151

(I am using MAC)

My id_rsa starts with

-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----

but I expect it to starts with

-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

I have send my id_rsa.pub to server administrator to get the access to server, so I don't want to generate a new key.

  1. Is there any way that I can transfer my id_rsa which is a openssh private key to a RSA private key? (command please.)

  2. If I can transfer, do I also need to transfer id_rsa.pub? (command please.) It seems id_rsa.pub doesn't have a header like id_rsa, so I am not sure if I should also transfer this.

6 Answers 6

247

You have an OpenSSH format key and want a PEM format key. It is not intuitive to me, but the suggested way to convert is by changing the password for the key and writing it in a different format at the same time.

The command looks like this:

ssh-keygen -p -N "" -m pem -f /path/to/key

It will change the file in place, so make a backup of your current key just in case. -N "" will set the passphrase as none. I haven't tested this with a passphrase.

The public key should be fine as is.

For full explanation of the above command, see the -m option here: https://man.openbsd.org/ssh-keygen#m

12
  • 14
    This does not change the content of he file for me
    – Whimusical
    May 12, 2020 at 17:15
  • 2
    @Whimusical, Please say what it does instead of changing the file, if anything. It would also help to know what kind of key you are working with, what you expect, and what OS you are using. Generally, more details.
    – Tad M.
    May 14, 2020 at 14:16
  • 4
    I discovered my problem occurred only because the key was generated elliptically. Regular ones are correctly converted
    – Whimusical
    May 15, 2020 at 15:11
  • 1
    How can we do the reverse conversion i.e. from PEM to OPENSSH format? With a CLI because I want to be able to employ it in Terraform. May 21, 2020 at 8:24
  • 8
    @TadM I got this message. "Failed to load key: invalid format". How can I fix this?
    – LeadStar
    Jul 1, 2020 at 13:44
27

Here's what worked for me for an in-place conversion of a key with a passphrase:

ssh-keygen -p -P "old passphrase" -N "new passphrase" -m pem -f path/to/key
6
  • 13
    ssh-keygen -m pem -f /path/to/key for those of us not using passphrases
    – jspinella
    Sep 23, 2020 at 23:03
  • Can it be done without replacing the original OPENSSH key? I'm using it for remote connection but I need an RSA key for MySQL Workbench. I'm just guessing but I could use both, OPENSSH for SSH terminal connection and RSA for MySQL Workbench/
    – Luciano
    Jan 11, 2021 at 5:26
  • 6
    @jspinella , That will generate a new key overwriting the existing /path/to/key file. Jan 26, 2021 at 20:55
  • 2
    @TejasSarade I think you'd just want to add -e > new-key-file.pem to the end of that
    – jspinella
    Jan 26, 2021 at 21:36
  • @jspinella -e only exports/prints public key. That is useful for converting public key to other formats than SSH. But it will not export/save the private key. Jan 26, 2021 at 22:17
9
  1. Install and open puttygen
  2. Click on "Load an existing private key file"
  3. Click on menu item "Conversions" -> "Export OpenSSH key"
  4. Save file
3

You can achieve this easily if you can get your hands on a linux system. I am using ubuntu 18.04 and did the following:

  1. update packages: sudo apt update
  2. install putty: sudo apt install putty
  3. install puttygen: sudo apt install putty-tools
  4. convert the private key to the intermediate format SSHv2: puttygen yourkey -O private-sshcom -o newkey
  5. convert it back to RSA/PEM: ssh-keygen -i -f newkey > newkey_in_right_format

And you are good to go

0

Some of the answers above didn't work and I actually ran into yet another problem when trying to create a RSA private key from the OpenSSH private key using ssh-keygen command: unsupported cipher 3des-cbc. A helpful gist for that problem can be found here: https://gist.github.com/twelve17/0449491d86158960fdb630160799ff23.

The following command worked for me to create a valid and working RSA private key from a (Putty on Windows generated) OpenSSH key using:

$ sudo apt install putty-tools
$ puttygen existing_key.ppk -o id_rsa -O private-openssh
# enter passphrase if needed
0

What has worked just fine for me in converting a private key to/from RSA to/from OpenSSH is simply changing the header and footer in vi from one format to another. E.g.: change the top from

-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

to

-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----

and the footer from

-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

to

-----END OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----

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