** Also affects: openssh (Debian) via
   https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=203700
   Importance: Unknown
       Status: Unknown

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1872145

Title:
  explicit key offered after all agent keys, auth can fail before
  explicit key used

Status in openssh package in Ubuntu:
  Triaged
Status in openssh package in Debian:
  Unknown

Bug description:
  A user creates an ssh key and specifies it on the cmdline with 'ssh -i
  new_key user@host'.  The connection fails with the message "Too many
  authentication failures" displayed to the user.

  This would lead the user to believe that they failed to put the public
  portion of the new key on the destination and it will probably be hard
  for the average user to debug this.

  The root of this issue is that the user has a number of keys in
  ~/.ssh/ registered with their ssh agent.  The ssh command is offering
  each of these keys from the agent to the remote system before trying
  the explicit key from the command line.  There are enough agent keys
  to reach the failure limit (usually 5 keys) with the remote before
  they get to the explicit key.

  The solution today for the user is to head down into the ssh_config
  man page to find '-o IdentitiesOnly=yes' to skip the agent keys and
  only use the specified key.  But they're unlikely to do this because
  '-i' in the ssh man page doesn't suggest this and they'd only look for
  this if they actually understood the root cause of the problem, which
  is a bit cruel.

  We should consider changing the order of the keys offered to the
  remote to use explicit keys first followed by agent keys.  It would
  seem to me that this would honor the users intent of explicitly
  specifying a key to use.

  The current order makes this difficult for anyone fielding a user's
  authentication failure report as they must double check that ssh
  managed to actually try the key the user specified before it raised an
  error message about authentication failures.

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