apparently I don't even have that file in the first place. Is there a way to create it?
It will be created for you on your first ssh
call
ssh -T [email protected]
That iwll trigger a message like:
The authenticity of host '111.222.333.444 (111.222.333.444)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is f1:cf:58:ae:71:0b:c8:04:6f:34:a6:b2:e4:1e:0c:8b.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)?
Answering yes will create the ~/.ssh/known_hosts
As chepner says in the comments, you should get the server actual fingerprint ahead of times, before answering 'yes', and comparing that fingerprint to what is added to the ~/.ssh/known_hosts
.
See for instance "Securely add a host (e.g. GitHub) to the SSH known_hosts file".
For instance: github.com
does give its server fingerprints: compare it with ssh-keyscan -t rsa github.com | ssh-keygen -lf -
.
C:\Users\vonc\git>ssh-keyscan -t rsa github.com | ssh-keygen -lf -
# github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-4cec2db4
2048 SHA256:nThbg6kXUpJWGl7E1IGOCspRomTxdCARLviKw6E5SY8 github.com (RSA)
If it matches, then add it to your ~/.ssh/known_hosts
.
.ssh/known_hosts
is a file to edit, not a command to run.ssh
uses it if it's found. If the file isn't found, or the host you are connecting to isn't found in the file,ssh
will add the file after confirming you want to connect.ssh
. But if you want to, any text editor will do.