how to connect raspbian strech over SSH [closed] - ssh

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I just upgraded the ssd card to 2018-11-13-raspbian-stretch-lite. Hence, no screen, no keyboard, just headless. With the version before I used SSH to acess the raspberrypi 3. But now i have trouble. SSH is disabled by default. Could be overcome by writing an empty file named ssh into / . Fine, should be easy, but it isn't. I tried to mount the ssd-card in a card reader from a linux computer. This would allow to write the required empty file with cat /dev/null > /mnt/rasp/ssh , but it doesn't work, because the device is mounted read only indepent of how I try to mount for read-write!
Has anybody an Idea how to open the ssh, maybe over USB-Telnet, or what ever?

You have to create a file called ssh in the boot partition, not the root partition.
You can also create a file called wpa_supplicant in the same place and your RasPi will join your wifi network.
You'll probably be able to ssh into it with:
ssh pi#raspberrypi.local
If not, look in your router's "DHCP clients" table or use nmap to get its IP address. Or install the fing app in your smartphone and it'll tell you the IP addresses and host/OS of all your network clients.

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What password should I enter for SSH? [closed]

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Closed 2 years ago.
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I am trying to learn how to use SSH and it's kinda hard for me. I installed PuTTY (windows 7 32-bit). It asked for my IP so I searched 'What is my ip' and pasted it in. Then in the 'command prompt style box' I entered my username 'dell'. Now it's asking for password. I'm really confused because my laptop has no password and there's no password I know of. Can you guys help?
Entering nothing doesn't work:
Putty is just a command line interface, that will allow you to run commands like ssh.
However, if you want to SSH into your machine you have to install an SSH server on your machine.
There are multiple solution on the web:
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/41560/how-to-get-ssh-command-line-access-to-windows-7-using-cygwin/
122.162.179.255 is likely the IP address of your network router / ADSL modem / etc and not your Windows PC (which won't have an SSH server installed by default).
There really is very little to learn about SSH itself, at least for basic day to day use.
If you want to learn how to use a UNIX-style command prompt then consider installing WSL or setting up a Linux installation on a separate computer (maybe a Raspberry Pi).

SCP File Transfer Between Pi and Windows [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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With pscp in windows command line, i can send file from Windows to Pi or i can copy a file from Pi to Windows. But opposite does not work. I cant send a file from pi to windows with pi's terminal.
scp text.txt username#192.168.1.100:C:/Users/Desktop/
or C/Users/Desktep with out colon.
Both does not work. It returns nothing. After few minutes it says connection timed out.
scp is a client that connects to a server. Your Pi is running an SSH server which allows you to connect to it from other machines using pscp or scp (depending on what OS). So to make it work the other way, you need to install an SSH server on your windows machine.
I followed this article to install on my windows machine:
http://linuxbsdos.com/2015/07/30/how-to-install-openssh-on-windows-10/
Sometime in the future based on the announcement by Microsoft at http://blogs.msdn.com/b/powershell/archive/2015/06/03/looking-forward-microsoft-support-for-secure-shell-ssh.aspx it appears Windows will have SSH server.

How can I make wifi access point on Banana pro? P [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I have installed bananian OS on Banana pro. Now I want to make wifi access point on banana pro.
Can anyone guide me how to do this?
Load the WiFi Driver
Run the following command to load the WiFi driver at boot time.
root#bananapi ~ # nano /etc/modules
# add the wifi driver
ap6210 op_mode=2
Adding Internet Access
While your WiFi users can connect to your BananaPro, they can’t do much else except to run apps on the BananaPro. Assuming you have your eth0 port connected to a network that has internet access, you can give them access to the Internet. All it requires is enabling IPv4 forwarding to allow traffic to pass between the eth0 and wlan0 ports.
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
To make this permanent, edit the /etc/sysctl file and un-comment the line:
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
Reference for adding connection

Accessing Samba share through Raspberry Pi SSH [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I have a raspberry Pi at home that I can access over the internet using SSH (using only key authentication), which is behind a TP-Link router. This router has a hard drive attached to it, which I can access as a samba share locally using the router's IP address.
I would like to access this hard drive when I'm away from home, but I don't want to expose my samba share to the internet (needless to say why). Is there a way I can access it securely through my Raspberry Pi's SSH server ?
I am not 100% sure, if this is what you want. But what you can do:
Mount your router drive via samba to your RPi's mount point.
Access your PRi via sshfs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSHFS
Works for me like a charm. I found that using sshfs is much easier than nfs or samba under Linux. This solution definitely works when you access your RPi under Linux. Windows -> RPi, or Mac -> RPi.... perhaps, I don't know. I think there are sshfs solutions, but I don't know how stable or usable they are.

How do I use an SSH File Transfer Protocol client (Cyberduck) through two ssh "points" [closed]

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I am trying to log in to my computer at work through cyberduck.
I can ssh into the computer just fine but I must first SSH into the central system, then ssh from there into my computer.
Is there a way to allow Cyberduck to ssh into my work computer, i.e. ssh twice at once?
You can use e.g. PuTTY to set up the port forwarding, also called an SSH tunneling (for purposes such as yours).
See https://the.earth.li/~sgtatham/putty/latest/htmldoc/Chapter3.html#using-port-forwarding
Alternatively you can use an SFTP client that supports this natively, e.g. WinSCP.
There's a guide for this here:
https://winscp.net/eng/docs/guide_tunnel
Note that aside from instructions, how to do this using WinSCP native tunneling functionality (section Section up tunnel in WinSCP), the guide also shows, how to tunnel WinSCP via PuTTY (section Section up tunnel using PuTTY for SFTP/SCP session). So if you insist on using Cyberduck, you can just replace WinSCP with Cyberduck in the guide.
(I'm the author of WinSCP)
Yes, you can configure local port forwarding. With it, localhost's socket will be forwarded to your work computer so middle SSH server will work as proxy.