And since it is a rpi... you can just pop out the sdcard, and put in a different computer and see which ssh-key is in the second-partition at user-data/*/.ssh/authorized_keys if you are really curious (although since you are on windows, reading that partition which is ext4 might be more difficult).
On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 9:25 AM, Luca Dionisi <luca.dion...@gmail.com> wrote: > Just a couple of hints. > > 1. Double check username. > It might be different than that of the email you use to signon at Ubuntu. > E.g. my mail is luca.dion...@gmail.com while user on my RPi is > luca-dionisi. > > 2. Try flag "-v" with ssh. Check the id_rsa* files that it tries with. > > > > > On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 4:08 PM, George Gundry <george.gun...@4dml.com> > wrote: > > I followed the instructions here: > > https://developer.ubuntu.com/core/get-started/raspberry-pi-2-3 > > > > I have created a Ubuntu SSO account > > > > uploaded my SSH public key, > > > > used Win32DiskImager to burn the Ubuntu Core Pi3 image > > ubuntu-core-16-pi3.img to an SD card, > > > > booted the Pi3 connected to Ethernet, > > > > correctly get the “Press Enter to Configure” message, > > > > pass Network Config, > > > > entered my SSO account, > > > > got the ”Contacting Store” message, > > > > got the success reply back from the store saying the key had been stored > on > > the Pi and I can use ssh <username>@<ip address> > > > > Try to connect to pi over ssh as instructed, private key auth fails … > > > > Things I have tried: > > > > Different terminal emulators – putty; Remote Terminal; TokenShell/MD; > > command line ssh from another Pi; forcing use of specific private key > with > > -I option > > > > Different SSH key pairs – known good pair that we use elsewhere; new > keygen > > generated keys with passphrase; new keygen generated keys without > passphrase > > > > Different Pi’s – Work and home > > > > Different Ubuntu SSO accounts – created a new account from scratch, same > > result. > > > > In desperation, I tried to load 16.04 LTS, and this was successful so I > am > > confident the kit (Pi, SD card, network connection) is good. > > > > Nothing I have tried makes any difference, the private key is never > accepted > > by the Ubuntu Core device. > > > > I am keen to investigate migrating our IoT product from Raspbian Lite to > > Core, but can’t seem to get beyond step one ! > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Snapcraft mailing list > > Snapcraft@lists.snapcraft.io > > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/snapcraft > > > > -- > Snapcraft mailing list > Snapcraft@lists.snapcraft.io > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/ > mailman/listinfo/snapcraft >
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