There wasn't a point where I made any users or set passwords?
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It seems that Haiku isn't a multi-user operating system.
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I browsed through the user guide but it didn't answer any of my questions. Turns out the daily tasks guide is what I wanted.
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Turns out sshd was enabled to start by default, but I had to know to run "useradd sshd" before it would start by default.
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Turns out Haiku dhchlient doesn't properly set the broadcast bit, when my router responds to its old address, haiku expected a broadcast.
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So on the second boot and onwards, the network simply doesn't autoconfigure. I can work around by randomizing the MAC address.
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Aha authorized_keys needs to be installed on Haiku as ~/config/settings/ssh/authorized_keys rather than ~/.ssh/authorized_keys.
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The haiku regular user 'user' turned out to be actually the root user by another name. I had to "PermitRootLogin yes" to get in.
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I finally have a haiku VM that I can ssh into, though I'll need to randomize its MAC & IP every boot for dhclient to work.
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The Haiku installation process wasn't so smooth as it could have been. A better story for the introductory documentation would have helped.
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Sounds like fixing trivial bugs & gratuitous incompatibilities would have gone just as far...
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