Hi,
I tried: ssh-agent ssh-add (entered passphrase) ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED] And Bang ... It is still asking for the passphrase ... Ok, whatsoever ... I stick to entering the password by hand. The funny thing is, that I created a key today for the first time, but was accessing this repository for months without entering the password manually. I wasn't working on that project for couple of weeks and now it is not working anymore. What I changed is: SuSe 8.0 -> Debian Stable/Testing/Unstable (same effect, no matter what version I use) and upgrading from eclipse 2.0.1 to 2.1 M4. Any of this changes or some change at sourceforge cut me off. Mariano On Wed, 2002-12-25 at 21:28, David Goodenough wrote: > On Wednesday 25 December 2002 17:38, Mariano Kamp wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I am using eclipse (http://eclipse.org) to access a cvs repository by > > using ext:. The problem is that it asks for the ssh password on the > > command line. Anything I can do to pass it in automatically? > > > > The short help of ssh looks like this: > > > > mkamp@hamlet:~$ ssh > > Usage: ssh [options] host [command] > > Options: > > -l user Log in using this user name. > > -n Redirect input from /dev/null. > > -F config Config file (default: ~/.ssh/config). > > -A Enable authentication agent forwarding. > > -a Disable authentication agent forwarding (default). > > -X Enable X11 connection forwarding. > > -x Disable X11 connection forwarding (default). > > -i file Identity for public key authentication (default: > > ~/.ssh/identity) > > -t Tty; allocate a tty even if command is given. > > -T Do not allocate a tty. > > -v Verbose; display verbose debugging messages. > > Multiple -v increases verbosity. > > -V Display version number only. > > -q Quiet; don't display any warning messages. > > -f Fork into background after authentication. > > -e char Set escape character; ``none'' = disable (default: ~). > > -c cipher Select encryption algorithm > > -m macs Specify MAC algorithms for protocol version 2. > > -p port Connect to this port. Server must be on the same port. > > -L listen-port:host:port Forward local port to remote address > > -R listen-port:host:port Forward remote port to local address > > These cause ssh to listen for connections on a port, and > > forward them to the other side by connecting to host:port. > > -D port Enable dynamic application-level port forwarding. > > -C Enable compression. > > -N Do not execute a shell or command. > > -g Allow remote hosts to connect to forwarded ports. > > -1 Force protocol version 1. > > -2 Force protocol version 2. > > -4 Use IPv4 only. > > -6 Use IPv6 only. > > -o 'option' Process the option as if it was read from a configuration > > file. > > -s Invoke command (mandatory) as SSH2 subsystem. > > -b addr Local IP address. > > > > I have also looked at the man page with not much of a success. I need > > something like a parameter -pw xyz to customize eclipse. > > > > Any ideas? > > > > Cheers, > > Mariano > > You can not do it directly, but if you use ssh-agent and ssh-add you can > add the ID file and open it with your password before you start eclipse. > > If you are using KDE you may find that ssh-agent is already started, and > all you need is to call ssh-add. > > David > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

