You can as well use your other rsa key, but let’s not mix things up.Ĭonfigure the connection in /config: Host nassau Generate the needed pub/priv keys $ ssh_keygen -q -t rsa In case you’re trying to do the same on a Linux client, the process is far more simple. You can checkout the repo using URL in form svn+ssh://session-name/repo-name Smartsvn checkout windows#This way the configuration will be saved to Windows Registry, so that Tortoise can retrieve it later. The last part - this is important - go back to the first screen ( Session), name the session and hit „Save”. Next select the Connection / SSH / Auth section and use the private key saved in step one. Open PuTTY and enter URL in the form Remember, that it’s not your username - it’s the system user used for SVN (see server configuration below). You will not need to connect using PuTTY, you will however need to define a new session using it. Just copy the „paste ready” version - this will be used for the server configuration. Save the generated private key, the public key won’t be needed. Just use the defaults and enter a blank passphrase (convinience over security, it’s your call). Run PuTTYgen to generate a private/public key pair. PuTTY won’t be used per se, but it’s required for the configuration. Tortoise SVN is the best SVN client ever made, so I’m sticking to that. SVN repository without HTTP/snvserve access, only SSH.The process of configuring SVN over SSH using private/public key pairs is quite complicated, especially on Windows platform - I couldn’t find a robust instruction on the net, so I’m writing my own.
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