How do you use an identity file with rsync?
This is the syntax I think I should be using with rsync to use an identity file to connect:
rsync -avz -e 'ssh -p1234 -i ~/.ssh/1234-identity' \ "/local/dir/" remoteUser@22.33.44.55:"/remote/dir/"
But it's giving me an error:
Warning: Identity file ~/.ssh/1234-identity not accessible: No such file or directory.
The file is fine, permissions are set correctly, it works when doing ssh - just not with rsync - at least in my syntax. What am I doing wrong? Is it trying to look for the identity file on the remote machine? If so, how do I specify that I want to use an identity file on my local machine?
use key file with rsync:
This works for me
You may want to use
ssh-agent
andssh-add
to load the key into memory.ssh
will try identities from ssh-agent automatically if it can find them. Commands would bessh-agent
is a user daemon which holds unencrypted ssh keys in memory. ssh finds it based on environment variables which ssh-agent outputs when run. Usingeval
to evaluate this output creates the environment variables.ssh-add
is the command which manages the keys memory. The agent can be locked using ssh-add. A default lifetime for a key can be specified when ssh-agent is started, and or specified for a key when it is added.You might also want to setup a ~/.ssh/config file to supply the port and key definition. (See `man ssh_config for more options.)
Single quoting the ssh command will prevent shell expansion which is needed for
~
or$HOME
. You could use the full or relative path to the key in single quotes.You have to specify the absolute path to your identity key file. This probably some sort of quirck in rsync. (it can't be perfect after all)
I ran into this issue just a few days ago :-)
Are you executing the command in bash or sh? This might make a difference. Try replacing
~
with$HOME
. Try double-quoting the string for the-e
option.Use either
$HOME
or full path to the key:
Tested with rsync 3.0.9 on Ubuntu