Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2002 17:20:33 GMT From: Daniel Barron <nettle@jadeb.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ssh keys and rsync Message-ID: <05102b4a4b.nettle@jadeb.com> In-Reply-To: <m2vg8cabrf.fsf@set.ehsrealtime.com> References: <45231c4a4b.nettle@jadeb.com> <m2vg8cabrf.fsf@set.ehsrealtime.com>
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In message <m2vg8cabrf.fsf@set.ehsrealtime.com> Wayne Pascoe <freebsd@penguinpowered.org.uk> wrote: > Daniel Barron <nettle@jadeb.com> writes: > > > Then that was it I could just 'ssh someserver' and be logged in. > > Someserver is a SunOS 4.8. > > > > I tried the same on the FreeBSD box and it always asked me for a > > password. I also tried without the -t dsa. > > Is it asking you for a password or a passphrase? There are differences. Yes I know. Password. > Have you added the key that belongs to the user you wish to ssh as to the > authorized_keys (or for ssh V2 authorized_keys2) file of the user that you > wish to ssh to ? Yes, tried both. > > EG. wayne on box a wants to ssh to web on box b. wayne on box a generates a > ssh key. The sysadmin then adds the contents of wayne's public key to > /export/home/web/.ssh/authorized_keys2 on box b. I'm just starting with ~/.ssh for now and will move on to /path/to/web once I can simply ssh without password or passphrase. > > > BTW, I know blank passphrases are bad, but how would I connect without > > any user intervention? > > You can use ssh-agent where you enter the passphrase once at startup, and > then ssh uses the running agent to authenticate against requests. I saw info on that but had no sucess. However it seems to be for interactive use rather than crontab-ed. -- Daniel Barron (Visit http://dansguardian.org/ - True web content filtering for all) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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