I connect to a server within Visual Studio Code using SSH ("Remote-SSH: Connect to Host..."). When working in the terminal within VS Code, the command code <file> results in opening the file in VS Code of the client (therefore on my screen). Now let's suppose I establish another SSH connection from the current session to a workstation within the network of the server using ssh <some workstation>. When I now try to open a file in VS Code using code <file>, nothing happens.
My questions are:
Since the last code <file> mentioned didn't open anything on my screen, is it possible that VS Code did open on any other screen connected to either the server or the workstation?
Is there any possibility to open the file within my VS Code?
As for your first question:
There's is NO WAY your action could have opened a window on any other screen than yours. For that to happen you'd have to "link" your ssh session to that screen, which would require a bunch of intermediary steps.
Now for the second question:
Yes its possible (and pretty easy). BUT you will have to open another session of VScode that will connect to the "workstation" through the server.
Currently, to connect to the server, you probably had to add these lines to your ssh config file:
Host MyServer
HostName adress.server
User username
To open a session in the workstation, through the server, you should add these lines:
Host MyWorkstation
HostName workstation.adress.within.network.of.the.server
User usernameInWorkstation
ProxyJump server.adress
I kept getting kicked out of my compute engine instance after a few seconds of idle with the indicated error (255).
I used 'gcloud compute ssh' to log in.
I am using the default firewall setting, which I believe would be good enough for ssh.
But if I am missing something, please so indicate and suggest the fix for this error.
Basically I can't get any efficient work done at this point having to ssh in so many times.
gcloud denies an ssh connection if there was a change in the setup, e.g.
after you changed your default zone or region, or you created another instance.
Then, you must update the ssh keys in your metadata by
sudo gcloud compute config-ssh
If this complains about different entries in your config file where your ssh key entries are stored, ~/.ssh/config, delete this file and execute the above command again.
If you have installed gcloud without sudo, you can omit sudo.
255 is the interactive ssh exit code for ssh failure - otherwise interactive ssh exits with the exit code of the last command executed in the ssh session.
The next time you get exit code 255 from ssh try running with --ssh-flag="-vvv" (more v's => more debugging output) and see if it helps track down connection problems.
For those who stop by this page. This helped me to solve the problem.
Try to the following:
Go to your Google and remove the SSH key for the server
Go to your google cloud console -> compute engine -> Metadata -> "SSH
keys" tab and click on edit. Here you can delete the ssh keys.
Run the gcloud command again
Click on the "Instances" link on the left side of your google cloud account, which will list down all the instances on the right side. Under
connect column, you will see "SSH" drop-down, click on "View cloud
Command" and this will bring a new dialog. Copy that command and run on your PC's terminal. This will let you SSH into the google compute engine.
It seems a feature/issue from Google Cloud Platform itself, we are going to continue checking it.
If the default network was edited, or if not using the default network, you may need to explicitly enable ssh access by adding a firewall-rule:
$ gcloud compute firewall-rules create --network=YOUR_NETWORK \
default-allow-ssh --allow tcp:22
After that, retry the 'gcloud compute ssh' command.
This is a real problem with very little documentation to dealing with it.
Sometime after creating the instance using the gcloud sdk ssh snippet provided via GCP console stopped working and continually errors with 255 making connecting to ssh on the instance only available through browser via GCP console for the compute instance in question. Not to mention this has happened to me on many different instances some without touching the default account permissions after initial setup and deployment which is overly frustrating. Cause for no reason it just stops working...works, then doesn't...
The only thing that worked for me was creating a new user to connect with through gcloud sdk! Be it Windows/PowerShell or Linux locally, using the following snippet:
gcloud compute ssh newuser-name#instance-name
That all per GCP documentation here: https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/troubleshooting/troubleshooting-ssh
Everything else passed per suggestions in documentation - port 22 open with access meaning it has to be a a problem with the default users authorization_keys WHICH they provide absolutely no documentation on how to fix that - at least nothing I could find on fixing (not creating or deleting)
I've tried updating the account, tried deleting the user and credentials from the instance, nothing appears to work. using:
gcloud compute --project "project-name" ssh --zone "us-east4-a" "instance-name"
Just doesn't work...
