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> > > The permissions and ownership of:
> > > - your home directory
> > drwxr-xr-x 138 mk group 24576 Nov 20 11:48 .
> > > - your home/.ssh directory
> > drwxr-xr-x 2 mk group 4096 Nov 19 13:44 .ssh
> > - your home/.ssh files
> > seen on UNIX:
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 mk group 545 Nov 20 08:48 > > authorized_keys
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 mk group 546 Nov 20 08:48 > > authorized_keys2
> > -rw------- 1 mk group 887 Nov 19 13:44 id_rsa
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 mk group 218 Nov 19 13:44 id_rsa.pub
> > -rw------- 1 mk group 523 Nov 19 13:44 identity
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 mk group 327 Nov 19 13:44 identity.pub
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 mk group 1442 Nov 20 11:50 known_hosts
> > -rw------- 1 mk group 512 Nov 20 11:50 random_seed
- mk is a user on a UNIX host.are perfectly fine. What irritates me is the "seen on UNIX" and "seen inside ssh session". What does that mean? From the cygcheck output I would think the home dir is on the local NTFS drive C:. So how can you see anything from UNIX? You know that the permission translation between UNIX and NT via Samba doesn't work flawlessly, don't you? Could you please enlighten us what the above wording is trying to say? And especially interesting are the permissions on these files seen in a *local* NT session on that very machine you're trying to connect via ssh.
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