I am trying to set up the keys to login seamless on to two diff environment server(s).
i used to have it couple of years back , but somehow never worked and didn`t concentte much , but when i want to setup again . facing a challange while copying the id_rsa.pubfile to authorized_keys .
I have used this link
server1 , i have below contents
and server2 i see as below
I hope i am clear on my questions , can someone help ?
hello
I want to connect from server1 to server2 (Aix 5.3) with ssh, without password prompt.
So i define a ssh-key
On server1:
ssh-keygen -b 1024 -f identity -P '' -t dsa
scp identity.pub toto@server2:/tmp/identity-.pub
On server 2:
cat identity-.pub >> .ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 400... (2 Replies)
Hi,
When logging in using SSH access (to a remotely
hosted account), I received a prompt to accept
a server's key fingerprint. Wrote that string
of code down for comparision.
Already emailed my host for their listing of the
string of code for the server's key fingerprint
(for comparison,... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a sshkey which I use to connect from my unix box to a linux box without any issue......
however I downloaded this same key to my laptop and tried to connect to the same linux box but it failed.....
As my laptop is running MS Vista I guessing I going have to convert it ...... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want to use ssh to add a register key on remote ssh server. Since there are space characters in my register key string, it always failed. If there is no space characters in the string, it worked fine. The following is what I have tried. It seems that "ssh" command doesn't care about double... (9 Replies)
Hi All;
I have an issue with password less authentication via ssh ( v2)
I have two servers Server A and Server B, following are the server details
Server A
OS - HP UX B.11.11 U 9000/800
SSH - OpenSSH_4.3p2-hpn, OpenSSL 0.9.7i 14 Oct 2005
HP-UX Secure Shell-A.04.30.000, HP-UX... (3 Replies)
Hi, I've used the following way to set ssh public key authentication and it is working fine on Solaris 10, RedHat Linux and SuSE Linux servers without any problem. But I got error 'Server refused our key' on Solaris 8 system. Solaris 8 uses SSH2 too. Why? Please help. Thanks.
... (1 Reply)
Hey Guys,
I have a server, and a technical user on it (only for reading logs). I set up openssh, and the user can login only with ssh key pair.
Under this one technical user, there are a lots of public keys in the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file. I would like to find out/log with which key the user... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I have generated pass phrase key from Linux and copied into windows system. Then now we cant login to Linux from windows without that pass phrase key, unfortunately i forgot the pass phrase key. I have tried below procedures to recover it.
1. Have regenerated the id_RSA key again... (3 Replies)
Hello
I have AIX server as a source server and destination is Linux server. I have configured the ssh key as below....
generated rsa key on aix with userA and copied the public key to
on linux server in userB/.ssh/authorized_keys
but when i try ssh userB@linux server its again asks me for... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: powerAIX
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
ssh-keyconverter
SSH-KEYCONVER(1) BSD General Commands Manual SSH-KEYCONVER(1)NAME
ssh-keyconvert -- convert ssh v1 keys and authorization files
SYNOPSIS
ssh-keyconvert [-k] [-o output_file] identity_file ...
ssh-keyconvert [-a] [-o output_file] authorization_file ...
DESCRIPTION
ssh-keyconvert converts RSA public and private keys used for public key based user authentication with protocol version 1 to the format used
with protocol version 2.
When using RSA user authentication with SSH protocol version 1, the client uses the private key from $HOME/.ssh/identity to provide its iden-
tity to the server. The server grants or denies access based on whether the public part of this key is listed in $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys.
SSH protocol version 2 supports both DSA and RSA keys, but the way RSA keys are stored are differently. On the client, the default file name
is .ssh/id_rsa rather than .ssh/identity, and the file's format is different as well. On the server, the public porting of the key can still
be stored in .ssh/authorized_keys, but the key notation has changed as well. Therefore, when switching from protocol version 1 to version 2,
you either have to create a new identity key using ssh-keygen(1) and add that key to the server's authorized_keys file, or you need to con-
vert your keys using ssh-keyconvert.
By default, ssh-keyconvert will try to guess the type of file that is to be converted. If it fails to guess correctly, you can tell if what
type of conversion to perform by specifying the -k option to convert the private key, or the -a option to convert an authorisation file.
When converting your private keys stored in .ssh/identity, ssh-keyconvert will read the private key, prompting you for the pass phrase if the
key is protected by a pass phrase. If the -o option is given, it will write the private key to the specified file, using version 2 syntax. If
the key was protected by a pass phrase, it will use the same pass phrase to protect the new file. It will also write the public portion of
the key to a second file, using the specified file name with ``.pub'' appended. If the -o option was not given, private and public key will
be written to id_rsa and id_rsa.pub, respectively, relative to the directory of the input key file.
If the destination file already exists, ssh-keyconvert will prompt the user for confirmation before overwriting the file, unless the -f
option is given.
When converting your authorized_keys file, ssh-keyconvert will ignore any keys in SSH version 2 format. Any public keys in version 1 format
will be converted and appended to the output file using the new syntax. If the -o option is given, keys are appended to the specified file.
If it is not given, ssh-keyconvert will append all keys to the input file.
Note that ssh-keyconvert does not check for duplicate keys, so if you run it on .ssh/authorized_keys more several times, the converted keys
will show up several times.
OPTIONS -k Convert private key file(s). The default is to guess the type of file that should be converted.
-a Convert authorized_keys file(s). The default is to guess the type of file that should be converted.
-o outfile
Specify the name of the output file. When converting an authorization file, all public keys will be appended to this file. For pri-
vate key conversion, the private and public components of the key will be stored in outfile and outfile.pub, respectively. Note that
since every key must be stored in a separate file, you cannot use this option when you specify several input files.
-f When converting a key file, and the output file already exists, ssh-keyconvert will ask the user whether to overwrite the file. Using
this option forces overwriting.
AUTHORS
OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen. Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos,
Theo de Raadt and Dug Song removed many bugs, re-added newer features and created OpenSSH. ssh-keyconvert was contributed by Olaf Kirch.
SEE ALSO ssh(1), ssh-add(1), ssh-agent(1), sshd(8)
J. Galbraith and R. Thayer, SECSH Public Key File Format, draft-ietf-secsh-publickeyfile-01.txt, March 2001, work in progress material.
BSD February 2, 2002 BSD