I use a private SSH key and passwordless entry for a number of user accounts on a server that hosts a number of websites.
I use the same private key for each user accoun
Update: as an additional security recommendation, you should generate a new set of keys for a new machine and send your new public key out to the various hosts you use it on, rather than copying your private keys. If you're just moving everything to a new computer however, you can take your keys with you, but remember to destroy them securely on the old computer.
The correct answer is to copy your .ssh
directory from the old machine to the new. This part is easy (scp -r .ssh user@newmachinehost:~
will do fine—or you can type the keys in character-by-character, up to you).
BUT—I think the missing link to answer this question is what you have to do after you copy your private keys to the new machine.
I had to run the following for each key (I have 3 separate keys for various organizations)
ssh-add .ssh/[key-filename]
If the filename argument is omitted, id_rsa
is assumed.
Once you do this to each key (and enter they key's passphrase if required; it will prompt you), ssh will be able to use those keys to authenticate.
Otherwise, no amount of copying will do much. SSH will ignore the keys in .ssh until they are explicitly used (via ssh -i [keyfilename] ...
).