Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting passwordless authentication of SFTP script Post 302157617 by uday.shankar on Friday 11th of January 2008 01:15:32 PM
Old 01-11-2008
Hi There
Thanks a lot for helping me out !!!
I am bit novice in Unix, Can u pls tell me where can I get the log of ssh-log
Will be it in server A or B and in which directory ..
I did run a command ssh -v -v -v B
and after that it lists lot of o/p and then prompting for password. I tried to copy the output into the file 'output'. with the below command ..

ssh -v -v -v B > output

But the output file doesn't not contain much. AM I doing something wrong here ..

Thanks a lot for ur effort to help me out !!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Passwordless authentication via SSH

I am trying to implement passwordless authentication via ssh2. I have used the well documented technique of generating a key pair with a blank passphrase on my client machine, and installing the public key on the destination server (AIX 5.3) in the user's .ssh2 directory. I have used this technique... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: RegX
1 Replies

2. AIX

Passwordless root authentication via SSH

Hello, I would like to issue a couple of commands as root on a remote machine without having to enter the root password. I used "ssh-keygen -t rsa" to generate the encryption keys, copied the public key to the remote machine, etc. I also tried playing around with the sshd_config file and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sphericon
3 Replies

3. HP-UX

sftp/scp/ssh script with password as authentication

Hello, Do you guys know set of commands that can incorporate to sftp/scp/ssh to add password in a script to automate file transfer. Our client is not using ssh keys authentication so we are force to create a script to pass the password into the script to transfer files via sftp/scp/ssh. We... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: james_falco
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Setup multiple passwordless authentication

I have experience in setting up passwordless authentication by sharing ssh public keys manually.Currently I am in the process to the write a script to perform the same functionality from one source(host) to multiple destinations. I have one source host (Host A) whose public keys has to be shared... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lancel0t
9 Replies

5. Red Hat

ssh private key passwordless authentication

Hello, Need a suggestion to setup private key passwordless authentication. I am not sure this can done or not :wall: here is the sincerio I have two servers, sever1 with a user "user1" and servera with usera here dataflow: usera from servera, will pull/push files to server1 on user1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bobby320
2 Replies

6. Ubuntu

Passwordless ssh authentication fails

Unable to set ssh passwordless authentication I am unable to ssh with passwordless authentication from Windows client onto UBuntu server. The ssh version on UBuntu is OpenSSH_5.8p1 Debian-7ubuntu1, OpenSSL 1.0.0e , while SSH on Windows Client is OpenSSH_5.1p1, OpenSSL 0.9.8k. I turned on ssh... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tkota
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Passwordless Authentication and Anonymous login

Hi, I am in the process FTPing some of my report files from my production server to another FTP server through batch/Shell Script. This is working fine with the password less authentication. Once i place all my report files in the ftp server the end users need to download ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Showdown
3 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Pearl script Net::SFTP authentication error

#!/usr/local/bin/perl -w use Net::SFTP; use File::Copy; my $user=(getpwuid($<)); my $server = "servername"; print "user - $user server - $server \n"; my %args = ( user => "$user", ssh_args => {port=> 'portnum'} ); $args{debug} = 1; $args{user} = "user"; my $sftp=Net::SFTP->new($server,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Yashaswini H L
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Ssh passwordless authentication

Hey team I have to enable password less authentication betweeen A to B server and A to C server and A to D server. For this I generated a ssh key on server A using ssh-keygen command and copied the key using ssh-copy-id command to B, C and D server. Everything is working fine as of now but... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sandeep_sandy
5 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to use passwordless sftp in script?

