On Sat, 2017-02-18 at 19:44 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
El 2017-02-18 a las 15:54 +0100, Carlos E. R. escribió:
On 2017-02-18 15:42, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2017-02-18 15:34, Bryon Adams wrote:
> > It's not SCP, but I believe TurboFTP can use private > keys. I
generally like using it when I've needed it.
The server only has the SSH port open.
It can use SFTP, sorry forgot to mention that. You should be good there as far as ports go.
Ah, thanks, I'll try it. :-)
Brief test, it tries to connect. Now it is Siesta time, so Ill figure out after it how to upload the key file to this app. Seems a nice app :-)
Huh, got it wrong.
The normal procedure is to generate dsa keys on the client (the tablet) then copy (paste) into a line in the server .ssh/authorized_keys file of the user's home. The private part is a file that the client side knows about.
But I do not see how to generate that key in the android...
I looked into the application. It cites a web page, http:maskyn.com/turboclient, but it is dead (domain is for sale). Dead end.
Stuck.
I just took a look around and it doesn't look like there is a simple way to accomplish this. That's aggravating haha. I normally use JuiceSSH on my tablet to ssh into things and that appears to have a utility built in to generate a key pair. I know it is a silly work- around but you could try to generate a key pair using some ssh app or perhaps an app meant to generate the keys. I honestl don't know where JuiceSSH stores the key it generates though I'm curious so I sent them an email just now. Hopefully they respond! -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org