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I have connected to a server via SFTP using FileZilla and accepted adding the server's SSH key to the key cache in FileZilla.

How can I extract this cached key to a keyfile so that may use it through other SFTP applications that require a keyfile be made available?

I have not been able to find anything in the FileZilla documentation related to this.

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  • The end result I'm shooting for is to do SFTP via Java using a library from EnterpriseDT.com. Part of their API requires providing a key file or the key text itself when connecting. I can't seem to find info though on how to pull the key information from the SFTP server that I'm trying to connect to so that I can save it. Ideas? Jan 29, 2010 at 17:29

5 Answers 5

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If you use the standard openssh console client (cygwin or from linux), host keys are stored, one-per-line, in ~/.ssh/known_hosts. From there, it's a simple matter of figuring out which bit of that host key is needed for your library.

Putty also stores host keys, but it appears to encode them in hex. Those can be found at HKCUR\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\SshHostKeys

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Thomas was correct. FileZilla piggybacks on PuTTY's PSFTP program and stores the saved keys encoded in a hex format at the registry key he listed (HKCUR\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\SshHostKeys). I needed the key in known_hosts format, so I has able to install a windows version of openssh at his recommendation and used the ssh-keyscan tool to hit the server and save the key info out in the correct format:

ssh-keyscan -t rsa <my_ftp_ip_address> > c:\known_hosts
ssh-keyscan -t dsa <my_ftp_ip_address> > c:\known_hosts

Thank you Thomas and SO!

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If you'd rather use a GUI, you can snag the host key from the log window or the first-time connection popup using WinSCP FTP client: https://winscp.net/eng/docs/ssh_verifying_the_host_key

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Thanks Dougman for the tip!

To further help any newcomers reading your answer.
Prior to running the ssh-keyscan, assuming the openssh is install by default, there is a few commands that needs to be run (read the quickstart/readme install for details).
Here are my commands which allow me to obtain the host key.

C:\Program Files\OpenSSH\bin>mkgroup -l >> ..\etc\group
C:\Program Files\OpenSSH\bin>mkpasswd -l >> ..\etc\passwd
C:\Program Files\OpenSSH\bin>net start opensshd
The OpenSSH Server service is starting.
The OpenSSH Server service was started successfully.
C:\Program Files\OpenSSH\bin>ssh-keyscan -t rsa vivo.sg.m.com > c:\known_hosts
vivo.sg.m.com SSH-2.0-Sun_SSH_1.1
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Unless I am misunderstanding you: you don't need to.

If you connect to the server with another application (ie: PuTTY) and it has not seen the server before then you will be prompted to accept the key.

I see why you might want to do this, but each application could have it's own way to store keys.

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  • 1
    Because he's writing his own application in Java.
    – PRMan
    Oct 26, 2017 at 23:53
  • Or, running a PowerShell script using the WinScpNet library. Could be multiple reasons.
    – Jeff Reddy
    Jul 18, 2019 at 15:57

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