Hi I am trying to do SFTP in shell script in such a way that it should not ask for password. for this is use below script but it prompt for password. here I am not abled to understand where I am making mistake. #!/bin/bash # SFTP TO remote server USER="ITO" PASSWORD="abcd@1234"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: scriptor
4 Replies
SSH-COPY-ID(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					    SSH-COPY-ID(1)

NAME
ssh-copy-id -- use locally available keys to authorise logins on a remote machine SYNOPSIS
ssh-copy-id [-f] [-n] [-i [identity_file]] [-p port] [-o ssh_option] [user@]hostname ssh-copy-id -h | -? DESCRIPTION
ssh-copy-id is a script that uses ssh(1) to log into a remote machine (presumably using a login password, so password authentication should be enabled, unless you've done some clever use of multiple identities). It assembles a list of one or more fingerprints (as described below) and tries to log in with each key, to see if any of them are already installed (of course, if you are not using ssh-agent(1) this may result in you being repeatedly prompted for pass-phrases). It then assembles a list of those that failed to log in, and using ssh, enables logins with those keys on the remote server. By default it adds the keys by appending them to the remote user's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys (creating the file, and directory, if necessary). It is also capable of detecting if the remote system is a NetScreen, and using its 'set ssh pka-dsa key ...' command instead. The options are as follows: -i identity_file Use only the key(s) contained in identity_file (rather than looking for identities via ssh-add(1) or in the default_ID_file). If the filename does not end in .pub this is added. If the filename is omitted, the default_ID_file is used. Note that this can be used to ensure that the keys copied have the comment one prefers and/or extra options applied, by ensuring that the key file has these set as preferred before the copy is attempted. -f Forced mode: doesn't check if the keys are present on the remote server. This means that it does not need the private key. Of course, this can result in more than one copy of the key being installed on the remote system. -n do a dry-run. Instead of installing keys on the remote system simply prints the key(s) that would have been installed. -h, -? Print Usage summary -p port, -o ssh_option These two options are simply passed through untouched, along with their argument, to allow one to set the port or other ssh(1) options, respectively. Rather than specifying these as command line options, it is often better to use (per-host) settings in ssh(1)'s configuration file: ssh_config(5). Default behaviour without -i, is to check if 'ssh-add -L' provides any output, and if so those keys are used. Note that this results in the comment on the key being the filename that was given to ssh-add(1) when the key was loaded into your ssh-agent(1) rather than the comment contained in that file, which is a bit of a shame. Otherwise, if ssh-add(1) provides no keys contents of the default_ID_file will be used. The default_ID_file is the most recent file that matches: ~/.ssh/id*.pub, (excluding those that match ~/.ssh/*-cert.pub) so if you create a key that is not the one you want ssh-copy-id to use, just use touch(1) on your preferred key's .pub file to reinstate it as the most recent. EXAMPLES
If you have already installed keys from one system on a lot of remote hosts, and you then create a new key, on a new client machine, say, it can be difficult to keep track of which systems on which you've installed the new key. One way of dealing with this is to load both the new key and old key(s) into your ssh-agent(1). Load the new key first, without the -c option, then load one or more old keys into the agent, possibly by ssh-ing to the client machine that has that old key, using the -A option to allow agent forwarding: user@newclient$ ssh-add user@newclient$ ssh -A old.client user@oldl$ ssh-add -c ... prompt for pass-phrase ... user@old$ logoff user@newclient$ ssh someserver now, if the new key is installed on the server, you'll be allowed in unprompted, whereas if you only have the old key(s) enabled, you'll be asked for confirmation, which is your cue to log back out and run user@newclient$ ssh-copy-id -i someserver The reason you might want to specify the -i option in this case is to ensure that the comment on the installed key is the one from the .pub file, rather than just the filename that was loaded into you agent. It also ensures that only the id you intended is installed, rather than all the keys that you have in your ssh-agent(1). Of course, you can specify another id, or use the contents of the ssh-agent(1) as you pre- fer. Having mentioned ssh-add(1)'s -c option, you might consider using this whenever using agent forwarding to avoid your key being hijacked, but it is much better to instead use ssh(1)'s ProxyCommand and -W option, to bounce through remote servers while always doing direct end-to-end authentication. This way the middle hop(s) don't get access to your ssh-agent(1). A web search for 'ssh proxycommand nc' should prove enlightening (N.B. the modern approach is to use the -W option, rather than nc(1)). SEE ALSO
ssh(1), ssh-agent(1), sshd(8) BSD
June 17, 2010 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:53 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy