I know the answer is out there, but I'm pretty Unix-dumb and probably wouldn't recognize the solution if it hit me in the face.

I'm on a Mac, connecting to a SVN server via SSH tunneling. I have to ssh-add privateKey.txt every time I want to connect to the SVN server (Both Cornerstone and Xcode are connecting to SVN).

Is there a way to "save" the key somewhere so I don't have to do this every time? Add it to my Keychain? Some config file? Start up script?

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5 Answers

First, move your private key file into ~/.ssh. This is not strictly necessary but it's the standard place for such things.

Then run ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/privateKey.txt. It'll prompt for your passphrase if necessary, then add it to your Keychain.

After that, you shouldn't have to do anything else. A slightly longer explanation is available here.

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I don't have much experience with macs, so not sure if this version is ok for your, but have a look at http://www.phil.uu.nl/~xges/ssh/

If this particular app doesn't work, that's what you're looking for anyways - ssh agent. On unix-like boxes, you'd want to start your whole window manager through that, to get the global effect, but it might not be possible in osx.

Some more info: http://www-uxsup.csx.cam.ac.uk/~aia21/osx/leopard-ssh.html

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After much exploration, I think I've found the answer to this issue completely. First, make sure you do ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/your_key_here. This adds the key to your keychain. Some places, I have read that this is enough, but I wasn't certain. This is also mac-specific, so if you need to do this on another unix flavor, you won't have this option necessarily.

For good measure, I edited the ~/.ssh/config file (you may have to create it) to point to all the keys I have. Mine has the following:

IdentityFile ~/.ssh/identity
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_dsa 
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/my_other_identity_here
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/yet_another_identity_here

According to the man page for ssh_config, it will try these in order. I'm not sure if the first three default ones I have listed need to be there, but I have included them anyway.

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sshkeychain is one possibility. installs fine with macports using:

sudo port install sshkeychain

it uses the keychain to store passwords, and you may simply launch it at the start-up of your login session (using at the first launch the usual right-ght click in the dock's icon + "launch at startup")

Note that Apple's svn uses keychain to store passwords but not necessarily the svn binary you would build with macports.

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up vote 0 down vote accepted

Just to come full circle with this, the easiest solution I came up with was writing a 1-liner script to call ssh-add, and having this run on startup.

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