Generating A New SSH Key and Adding It To The Ssh-Agent - GitHub Docs
Generating A New SSH Key and Adding It To The Ssh-Agent - GitHub Docs
In this article
Generating a new SSH key
Adding your SSH key to the ssh-agent
Further reading
If you don't already have an SSH key, you must generate a new SSH key. If you're unsure whether
you already have an SSH key, check for existing keys.
If you don't want to reenter your passphrase every time you use your SSH key, you can add your
key to the SSH agent, which manages your SSH keys and remembers your passphrase.
1 Open Terminal.
This creates a new ssh key, using the provided email as a label.
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3 When you're prompted to "Enter a file in which to save the key," press Enter. This accepts
the default file location.
> Enter a file in which to save the key (/home/you/.ssh/id_rsa): [Press enter]
4 At the prompt, type a secure passphrase. For more information, see "Working with SSH
key passphrases".
Before adding a new SSH key to the ssh-agent to manage your keys, you should have checked
for existing SSH keys and generated a new SSH key.
2 Add your SSH private key to the ssh-agent. If you created your key with a different name,
or if you are adding an existing key that has a different name, replace id_rsa in the
command with the name of your private key file.
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Further reading
"About SSH"
"Working with SSH key passphrases"
"Authorizing an SSH key for use with SAML single sign-on"
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