- even tried 'gcloud compute config-ssh --force-key-file-overwrite' NOTHING WORKS...
But creating a new user works every time, and once the user is created you can keep using that user via gcloud sdk
It's a work around, and I hate work around's for things like this but for my sanity this works at least until I can figure out how to reset the default account permissions, so if anyone has any ideas there or can point me in a direction for that I'd more than appreciate it!
IT was my mistake stating that the default firewall would allow all connections into an instance. The contrary turned out to be true. Please refer to an appropriate firewall rule must be set up to allow connection into an instance
Anh-
If you have Identity-Aware Proxy (IAP) enabled for your setup, try adding the --tunnel-through-iap option to the gcloud compute ssh command.
$ gcloud compute ssh --zone <zone> --project <project> --tunnel-through-iap <instance-name>
More information for people landing on this page, if you're using preemptible instances to save some compute costs, that could also be the reason for getting kicked out like this. Your instance may have just randomly stopped.
In my case, the I had created a bootable disk for the VM without adding the information of what source-image it needs to have. Because of this, even though the instance was coming up alright and ssh-allow rule was there, the VM was not booting up.
Finally added the source image to the disk and I was able to ssh into the VM.
Hope this helps for someone.
I had the same error . i restarted the VM instance and ssh workis fine
I had the problem where after clicking on the SSH button it would keep trying to establish a connection and fail. After long struggle I resolved it by adding Service Account User role to myself. If your account was created after the VM instance was created, it might result in this situation.
I know this was opened a long time ago, but for a more recent update on this topic. I had the same trouble connecting via ssh. It was giving the error code 225. Obviously there was a connectivity issue. There was already a firewall rule set under VPC network-> Firewall to allow ssh. However, to fix this problem I had to go to the specific network and create a rule under the network Firewall Rules. VPC network details -> FIREWALL RULES and create an inbound TCP rule for port 22.
if you are having a problem trying to access you g-cloud VM instance from your computer terminal remotely, and are getting the error code 255,the problem is that the ssh protocols in your computer are wrong or not updated.
In this case the best way to fix it is to go to your home directory (in your computer) check the hidden files and find the folder ".ssh" .Just delete this folder and re-open your bash terminal. Then run again your gcloud vm command.
Example:
you#your_computer:~$ gcloud beta compute ssh --zone "us-central1-a" "your_VM_name" --project "your_project_name"
You should this time instead of getting the error 255 code, the messages below:
WARNING: The private SSH key file for gcloud does not exist.
WARNING: The public SSH key file for gcloud does not exist.
WARNING: You do not have an SSH key for gcloud.
WARNING: SSH keygen will be executed to generate a key.
This tool needs to create the directory [/home/your_name/.ssh] before being able to
generate SSH keys.
Do you want to continue (Y/n)?
Type "Y" and gcloud will setup the new protocols by creating a brand new updated .ssh file.
After that you should be able to access your VM with your gcloud command without any problem.
That should solve the problem
Cheers
https://blackpearlmatrix.com
had the exact same symptoms - in my case the reason appeared to be the following. I was using root user + ssh key whereas root login is by default disabled in /etc/ssh/sshd_config (PermitRootLogin property).
I eventually had to delete my instance and make a new one with the same disk. See https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/troubleshooting/troubleshooting-ssh#use_your_disk_on_a_new_instance for details.
For me, my other teammates were able to login into the machine, but not me. So I asked them to create a user of my name with sudo rights, logged into serial console and changed passwordAuthentication to yes followed by sudo service ssh restart (for few this could be sudo service sshd restart.)
Post this I was able to login with
ssh -o PreferredAuthentications=password username#publicIP -p 22
This trick worked fine for me.
