Date: Tue, 23 Apr 2002 23:52:22 -0400 (EDT) From: Peter Leftwich <Hostmaster@Video2Video.Com> To: "Philip J. Koenig" <pjklist@ekahuna.com> Cc: FreeBSD LIST <FreeBSD-Questions@FreeBSD.Org>, Tim Erlin <tim@firstinitiallastname.com> Subject: Re: SSH questions Message-ID: <20020423235007.G58815-100000@earl-grey.cloud9.net> In-Reply-To: <20020424033916046.AAA725@empty1.ekahuna.com@pc02.ekahuna.com>
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On Tue, 23 Apr 2002, Philip J. Koenig wrote: > On 23 Apr 2002, at 7:53, Tim Erlin boldly uttered: > > You can run ssh with -v and get some good debug output. Might be useful. --Tim > Indeed it may be. Here's what I see when the session disconnects: I use the command `ssh -l username -C domain.net` but find the -v flag interesting... does ssh report the verbose stuff when the user "ends" the ssh session (hits Ctrl-D at the remote site)? > $ Read from remote host host.example.com: Connection reset by peer > Connection to host.example.com closed. > debug: Transferred: stdin 0, stdout 29815, stderr 128 bytes in 861.7 seconds > debug: Bytes per second: stdin 0.0, stdout 34.6, stderr 0.1 > debug: Exit status -1 > > So I get a couple of things. The session lasted about 14 mins (maybe there's a 10 min idle timer?), the Connection reset by peer message, and the "Exit status -1". Does this tell us much? > Philip J. Koenig pjklist@ekahuna.com > Electric Kahuna Systems -- Computers & Communications for the New Millenium A lot of commercial ISPs with unix logins have idle timers that kick you off. You may be able to get away with a shell script that types a "." every 1 minute to prevent getting kicked. -- Peter Leftwich President & Founder Video2Video Services Box 13692, La Jolla, CA, 92039 USA +1-413-403-9555 To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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