From 49b6c3928394c29b1ec336caffb190915295498b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: jacob Date: Sun, 24 Oct 2004 16:24:58 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Freshness tweaks: - soften language around changing-username-during-login section; with SSH-2 this is a misfeature of implementations rather than the protocol itself - tweak new-host-key dialog text git-svn-id: svn://svn.tartarus.org/sgt/putty@4681 cda61777-01e9-0310-a592-d414129be87e --- doc/gs.but | 11 +++++------ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/gs.but b/doc/gs.but index 83b6b2bf..043d65fe 100644 --- a/doc/gs.but +++ b/doc/gs.but @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -\versionid $Id: gs.but,v 1.8 2004/09/17 14:26:39 jacob Exp $ +\versionid $Id: gs.but,v 1.9 2004/10/24 16:24:58 jacob Exp $ \C{gs} Getting started with PuTTY @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ will probably see a message looking something like this: \c The server's host key is not cached in the registry. You \c have no guarantee that the server is the computer you \c think it is. -\c The server's key fingerprint is: +\c The server's rsa2 key fingerprint is: \c ssh-rsa 1024 7b:e5:6f:a7:f4:f9:81:62:5c:e3:1f:bf:8b:57:6c:5a \c If you trust this host, hit Yes to add the key to \c PuTTY's cache and carry on connecting. @@ -117,10 +117,9 @@ give you several chances to get it right. If you are using SSH, be careful not to type your username wrongly, because you will not have a chance to correct it after you press -Return. This is an unfortunate feature of the SSH protocol: it does -not allow you to make two login attempts using \i{different -usernames}. If you type your username wrongly, you must close PuTTY -and start again. +Return; many SSH servers do not permit you to make two login attempts +using \i{different usernames}. If you type your username wrongly, you +must close PuTTY and start again. If your password is refused but you are sure you have typed it correctly, check that Caps Lock is not enabled. Many login servers, -- 2.11.0