Hello, Am Montag, 17. April 2006 15:03 schrieb houghi:
On Mon, Apr 17, 2006 at 02:22:20PM +0200, Christian Boltz wrote: [...]
* If you use the default filename for your key, you don't have to give the filename with every ssh call (or to use an alias): ssh-keygen -t dsa -b 2048 # without -f filename You can then login with simply ssh user@host # without -i filename
It still asks for the password and the point is that it shouldn't. At least that happens with me.
Works without problems here ;-) # ssh server 'date' Mo Apr 17 15:23:02 IST 2006 # ls -l /home/cb/.ssh/ | grep id -rw------- 1 cb users 1264 2004-01-28 17:07 id_dsa -rw-r--r-- 1 cb users 1108 2004-01-28 17:07 id_dsa.pub Try renaming your key to those (default) filenames, add eval `ssh-agent` to your ~/.profile and call ssh-add once after login.
* "no passphrase" isn't something I like...
If I don't use that, I can't run a remote script automagially. It keeps asking for a passphrase. Now why would I eneter a passpfrase if I son't want to enter a password.
I might need a real example on how to run a remote script.
see "cb-keychain" in my mail about the rsync/storeBackup combination and eval `cat /root/.cron-ssh-agent` at the start of the backup script ;-) Regards, Christian Boltz -- [tgz Datei entpacken] tar xzf <Archiv> Für weitere Informationen lesen Sie bitte die Manpage oder Ihren Admin. [Torsten Hallmann in suse-linux]