ssh-troubleshoot — tool for collecting system information
ssh-troubleshoot is a tool for collecting information on the operating system (its version, patches, configuration settings, installed software components, and the current environment and state) and on the Tectia installation (installed product components and versions, their state, and the global and user-specific configurations).
The collected information will be stored in a file named
ssh_troubleshoot_<host>_<date>_<time>.tar
.
Send the file to the SSH technical support for analysis to help in
troubleshooting situations.
To get all necessary information, run the command as an administrator, because it might need root access to some directories.
The default location of this tool is
/opt/tectia/sbin/
, and that path should be set in the
user's PATH. Otherwise ssh-troubleshoot
can be run only by
pointing directly to the executable file. In case you want to install Tectia
tools to any non-default directory, for example to
/usr/lpp/tectia/
, you must set that directory in the
user's PATH.
Enter each option separately, they cannot be combined. The following options are available:
-d, --debug
LEVEL
Sets the debug level string to LEVEL
.
-k, --keep-going
Defines that the data collecting is continued as long as possible, even after errors are encountered.
-o, --output
FILENAME
Defines a non-default output file for storing the collected data.
If FILENAME
is '-
', the
collected data is added to the standard output. The default output file is
created in a temporary archive directory and stored as
ssh-troubleshoot-data-<hostname>-<timestamp>.tar
.
The timestamp is in format: yyyymmdd-hhmmUTC
.
-u, --user
USERNAME
Defines another user for the info command, the default is the current user. This affects the home directory from which the user-specific Tectia configuration files are fetched.
-q, --quiet
Suppresses detailed reporting about the command progress, reports only errors.
-h, --help
Displays this help text.
ssh-troubleshoot accepts the following command:
info
Gathers information about the system configuration.
The collected data will be stored as a tar
file.
Options:
--include-private-keys
Collects everything from the specified user's configuration directories, including the private keys. By default, the private keys nor unrecognized files are not included in the result data.