ssh-add -l displays that I have 3 RSA keys added to my SSH agent. ssh-add -L displays the public keys. How do I get the private keys as well, so that I can save them to a file? Or is it by design that this is impossible, i.e. ssh-agent can be asked to do operations using the private key, but it will never return the key itself? If it is so, then how can I ask it to encrypt/decrypt a number for me?

It's OK that I have to write code for this (the programming language doesn't matter), but I'd prefer using an existing tool or a library.

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I've just found a very good explanation about how ssh-agent works: http://www.unixwiz.net/techtips/ssh-agent-forwarding.html . This partially answers some of my questions.

  • One of the more clever aspects of the agent is how it can verify a user's identity (or more precisely, possession of a private key) without revealing that private key to anybody.

  • One of the security benefits of agent forwarding is that the user's private key never appears on remote systems or on the wire, even in encrypted form.

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this is more a sysadmin question, but just look in ~/.ssh/id_rsa or id_dsa for the private keys. They had to get into ssh-agent in the first place...

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I know about the ~/.ssh/id* files, and I don't care about them. I want to get access to the keys in the memory of an ssh-agent. – pts Jun 4 '10 at 18:23
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