There are several tests that depended in the past on the fact that we can not read public key from private encrypted keys. This is no longer the case for some time as the OpenSSH file format has public key in plaintext. This change just converts the same key into the PEM Format, which should still be opaque for us and trigger code paths that enforce opening of the accompanied public key file. Converted using the following command: $ ssh-keygen -m PEM -p -N secret -P secret -f tests/keys/id_rsa_protected Signed-off-by: Jakub Jelen <jjelen@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Sahana Prasad <sahana@redhat.com>
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The SSH library
Why?
Why not ? :) I've began to work on my own implementation of the ssh protocol because i didn't like the currently public ones. Not any allowed you to import and use the functions as a powerful library, and so i worked on a library-based SSH implementation which was non-existing in the free and open source software world.
How/Who?
If you downloaded this file, you must know what it is : a library for accessing ssh client services through C libraries calls in a simple manner. Everybody can use this software under the terms of the LGPL - see the COPYING file
If you ask yourself how to compile libssh, please read INSTALL before anything.
Where ?
Contributing
Please read the file 'CONTRIBUTING.md' next to this README file. It explains our copyright policy and how you should send patches for upstream inclusion.
Have fun and happy libssh hacking!
The libssh Team