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I want to be able to remove the remote server key from known_hosts and add it again. The remote server gets updated often so I want to automatically remove the remote host key and add its new key to known_hosts. I can remove the key from known_hosts though it is clunky and uses a Process instead of going through JSCH. This works but I encounter this message whenever I try to access the server:

The authenticity of host '192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is 10:10:30:00:e7:0c:d3:18:cf:ac:42:e2:f3:51:25:bg.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? 

I know it is possible to get around this message using a UserInfo but I use other ways of connecting to the remote server, such as a Process and the message would appear when I run those commands.

Is it possible to use JSCH to remove and add a host id from known_hosts?

Possibly related though it does not use jsch:

How can I write a program (script) to remove obsolete host keys from ~/.ssh/known_hosts?

2 Answers 2

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Yes you can add a remote host entry into your known_hosts file using JSch. As Jim Garrison answered, there are other ways around the issue, but here is how to do it in your code:

First, understand that as a default, if you do not specify a known_hosts file, JSch can still work, it will just create a run-time known_host file in memory, and add entrys automatically so long as Strict Host Key Checking is set to 'no'.

If you DO specify Known Hosts file, then JSch will add new entries to that file when Strict Host Key Check is set to 'no'

        JSch jsch = new JSch();

        jsch.setKnownHosts(knownHostsFile);
        logger.info("known hosts file set: " + knownHostsFile);

        jsch.addIdentity(privateKey);
        logger.info("rsa private key loaded: " + privateKey);

        Session session = jsch.getSession(user, host, port);
        java.util.Properties config = new java.util.Properties();

        // this setting will cause JSCH to automatically add all target servers' entry to the known_hosts file
        config.put("StrictHostKeyChecking", "no");  
        session.setConfig(config);

        session.connect();

This is not very secure behavior, but is a handy way to get JSCh to setup a new server entry for you. After your known hosts file is setup, I recommend turning your StrictHostKeyChecking back to yes.

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  • If I'm not mistaken, this would only work for commands ran within JSCH. if I had a Process, it would still give the the message above.
    – Aboutblank
    Mar 26, 2013 at 19:23
  • this would only set StricctHostKeyChecking to no for your JSCH session. If you then 'connect', JSCH is going to add the remote hosts entry for the session to the known_host file (permanently). The known_host update will update the file directly, if the actual file has been specified with setKnownHosts Mar 29, 2013 at 4:20
  • If the String knownHostsFile is not an existing file, you need to create it as an empty file first (at least I had to). Feb 5, 2019 at 13:52
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There is no need to programmatically manipulate known_hosts

ssh -oStrictHostKeyChecking=no remote-host

Or add

StrictHostKeyChecking no

to ~/.ssh/config. Read the ssh_config(5) man page for details.

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  • this seems to be the best I can do at the moment, I'm currently adding the setting at the beginning of the program and removing the setting on exit.
    – Aboutblank
    Mar 26, 2013 at 19:42

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