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Difference between revisions of "Package talk:Keychain"
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m (Pytony moved page Talk:Keychain to Package talk:Keychain: This is an ebuild) |
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--[[User:Daniel Robbins|Daniel Robbins]] ([[User talk:Daniel Robbins|talk]]) 13:13, 18 April 2014 (UTC) | --[[User:Daniel Robbins|Daniel Robbins]] ([[User talk:Daniel Robbins|talk]]) 13:13, 18 April 2014 (UTC) | ||
It appears there is a missing graphic or code block between these paragraphs. | |||
<pre> | |||
>Note that when keychain runs for the first time after your local system has booted, you will be prompted for a passphrase for your private key file if it is encrypted. But here's the nice thing about using keychain -- even if you are using an encrypted private key file, you will only need to enter your passphrase when your system first boots (or in the case of a server, when you first log in.) After that, ssh-agent is already running and has your decrypted private key cached in memory. So if you open a new shell, you will see something like this: | |||
>This means that you can now ssh to your heart's content, without supplying a passphrase. | |||
</pre> | |||
[[User:dragon788]] |
Revision as of 17:38, November 21, 2017
http://www.funtoo.org/Keychain#Linux > The quick install docs assume you have a DSA key pair named id_dsa and id_dsa.pub > in your ~/.ssh/ directory. Add the following to your ~/.bash_profile: > eval `keychain --eval --agents ssh id_rsa`
I suspect a typo here, but JIC I'm missing something: if "you have a DSA key pair" then why should one have `id_rsa` in the command above?
TomRoche (talk) 04:56, 18 April 2014 (UTC)
Tom, you are correct. That is a typo.
--Daniel Robbins (talk) 13:13, 18 April 2014 (UTC)
It appears there is a missing graphic or code block between these paragraphs.
>Note that when keychain runs for the first time after your local system has booted, you will be prompted for a passphrase for your private key file if it is encrypted. But here's the nice thing about using keychain -- even if you are using an encrypted private key file, you will only need to enter your passphrase when your system first boots (or in the case of a server, when you first log in.) After that, ssh-agent is already running and has your decrypted private key cached in memory. So if you open a new shell, you will see something like this: >This means that you can now ssh to your heart's content, without supplying a passphrase.