[Beowulf] A careful exploit?
Jörg Saßmannshausen
sassy-work at sassy.formativ.net
Thu Jun 13 13:49:43 PDT 2019
Dear all,
why port 23? Was that a typo and you mean port 22 (ssh)?
All the best
Jörg
Am Donnerstag, 13. Juni 2019, 11:09:21 BST schrieb Robert G. Brown:
> On Thu, 13 Jun 2019, Jonathan Engwall wrote:
> > It was an actual machine I could ping but I could not connect. It was
> > there
> > at start up.
>
> If it is an actual machine, hang a console on it and see what is
> happening. If you can ping it, its network is up. But to be able to
> connect to it, you have to have a bunch of stuff configured to allow
> connection. These problems all live at a higher level than the physical
> transport levels.
>
> Personally, I'd start by killing selinux, as it is notorious for
> nearly randomly deciding that this or that connection is not secure and
> blocking it with no (EXTERNAL) warning -- it would show up in logs. If
> you prefer, master selinux and figure out how to configure it for the
> specific ports you are trying to connect to. Then I'd check the
> firewall. Are you trying to ssh in? Make sure that port 23 is open and
> not firewalled off in the default installation image. Then check
> services. Are you trying to ssh in? Well, is sshd installed and
> running? If it isn't, you have to install it, configure it, make sure
> the firewall passes it, and make sure selinux isn't going to come in and
> override the firewall and refuse to pass it after all. And so on, for
> any port(s) you wish to access. Most linuxes these days install in a
> default "secure" mode with no open ports and firewalled up pretty tight,
> assuming that the installer is a normal human who has no idea how to
> offer services or secure them, but if you run a cluster you really need
> to be at least on the road to being an abnormal person who does.
>
> If you're trying to build a cluster that automagically installs with all
> of this stuff up, well, then you'll need to read the manual(s) or
> whatever documentation they provide to see what you didn't preconfigure
> on the install host.
>
> Hopefully you're getting the idea that debugging networking problems
> requires a) a pretty good knowledge of networking from the wire on up to
> the network application; b) a pretty good knowledge of systems
> administration and how to set up, start, manage, debug applications,
> read logs (know where the logs are to read, for starters) etc; c) a very
> patient and systematic approach. As Chris says, start at the wire up,
> if it is wired, look at the wireless router tables of connected hosts if
> it is wireless, etc. See if it pings. If it pings, see what's
> wrong with the ports/services you're trying to connect to. Read logs.
> Try experiments. Compare a working host to the one that isn't working.
> Read the logs some more.
>
> It's all in there, if you know how to get it out.
>
> And again, if you really want our help, repost a DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF
> WHAT IS WRONG. I'd wager 90% or more of the people on this list could
> debug your problem from a sufficiently detailed description alone, but
> so far we know next to nothing about what you are trying to do, what
> your network looks like, what version of Linux (or other operating
> system!) you are using, what tools you're talking about. I don't even
> know if you are really trying to build or work with a cluster or are
> just trying to figure out why ssh doesn't work out of the box on hosts
> in an office.
>
> Details, please!
>
> rgb
>
> > On Tue, Jun 11, 2019, 9:49 PM Chris Samuel <chris at csamuel.org> wrote:
> > On 11/6/19 8:18 pm, Robert G. Brown wrote:
> > > * Are these real hosts, each with their own network interface
> >
> > (wired or
> >
> > > wireless), or are these virtual hosts?
> >
> > In addendum to RGB's excellent advice and questions I would add
> > to this
> > question the network engineers maxim of "start at layer 1 and
> > work up".
> >
> > In other words, first check your physical connectivity and then
> > head up
> > the layers.
> >
> > Best of luck!
> > Chris
> > --
> > ? Chris Samuel? :?http://www.csamuel.org/? :?Berkeley, CA, USA
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>
> Robert G. Brown http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/
> Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305
> Durham, N.C. 27708-0305
> Phone: 1-919-660-2567 Fax: 919-660-2525 email:rgb at phy.duke.edu
>
>
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