Using keys

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Revision as of 17:03, 20 January 2009 by Freephile (talk | contribs) (fixes incorrect link)

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There are a lot of things you can do with computers to create security, that's why Security is a process, not a product. One such thing is to use SSH Keys to authenticate with a remote host, rather than typing in your password all the time. Of course, using SSH Authentication keys is convenient as well.

Visit http://sial.org/howto/openssh/publickey-auth/ for a better and more in-depth look at using SSH keys

Secure Shell Key Authentication[edit | edit source]

Setting up SSH Key Authentication allows a user account to connect from one server to another without requiring a password login. This can be utilized for applications (e.g. Nagios monitoring other servers), as well as for publish scripts that move files around servers as well as individual users.

Procedure[edit | edit source]

  1. If you are an administrator, please assume the role of the user for whom you are setting up this service.
    1. sudo su user
  2. Ensure the user has a ~/.ssh/ directory with appropriate permissions. It must allow the user access for RWX, and group and other permissions must not be writable. Typically, 755 is a good setup. If they don't have one, then
    mkdir ~/.ssh/ && chmod 755 ~/.ssh
    
    Note that the actual identity files should NOT be readable by anyone but the user because ssh-add ignores identity files if they are accessible by others. That means files like id_rsa should be 600 and id_rsa.pub should be 644
  3. Create a new private/public key pairing for the user. Type: RSA, Bits: 1024, File:~/.svn/identity[.pub]
    1. ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 1024 -f ~/.ssh/identity
      
  4. Copy the contents of ~/.ssh/identity.pub so you can paste it in a file on the remote server.
  5. Login to the remote server and assume the role of the user for whom you are setting up this service in step 1 above.
  6. On the remote server, ensure the user account also has a ~/.ssh/ directory with the same permissions as in step 2 above.
  7. Open a Text Editor and edit ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
    1. Paste the public key from step 4 above into this file, on one line only.
  8. Try logging in from the first server to the second without using a password.

Troubleshooting[edit | edit source]

Check /var/log/auth.log on the remote server for details if this doesn't work as expected.

If you want to check what version of SSH is running on a server, you could do this with telnet (although the ssh client will also tell you this information):

$ telnet example.com 22
Trying 192.168.1.1...
Connected to example.com.
Escape character is '^]'.
SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_4.3
^]
telnet> quit
Connection closed.