Viewed 3k times 3. I got message "Permission denied (publickey)" when trying to access SSH to EC2 on another local Ubuntu. Once you can do that, you can upload your key: Using ssh-copy-id - it will allow you to specify a different key if you're in the process of replacing your old one, for example. More Less. If you cannot get any remote access to the server (ssh, telnet, ftp), you would need physical access to it. I've pasted here the -v of a connection attempt to git@github.com. Each pair of keys is unique, and each public key only works with the private key from the same pair. There's a couple of similar scripts in both machines to be ran under power failure situations. NaCl plugin exited with status code 255. It's so strange to me. Active 3 years, 1 month ago. Log in or sign up to leave a comment log in sign up.

iMac, Mac OS X (10.4.10) Posted on Sep 19, … SSH passwordless root login gets “Permission denied (publickey).” Ask Question Asked 3 years, 1 month ago. I have two Raspberry Pi (with Raspbian 7 and 8) connected to the same LAN. Re: ssh Permission denied (publickey,password) Sorry I cannot tell if private message replies are working, since my Sent Items remains at 0.
best. no comments yet. Anyone got a clue what's going on? Thanks in advance! Sort by. 0 comments. One has a data connection with an APC UPS. Thank you. The public key is placed on your host server, and the private key on your own computer, where you will present it to the server in order to authenticate and initiate the SSH connection. Permission denied (publickey). It works fine on one of local ubuntu and also laptop. But then drop'd to the command line with the above message... Any ideas, why? That because it is adopted to real users, and you can make it do what you want. Permission denied (publickey) is the remote SSH server saying "I only accept public keys as an authentication method, go away". save hide report.

share. I have an instance of an application running in the cloud on Amazon EC2 instance, and I need to connect it from my local Ubuntu. Just me, but I always recommend using symbol rights instead of octal rights in chmod(1). That's your main challenge: Getting onto the remote system. 100% Upvoted.