![]() ![]() ![]() 14:31:16.594 Recycle bin: Delete to: No, Overwritten to: No, Bin path: 14:31:16.594 Cache directory changes: Yes, Permanent: Yes 14:31:16.594 Local directory: default, Remote directory: home, Update: Yes, Cache: Yes 14:31:16.594 Clear aliases: Yes, Unset nat.vars: Yes, Resolve symlinks: Yes Follow directory symlinks: No 14:31:16.594 Return code variable: Autodetect Lookup user groups: Auto 14:31:16.594 SSH Bugs: Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto,Auto 14:31:16.593 Ciphers: aes,chacha20,blowfish,3des,WARN,arcfour,des Ssh2DES: No 14:31:16.593 Try agent: Yes Agent forwarding: Yes TIS/CryptoCard: No KI: Yes GSSAPI: Yes 14:31:16.593 SSH protocol version: 2 Compression: No 14:31:16.593 Ping type: Off, Ping interval: 30 sec Timeout: 15 sec 14:31:16.593 User name: ubuntu (Password: No, Key file: Yes, Passphrase: No) 14:31:16.593 Time zone: Current: GMT 2, Standard: GMT 1 (Mitteleuropäische Zeit), DST: GMT 2 (Mitteleuropäische Sommerzeit), DST Start:, DST End: 14:31:16.592 Configuration: HKCU\Software\Martin Prikryl\WinSCP 2\ ![]() I am providing both programs the same path to the key, which is in the. With putty I have to enter the user name, while with WinSCP I can either define it beforehand, or enter it (I tried both). The user name is "ubuntu", and by reading the key the server somehow knows who I am, and which virtual machine to connect me to. The only thing I did, was to enter the server IP and the path to the key in both GUIs. This works fine if I use Putty, but the same key is refused when I try it with WinSCP. I try to connect to a server using WinSCP and I authenticate with a private key. ![]()
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