The keypair's can only be downloaded once from Amazon, presumably for security reasons. What you could do, is assign one of your Elastic IP's to the instance and route traffic through that normally. Snapshot the instance and bring up a duplicate with a new Keypair.
Switch the Elastic IP over to the new instance. This is not particularly elegant, but is much less downtime that a full shutdown Note: If you assign the Elastic IP to the instance, it will override the current public IP, so you will have to make sure to update DNS as well.
The keypair's can only be downloaded once from Amazon, presumably for security reasons. What you could do, is assign one of your Elastic IP's to the instance and route traffic through that normally. Snapshot the instance and bring up a duplicate with a new Keypair.
Switch the Elastic IP over to the new instance. This is not particularly elegant, but is much less downtime that a full shutdown. Note: If you assign the Elastic IP to the instance, it will override the current public IP, so you will have to make sure to update DNS as well.
Actually, you can assign a new keypair to the instance ONLY IF you stop the instance, detach the root partition (usually /dev/sda1) and attach it to another instance. After doing that, you will have access to /home/ubuntu/. You can generate a new .
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