Reinitializing the gcloud with "gcloud init" and generating new ssh keys resolved the problem for me.
I had same issue.
I had connected the serial control and had checked logs. and there was some error log like "there is no disk space". Then I had resized disk as written in this document.
Now I am able to connect to instance with ssh.
Try switching to a different Internet connection
So, I was getting the same error but in my case I was not able to log in to the instance at all.
(base) girish#girish:~$ gcloud beta compute ssh --zone "asia-east1-b" "fp-1" --project "fp-public"
ssh: connect to host 12.345.678.90 port 22: Resource temporarily unavailable
ERROR: (gcloud.beta.compute.ssh) [/usr/bin/ssh] exited with return code [255].
(base) girish#girish:~$ gcloud beta compute ssh --ssh-flag='-vvv' --zone "asia-east1-b" "fp-1" --project "fp-public"
OpenSSH_7.6p1 Ubuntu-4ubuntu0.3, OpenSSL 1.0.2n 7 Dec 2017
debug1: Reading configuration data /etc/ssh/ssh_config
debug1: /etc/ssh/ssh_config line 19: Applying options for *
debug2: resolving "12.345.678.90" port 22
debug2: ssh_connect_direct: needpriv 0
debug1: Connecting to 12.345.678.90 [12.345.678.90] port 22.
[debug1: connect to address 12.345.678.90 port 22: Resource temporarily unavailable
ssh: connect to host 12.345.678.903 port 22: Resource temporarily unavailable
ERROR: (gcloud.beta.compute.ssh) [/usr/bin/ssh] exited with return code [255].
What worked for me:
I tried reinstalling lots of things and re-initializing various config and then landed on a thread which suggest to change the Internet network you are using and it worked!!
It's possible you have a rule that only allows whiltelisted IPs to ssh into a gcloud VM. So you may have forgotten to enable your work VPN or out of your work's office IP.
Try restarting your computer.
I got the same error and tried gcloud config ssh as mentioned previously to no avail. I then checked that the IDs and roles of serviceaccount and developer had 'editor' permissions, and that was fine. I started a new instance and logged out of all of my other google accounts and it still threw the error. Then, I restarted my computer and did not log back into my other google accounts. That fixed it.
When using IAP, GCP stores the key in instance metadata and then propagate
that to the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file.
You might get the error OP talks about when you remove the key from the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file and it's still in the instance metadata. Reason being:
GCP check that the user, key combo that you are using to ssh is already in the instance metadata.
It assumes that the exists in the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file for that user and doesn't propagate the key.
As the key doesn't exist in ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file for whatever reason (you deleted it, someone else deleted it etc. etc.) - you get access denied.
If this is the case with you, then fix is simple: remove the instance metadata entry for that user, key combo (have attached an image for ref, just click X and remove your faulty key) and try ssh again
What worked for me was turning my firewall on. (On a Mac, ssh'ing into a gcp instance).
In another instance of the error, my connection worked fine when I was on ethernet, but not when I was on wifi. Switching back to ethernet allowed me to connect again.
In my case sorted out the issue after restarting the VM.
if you are able to access the VM previously and suddenly giving SSH issues, give it a try by restarting.
Permission wise check whether you have IAP-secured Tunnel User
gcloud compute ssh --zone "your_zone" "instance_name" --tunnel-through-iap --project "project_name"
If this not works check with the GCP built-in SSH client, and click open in browser window.
Hope this help !!!
I'm trying to connect to an admin server in WLST using config and key files. There are no error messages but I am prompted for a username and password. These files were created (by another developer who is long gone[1]) with the storeUserConfig() command. My call to connect looks something like this: connect(userConfigFile=configFile, userKeyFile=keyFile, url='t3://somehost:7031')).
Is there some restriction in using these files, such as it can only be used on the host where created, or it needs access to the domain's boot.properties file?
Note: I'm trying to connect to an admin server on a different host and non-standard port (e.g. not 7001). The server I am running WLST on and the remote host are the same version of Weblogic.
