I found the answer myself.
I've found out that ssh-keygen does this when given the '-l' option and
a file name.
<OPINION>
Not very intuitive, IMO. A 'keygen' application makes me thinking of
generating (creating) keys, not to do any other administrative work with
existing keys. IMO the application should have been named 'ssh-keys' or
something similar. (I know, I could create a short-cut or an alias or
whatever. But that's not necessary now when I know it.)
OK, I'll stop grumbling here... ;-)
</OPINION>
Regards
Gustav
Gustav Schaffter wrote:
<snip>
> Question:
> How can I, on the sshd server computer extract this fingerprint from a
> public key so that I can read it up to my friend over the telephone and
> he can know for sure that he's connecting to my computer?
--
pgp = Pretty Good Privacy. To get my public pgp key, send an e-mail to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Visit my web site at http://www.schaffter.com
_______________________________________________
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list