In that case you have a few options.
1. Enable password authentication on the desktop.
2. Move the key another way (email pubkey, pastebin, etc)
3. On your desktop, copy the key from your laptop.
Using either password auth, or by adding an existing key to your
laptop's authorised keys file.
If you use GitHub you can see any public keys you've added to your
account like so: https://github.com/borcean.keys
Replacing 'borcean' with your username.
On Wed, Apr 19, 2023 at 12:08 PM Rich Shepard <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 19 Apr 2023, Jeffrey Borcean wrote:
>
> > Are you able to ssh into your desktop from the laptop?
>
> Jeffrey,
>
> Nope. That's what I'm trying to do.
>
> > It looks like the desktop is configured to use keys for
> > authentication, but you don't have any trusted keys on the laptop. So
> > you can't connect.
>
> I just used ssh-keygen to produce a new pair of ED25519 keys and a
> passphrase.
>
> > If you have another key that is already autorised you can specify the
> > key with: -i identiy_file
>
> This is a new installation on the laptop.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rich