-\versionid $Id: pubkey.but,v 1.21 2003/01/16 15:43:18 jacob Exp $
+\define{versionidpubkey} \versionid $Id$
\C{pubkey} Using public keys for SSH authentication
PuTTYgen later (see \k{puttygen-load}) and the public key will be
available for copying and pasting again.
-\k{pubkey-gettingready} describes the typical process of configuring
+\K{pubkey-gettingready} describes the typical process of configuring
PuTTY to attempt public-key authentication, and configuring your SSH
server to accept it.
You may also need to ensure that your home directory, your \c{.ssh}
directory, and any other files involved (such as
\c{authorized_keys}, \c{authorized_keys2} or \c{authorization}) are
-not group-writable. You can typically do this by using a command
-such as
+not group-writable or world-writable. You can typically do this by
+using a command such as
-\c chmod g-w $HOME $HOME/.ssh $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
+\c chmod go-w $HOME $HOME/.ssh $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
Your server should now be configured to accept authentication using
your private key. Now you need to configure PuTTY to \e{attempt}