On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 04:06:11PM -0700, Jason Usher wrote: > > > --- On Thu, 5/17/12, Jason Hellenthal <jhellent...@dataix.net> wrote: > > > On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 02:17:03PM -0700, Jason Usher > > wrote: > > > I have some old 6.x FreeBSD systems that need their > > OpenSSH upgraded. > > > > > > Everything goes just fine, but when I am done, existing > > clients are now presented with this message: > > > > > > > > > WARNING: DSA key found for host hostname > > > in /root/.ssh/known_hosts:12 > > > DSA key fingerprint 4c:29:4b:6e:b8:6b:fa:49....... > > > > > > The authenticity of host 'hostname (10.1.2.3)' can't be > > established > > > but keys of different type are already known for this > > host. > > > RSA key fingerprint is a3:22:3d:cf:f2:46:09:f2...... > > > Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no) > > > > > > > You must be using different keys for your server than the > > one that has > > been generated before the upgrade. Just copy your keys over > > to the new > > location and restart the server daemon and you should be > > fine. > > > > copy /etc/ssh/* -> /usr/local/etc/ssh/ > > > You didn't read that error message.
Sorry I misread that. Decieving message... > > That is not the standard "key mismatch" error that you assumed it was. Look > at it again - it is saying that we do have a key for this server of type DSA, > but the client is receiving one of type RSA, etc. > > The keys are the same - they have not changed at all - they are just being > presented to clients in the reverse order, which is confusing them and > breaking automated, key-based login. > > I need to take current ssh server behavior (rsa, then dss) and change it back > to the old order (dss, then rsa). Have you attempted to change that order via sshd_config and placing the DSA directive before the RSA one ? -- - (2^(N-1)) _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"