Many applications (like PA Server Monitor!) use keys in the OpenSSH format, so save those via the Conversions menu. I recommend giving them a passphrase first. You should save the public and private key files. Once PuTTYgen has enough data, it will create some keys and show them in it’s display. Wiggle the mouse around randomly to help it get some random data to create the keys with as shown below: Press the Generate button to get started. The default SSH-2 RSA key type is good so leave that alone. The easiest way to do this is to download PuTTYgen from. Next, you need to generate a public/private key pair. If you don’t see SSH, you can enable it by going to Properties and then starting the service. In the vSphere client, go to Security Profile. They’re pretty easy once you figure them out (isn’t it always that way!).įirst, we need to enable SSH connections to our ESXi server. Having just struggled with this for a while, I thought I’d record the steps I took.
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