Thanks for the response. With the support team assistance, I worked some issues for what happened in my case after the upgrade. I connected directly to the terminal and ran the following:
service sshd status
It showed that was started
Then looked at /etc/ssh/sshd_config file with this command:
grep "^[^#]" /etc/ssh/sshd_config
It should have looked like this:
PermitRootLogin yes
PasswordAuthentication yes
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
KbdInteractiveAuthentication no
UsePAM yes
GatewayPorts yes
PrintMotd no
PrintLastLog no
Subsystem sftp internal-sftp
AcceptEnv LANG LC_*
Match Group sftp
ForceCommand internal-sftp
AllowTcpForwarding no
PasswordAuthentication yes
but was only showing this:
Match Group sftp
ForceCommand internal-sftp
AllowTcpForwarding no
PasswordAuthentication yes
So I put the missing lines back into the sshd_config file, restarted everything and now am able to log in using PuTTY.
Thanks for the ideas (the IP0 is something that I forget when moving things around),
Brian
Thanks for the response. With the support team assistance, I worked some issues for what happened in my case after the upgrade. I connected directly to the terminal and ran the following:
service sshd status
It showed that was started
Then looked at /etc/ssh/sshd_config file with this command:
grep "^[^#]" /etc/ssh/sshd_config
It should have looked like this:
PermitRootLogin yes
PasswordAuthentication yes
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
KbdInteractiveAuthentication no
UsePAM yes
GatewayPorts yes
PrintMotd no
PrintLastLog no
Subsystem sftp internal-sftp
AcceptEnv LANG LC_*
Match Group sftp
ForceCommand internal-sftp
AllowTcpForwarding no
PasswordAuthentication yes
but was only showing this:
Match Group sftp
ForceCommand internal-sftp
AllowTcpForwarding no
PasswordAuthentication yes
So I put the missing lines back into the sshd_config file, restarted everything and now am able to log in using PuTTY.
Thanks for the ideas (the IP0 is something that I forget when moving things around),
Brian