SSH-KEYGEN(1) General Commands Manual SSH-KEYGEN(1)

ssh-keygen
authentication key generation

ssh-keygen [-dq] [-b bits] [-N new_passphrase] [-C comment] [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -p [-P old_passphrase] [-N new_passphrase] [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -x [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -X [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -y [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -c [-P passphrase] [-C comment] [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -l [-f keyfile]

ssh-keygen -R

ssh-keygen generates and manages authentication keys for ssh(1). ssh-keygen defaults to generating an RSA key for use by protocols 1.3 and 1.5; specifying the -d flag will create a DSA key instead for use by protocol 2.0.

Normally each user wishing to use SSH with RSA or DSA authentication runs this once to create the authentication key in $HOME/.ssh/identity or $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa. Additionally, the system administrator may use this to generate host keys, as seen in /etc/rc.

Normally this program generates the key and asks for a file in which to store the private key. The public key is stored in a file with the same name but “.pub” appended. The program also asks for a passphrase. The passphrase may be empty to indicate no passphrase (host keys must have empty passphrase), or it may be a string of arbitrary length. Good passphrases are 10-30 characters long and are not simple sentences or otherwise easily guessable (English prose has only 1-2 bits of entropy per word, and provides very bad passphrases). The passphrase can be changed later by using the -p option.

There is no way to recover a lost passphrase. If the passphrase is lost or forgotten, you will have to generate a new key and copy the corresponding public key to other machines.

For RSA, there is also a comment field in the key file that is only for convenience to the user to help identify the key. The comment can tell what the key is for, or whatever is useful. The comment is initialized to “user@host” when the key is created, but can be changed using the -c option.

After a key is generated, instructions below detail where the keys should be placed to be activated.

The options are as follows:

bits
Specifies the number of bits in the key to create. Minimum is 512 bits. Generally 1024 bits is considered sufficient, and key sizes above that no longer improve security but make things slower. The default is 1024 bits.
Requests changing the comment in the private and public key files. The program will prompt for the file containing the private keys, for passphrase if the key has one, and for the new comment.
Specifies the filename of the key file.
Show fingerprint of specified private or public key file.
Requests changing the passphrase of a private key file instead of creating a new private key. The program will prompt for the file containing the private key, for the old passphrase, and twice for the new passphrase.
Silence ssh-keygen. Used by /etc/rc when creating a new key.
comment
Provides the new comment.
new_passphrase
Provides the new passphrase.
passphrase
Provides the (old) passphrase.
If RSA support is functional, immediately exits with code 0. If RSA support is not functional, exits with code 1. This flag will be removed once the RSA patent expires.
This option will read a private OpenSSH DSA format file and print a SSH2-compatible public key to stdout.
This option will read a SSH2-compatible public key file and print an OpenSSH DSA compatible public key to stdout.
This option will read a private OpenSSH DSA format file and print an OpenSSH DSA public key to stdout.

$HOME/.ssh/identity
Contains the RSA authentication identity of the user. This file should not be readable by anyone but the user. It is possible to specify a passphrase when generating the key; that passphrase will be used to encrypt the private part of this file using 3DES. This file is not automatically accessed by ssh-keygen but it is offered as the default file for the private key. sshd(8) will read this file when a login attempt is made.
$HOME/.ssh/identity.pub
Contains the public key for authentication. The contents of this file should be added to $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys on all machines where you wish to log in using RSA authentication. There is no need to keep the contents of this file secret.
$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa
Contains the DSA authentication identity of the user. This file should not be readable by anyone but the user. It is possible to specify a passphrase when generating the key; that passphrase will be used to encrypt the private part of this file using 3DES. This file is not automatically accessed by ssh-keygen but it is offered as the default file for the private key. sshd(8) will read this file when a login attempt is made.
$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub
Contains the public key for authentication. The contents of this file should be added to $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys2 on all machines where you wish to log in using DSA authentication. There is no need to keep the contents of this file secret.

Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>

OpenSSH is a derivative of the original (free) ssh 1.2.12 release, but with bugs removed and newer features re-added. Rapidly after the 1.2.12 release, newer versions bore successively more restrictive licenses. This version of OpenSSH

  • has all components of a restrictive nature (i.e., patents) directly removed from the source code; any licensed or patented components are chosen from external libraries.
  • has been updated to support ssh protocol 1.5.
  • contains added support for kerberos(8) authentication and ticket passing.
  • supports one-time password authentication with skey(1).

ssh(1), ssh-add(1), ssh-agent(1), sshd(8),
September 25, 1999 BSD