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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat SSH Keys between RHEL 5 and Solaris 10 Post 302591150 by craigp84 on Wednesday 18th of January 2012 04:36:53 PM
Old 01-18-2012
From the user who you're setting up passwordless, can you paste the output of:

Code:
ssh -vvv user@host

That'll tell us where it's going wrong.

My money's (but i've always been a rotten gambler!) on this idea:

Quote:
Originally Posted by vgersh99
Code:
 chmod 700 $HOME/.ssh

ssh checks perms on the files under ~/.ssh, e.g. if ~/.ssh/id_rsa is anything other than chmod 400 it rubber ear's the file :-)

To give you some hope - if i had £1 for every time i've set this up for production i wouldn't need to work anymore.

There can be loads of small bumps in the road with this - things like keon with dodgy LATs running on the remote host or business groups with policy's that mean AuthorizedKeysFile location is set elsewhere than ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the remote host. Fun fun fun! :-)
 

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SSH-COPY-ID(1)						      General Commands Manual						    SSH-COPY-ID(1)

NAME
ssh-copy-id - install your public key in a remote machine's authorized_keys SYNOPSIS
ssh-copy-id [-i [identity_file]] [user@]machine DESCRIPTION
ssh-copy-id is a script that uses ssh 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 also changes the permissions of the remote user's home, ~/.ssh, and ~/.ssh/authorized_keys to remove group writability (which would oth- erwise prevent you from logging in, if the remote sshd has StrictModes set in its configuration). If the -i option is given then the identity file (defaults to ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub) is used, regardless of whether there are any keys in your ssh-agent. Otherwise, if this: ssh-add -L provides any output, it uses that in preference to the identity file. If the -i option is used, or the ssh-add produced no output, then it uses the contents of the identity file. Once it has one or more fin- gerprints (by whatever means) it uses ssh to append them to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the remote machine (creating the file, and directory, if necessary) SEE ALSO
ssh(1), ssh-agent(1), sshd(8) OpenSSH 14 November 1999 SSH-COPY-ID(1)
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