table of contents
SSH-ADD(1) | General Commands Manual | SSH-ADD(1) |
NAME¶
ssh-add
— adds
private key identities to the authentication agent
SYNOPSIS¶
ssh-add |
[-cDdLlXx ] [-t
life] [file ...] |
ssh-add |
-s pkcs11 |
ssh-add |
-e pkcs11 |
ssh-add |
-n [-T
token] |
DESCRIPTION¶
ssh-add
adds private key identities to the
authentication agent, ssh-agent(1). When run without
arguments, it adds the files ~/.ssh/id_rsa,
~/.ssh/id_dsa,
~/.ssh/id_ecdsa and
~/.ssh/identity. After loading a private key,
ssh-add
will try to load corresponding certificate
information from the filename obtained by appending
-cert.pub to the name of the private key file.
Alternative file names can be given on the command line.
If any file requires a passphrase, ssh-add
asks for the passphrase from the user. The passphrase is read from the
user's tty. ssh-add
retries the last passphrase if
multiple identity files are given.
The authentication agent must be running and the
SSH_AUTH_SOCK
environment variable must contain the
name of its socket for ssh-add
to work.
The options are as follows:
-c
- Indicates that added identities should be subject to confirmation before
being used for authentication. Confirmation is performed by the
SSH_ASKPASS
program mentioned below. Successful confirmation is signaled by a zero exit status from theSSH_ASKPASS
program, rather than text entered into the requester. -D
- Deletes all identities from the agent.
-d
- Instead of adding identities, removes identities from the agent. If
ssh-add
has been run without arguments, the keys for the default identities will be removed. Otherwise, the argument list will be interpreted as a list of paths to public key files and matching keys will be removed from the agent. If no public key is found at a given path,ssh-add
will append .pub and retry. -e
pkcs11- Remove key provided by pkcs11.
-L
- Lists public key parameters of all identities currently represented by the agent.
-l
- Lists fingerprints of all identities currently represented by the agent.
-s
pkcs11- Add key provided by pkcs11.
-t
life- Set a maximum lifetime when adding identities to an agent. The lifetime may be specified in seconds or in a time format specified in
-T
token- Explicitly set token name. sshd_config(5).
-X
- Unlock the agent.
-x
- Lock the agent with a password.
ENVIRONMENT¶
DISPLAY and SSH_ASKPASS
- If
ssh-add
needs a passphrase, it will read the passphrase from the current terminal if it was run from a terminal. Ifssh-add
does not have a terminal associated with it butDISPLAY
andSSH_ASKPASS
are set, it will execute the program specified bySSH_ASKPASS
and open an X11 window to read the passphrase. This is particularly useful when callingssh-add
from a .xsession or related script. (Note that on some machines it may be necessary to redirect the input from /dev/null to make this work.) SSH_AUTH_SOCK
- Identifies the path of a unix-domain socket used to communicate with the agent.
SSH_USE_STRONG_RNG
- The reseeding of the OpenSSL random generator is usually done from
/dev/urandom
. If theSSH_USE_STRONG_RNG
environment variable is set to value other than0
the OpenSSL random generator is reseeded from/dev/random
. The number of bytes read is defined by the SSH_USE_STRONG_RNG value. Minimum is 14 bytes. This setting is not recommended on the computers without the hardware random generator because insufficient entropy causes the connection to be blocked until enough entropy is available.
FILES¶
- ~/.ssh/identity
- Contains the protocol version 1 RSA authentication identity of the user.
- ~/.ssh/id_dsa
- Contains the protocol version 2 DSA authentication identity of the user.
- ~/.ssh/id_ecdsa
- Contains the protocol version 2 ECDSA authentication identity of the user.
- ~/.ssh/id_rsa
- Contains the protocol version 2 RSA authentication identity of the user.
Identity files should not be readable by anyone but the user. Note
that ssh-add
ignores identity files if they are
accessible by others.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
Exit status is 0 on success, 1 if the specified command fails, and
2 if ssh-add
is unable to contact the authentication
agent.
SEE ALSO¶
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. Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0.
June 12, 2007 | Linux 5.14.0-427.18.1.el9_4.x86_64 |