On Wed, 9 May 2007, Nathan Aubrey wrote: > On Tuesday 08 May 2007, Jeremy C. Reed wrote: > > I frequently use ssh-agent to store passwords associated with SSH keys. > > > > But does anyone know of a tool or way to store passwords for SSH logins > > without a key? > > > > I use a SSH server for frequent manual transactions and it is an > > inconvenience for me to re-enter password every time. It is not an option > > for me to setup an SSH key on the server (I don't control it). > Maybe I'm missunderstanding, but don't you create your key on your > workstation, not on the server? Then copy it to the .ssh/authorized_keys in > the home directory of the user you log in as? Sorry. I wasn't clear: I can not copy my key to authorized_keys. I don't have write access (and I have no login shell). And it is not using public key authentication. > Or do you mean the initial keys that are created the very first time you > run sshd on the server? I can't run sshd there. It is not my server and I have no way to login or execute any arbitrary command. I may use expect. But maybe ssh-agent can be patched to do what I want, since it already stores information. Or now I am finding other ideas... anyone know of a ssh client that uses libgnome-keyring? Or do you know of any other "keyring" implementations? I read that Apple Keychain can help with SSH accounts. And I found a patch to use that. (I don't use Mac OS X here though, so this is just an idea for me.) So I could probably implement my own keyring tool. Jeremy C. Reed --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss