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authorJameson Graef Rollins <jrollins@phys.columbia.edu>2008-09-04 00:17:55 -0700
committerJameson Graef Rollins <jrollins@phys.columbia.edu>2008-09-04 00:17:55 -0700
commit7bd735abd6f9c2aa73e98a22ce48bea01bc097b7 (patch)
tree12edb5f3b2bb845cfdd63433ecb9956ca11fcca7 /website
parent9bd226416a364283309a62e0bedf318a143b5cb3 (diff)
some small changes to the web pages.
Diffstat (limited to 'website')
-rw-r--r--website/getting-started-user.mdwn28
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/website/getting-started-user.mdwn b/website/getting-started-user.mdwn
index 00b803e..947c2da 100644
--- a/website/getting-started-user.mdwn
+++ b/website/getting-started-user.mdwn
@@ -27,13 +27,13 @@ Keeping your `known_hosts` file in sync with your keyring
With your keyring updated, you want to make sure that OpenSSH can
still see the most recent trusted information about who the various
hosts are. This can be done with the monkeysphere-ssh-proxycommand
-(see next section) or with the update-known_hosts command:
+(see next section) or with the `update-known_hosts` command:
$ monkeysphere update-known_hosts
-This command will check to see if there is an OpenPGP key for
-each (non-hashed) host listed in the known_hosts file, and then add
-the key for that host to the known_hosts file if one is found. This
+This command will check to see if there is an OpenPGP key for each
+(non-hashed) host listed in the `known_hosts` file, and then add the
+key for that host to the `known_hosts` file if one is found. This
command could be added to a crontab as well, if desired.
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ Using `monkeysphere-ssh-proxycommand`(1)
----------------------------------------
The best way to handle host keys is to use the monkeysphere ssh proxy
-command. This command will make sure the known_hosts file is
+command. This command will make sure the `known_hosts` file is
up-to-date for the host you are connecting to with ssh. The best way
to integrate this is to add the following line to the "Host *" section
of your `~/.ssh/config` file:
@@ -64,28 +64,28 @@ FIXME: We should setup a way for someone to download a test gpg key and
then connect to a test server that is signed by this gpg key so users
can establish that they are setup correctly.
-The remaining steps will complete the second half: allow servers to
+The remaining steps will complete the second half: allowing servers to
verify you based on your OpenPGP key.
Setting up an OpenPGP authentication key
----------------------------------------
-First things first: you'll need to create a new subkey for your
-current key, if you don't already have one. If you already have a GPG
-key, you can add a subkey with:
+First things first: you'll need to create an "authentication" subkey
+for your current key, if you don't already have one. If you already
+have a GPG key, you can add an authentication subkey with:
$ monkeysphere gen-subkey
If you have more than one secret key, you'll need to specify the key
-you want to add a subkey to on the command line.
+you want to add the subkey to on the command line.
Using your OpenPGP authentication key for SSH
---------------------------------------------
-Once you have created an OpenPGP authentication key, you will need to
-feed it to your ssh agent.
+Once you have created an OpenPGP authentication subkey, you will need
+to feed it to your ssh agent.
Currently (2008-08-23), gnutls does not support this operation. In order
to take this step, you will need to upgrade to a patched version of
@@ -110,12 +110,12 @@ Miscellaneous
Users can also maintain their own `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` files with
the Monkeysphere. This is primarily useful for accounts on hosts that
-are not already systematically using the monkeysphere for user
+are not already systematically using the Monkeysphere for user
authentication. If you're not sure whether this is the case for your
host, ask your system administrator.
If you want to do this as a regular user, use the
-update-authorized_keys command:
+`update-authorized_keys` command:
$ monkeysphere update-authorized_keys