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Subject: | Re: Problems with ssh when I log into my PC using my corporate domain |
while working from home | |
To: | cygwin AT cygwin DOT com |
Newsgroups: | gmane.os.cygwin |
References: | <r7n3nu$1u6e$1 AT ciao DOT gmane DOT io> <871roeyuy0 DOT fsf AT Otto DOT invalid> |
From: | Mark Hansen <cygwin AT mehconsulting DOT com> |
Message-ID: | <49c12452-3402-54ff-57ba-f61757d99ae0@mehconsulting.com> |
Date: | Thu, 23 Apr 2020 11:10:24 -0700 |
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On 4/23/2020 10:26 AM, ASSI wrote: > Mark Hansen writes: >> Here is my user id (from the id command) when I log in from the office: >> >> uid=1293438(Mark.Hansen) gid=1049089(Domain Users) ... >> >> Here is the same when I've logged in with the machine at home: >> >> uid=1293438(MAN+User(244862)) gid=1293438 >> >> (MAN) is the domain. > > That likely means that when you connect from home, you cannot talk to the > corporate domain server or you are ion a different domain. The domain > part is only shown when it isn't the primary domain IIRC and since the > numerical user instead of the name is shown, that SID did not resolve. > >> The actual problem I'm having is that Cygwin tools like ssh, git, etc. can't find my .ssh >> directory. They are looking in "/" rather than my home directory. > > Depending on how this is set up in your domain, you might need to point > either Cygwin or sshd to use a separate local directory. You have no > network access on Windows (i.e. you won't be able to access any fils > shares) until you've authenticated with a password. > >> I tried copying my .ssh directory from my home to "/" and although it was created, the >> files have the wrong permissions and I'm unable to change them. > > You would need to be either an admin and/or the user who installed > Cygwin for that to work, but you shouldn't do that. > >> Is there something I can tweak to get Cygwin to understand which user I am so the ssh >> stuff can start working again? > > If Cygwin doesn't know who you are, then that means Windows doesn't know > either, so fixing this on the Cygwin side won't get you much further. > > > Regards, > Achim. > I think Windows knows who I am. I log into the machine using my normal domain login credentials. The machine looks the way it does when I log in when the machine is in the office - the desktop is the same, etc. - it's not acting like I'm a new user or anything like that. Everything on the Windows side seems to be working fine. The only issue I've found is with Cygwin. Is there a way (short of removing and reinstalling Cygwin) that I can get Cygwin to recognize my current user so ssh and git can know where my home directory is located? -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
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