Some of the things I have tried:
verified that these files appear correct, the key file being binary data and the config file having a line for "weblogic.management.username={AES}..." and "weblogic.management.password={AES}...".
verified that there is a server on the specified port by entering a known login and password that is successful
specified the admin server in the connect parameter
turn on debug(true); the only output is <wlst-debug> connect : Will check if userConfig and userKeyFile should be used to connect to the server and another line giving the path to the userConfig file
turn on Python logging in jython with -Dpython.verbose=debug; nothing relevant to decryption operation
Munging the key or the config files generates no error messages and behaviour as above
[1]: These files are still used today by other existing WLST scripts. However, these scripts are so convoluted and deliberately obfuscated that they are very difficult to reverse-engineer how connect() is being called.
You do not need to access to the domain's boot.properties file. You just need to make sure the configFile and keyFile pointing to the right files. FYI, here is one of the commands we are using:connect(userConfigFile='./user.secure',userKeyFile='./key.secure',url='t3://somehost:7001')
Have you check the network connectity that might be having a firewall in between that troubling you, check the traceroute from the script machine to the Remote machine. Recently I have faced simalar issue. once the routing table updated with allow the WL admin server port everything got set.
Hope this could helps you!
I had this problem too. In a script, I exported the Linux variables userConfigFile and userKeyFile. Then I connected by running:
url='t3://localhost:7002'
userConfigFile='$userConfigFile'
userKeyFile='$userKeyFile'
connect(userConfigFile=$userConfigFile, userKeyFile=#userKeyFile, url=url)
That all worked in a script, but would not work interactively. I changed to doing the following:
url='t3://localhost:7002'
userConfigFile='/users/me/weblogic-2014/weblogic-admin-WebLogicConfig.properties'
userKeyFile='/users/me/weblogic-2014/weblogic-admin-WebLogicKey.properties'
connect(userConfigFile=userConfigFile, userKeyFile=userKeyFile, url=url)
And that worked interactively.
I have set env.user and env.password,but when I use:
run('ssh-copy-id -i $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub server1')
it still asks me for the password,why?
env.user and env.password are used to ssh to remote server and then run the command inside run () at the remote server.
They are not used for the remote command itself (running in the remote server).
So ssh-copy-id doesn't know anything about the user or password.
If this is not what you mean, I would advice you to edit the question and make things more clear, like providing more context of what you are trying to accomplish: pasting the function that contains this 'run' for example.
I'm running a mongodb process with the following line:
/usr/bin/mongod --dbpath /var/db/mongo --journal
According to mongodb's docs:
http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Http+Interface
I should be able to access the http console with http://myhost:28017
When I attempt to access the page it asks for authentication.
According to the docs if security is configured I would need to authenticate. But after looking at mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Security+and+Authentication it seems clear to me I'm not using any authentication. I don't run the process with the --auth option, nor are there any users when I run a db.system.users.find() command.
What's going on here?
I have been able to reproduce this, and this is not the intended behavior. I have filed https://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-4601 The fix version is 2.1.1
Thank you for bringing this to our attention!
In the meantime, there are two work-arounds:
1) Enter the credentials for authentication in the browser pop-up window
2) Remove all user credentials from each of your DBs (including admin) using db.system.users.remove()
Either of these should allow you to view the http console.
Greetings Brain,
i am using mongo V 2.4.6 and its on default port 27017, its http console is enabled by default but when you try to access from Network it ask for password and i dont know why as i am new to this and dont know the exact reason. by i have a way to access it.
Create a tunnel to your mongo Server and when you access, it wont ask for password. and if you are using putty.
enter host name
go to ssh on left menu options and click +
Than Click on tunnel
in Source port type 28017
in destination type localhost colon port 28017(sorry dont know how to write http url in localhost here in my post)
not click open and provide ssh username and password
now open browser on PC from where you are doing ssh .Type localhost and port 28017
and Boom its accessible and wont ask for username and password. hope it work for you, let me know if u need any help.