Are there any reasons to get a pubkey denied after you run ssh-copy-id onto your server? I’ve already restarted the sshd service but I still get pubkey denied after I copied my ssh I.D. to my server. I am thinking about just removing all the keys I have on the server and re-adding them but I was hoping someone else may have an idea before I do that. Thanks!
EDIT: OKAY. I fixed it. I appreciate all the help I received. I still really could not figure out what the actual issue is. But I did have some extra ssh keys that I wasn’t using from old machines and after I deleted those and readded my key everything seems to work
Check perms on the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file on the server side (should be 0600) and the ~/.ssh dir itself?
Have you confirmed that the public keys exist on the remote server in your
.ssh
directory? Are the permissions correct?I’ll have to check when I get off work. I never have any errors when copying my id so I am not sure why they wouldn’t be there but I will check
Same. I’ve never had it screw up before, but the only thing I can imagine is that something’s not right with the keys.
As an aside, I did recently create a new server, and somehow managed to completely ignore the errors in
ssh-copy-id
. Turns out I forgot to use-m
(to create my home directory) inuseradd
when I went to create my personal account. Oops!
Also: Make sure that the user you ran “ssh-copy-id” against on the remote machine is also the user you’re trying to log in with.
Try running this command on your target system:
cat $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
Does the private key part of your key pair show up in the list?
How many private keys do you have in your client machine? Sometimes people generate a new key par but there’s a previous one on the system that gets served before the right one. Go into your
.ssh
directory in the client and check if there’s anything else there.