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Revision 29 as of 2011-09-17 10:45:23
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Comment: DSA is no longer recommended, it's been the case for the last several years, please update the ducumentation as it is misleading
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## page was renamed from ssh
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ssh stands for '''s'''ecure '''sh'''ell and is a program for remote logins into other computers and for running single commands on other computers in a safe way, see [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Shell|Wikipedia - Secure Shell]] for more general information and [[http://www.openssh.org/|OpenSSH]], DebPkg:lsh-server or DebPkg:dropbear for the ssh homepage. (ssh replaces the unencrypted WikiPedia:telnet protocol, and adds many features.) '''SSH''' stands for '''S'''ecure '''Sh'''ell and is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network services over an insecure network<<FootNote(http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4252)>>.
See [[WikiPedia:Secure_Shell|Wikipedia - Secure Shell]] for more general information and DebPkg:ssh, DebPkg:lsh-client or DebPkg:dropbear for the SSH software implementations out of which [[http://www.openssh.org/|OpenSSH]] is the most popular and most widely used<<FootNote(http://www.openssh.org/users.html)>>.
SSH replaces the unencrypted [[WikiPedia:Telnet|telnet]],[[WikiPedia:Rlogin|rlogin]] and [[WikiPedia:Remote_shell|rsh]] and adds many features.
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Throughout this document it will be assumed that the following two variables are defined In this document we'll be using the OpenSSH command suite, it will also be assumed that the following two variables are defined:
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ssh-keygen -t dsa ssh-keygen
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cat .ssh/id_dsa.pub | ssh $remote_user@$remote_host 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys' cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh $remote_user@$remote_host 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys'
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ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub $remote_user@$remote_host ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub $remote_user@$remote_host
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 '''REMARK:''' The example above assumes ssh protocol 2 and uses DSA encryption, which is currently recommended. One could also use RSA encryption for ssh protocol 2. ssh protocol 1 uses yet another encryption, but is obsolete.  '''REMARK:''' The example above assumes SSH protocol 2 and uses RSA encryption by default. DSA for SSH protocol 2 and SSH protocol 1 are both obsolete<<FootNote(http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/reference/ch06.en.html#_connecting_without_remote_passwords)>> and '''not''' recommended<<FootNote(http://wiki.debian.org/SSLkeys#Identifying_Weak_Keys)>>
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 * Consider using DebPkg:fail2ban which is a log file monitor that automatically bans an ip address after a predefined number of failed login attempts. Guards against brute force attacks.    * Consider using DebPkg:fail2ban which is a log file monitor that automatically bans an ip address after a predefined number of failed login attempts. Guards against brute force attacks.

Translation(s): English - ?Français - ?Italiano

ToDo: merge (and translate) this page and the french one (more complete)

Introduction

SSH stands for Secure Shell and is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network services over an insecure network1. See Wikipedia - Secure Shell for more general information and ssh, lsh-client or dropbear for the SSH software implementations out of which OpenSSH is the most popular and most widely used2. SSH replaces the unencrypted telnet,rlogin and rsh and adds many features.

In this document we'll be using the OpenSSH command suite, it will also be assumed that the following two variables are defined:

remote_host=<the remote computer>
remote_user=<your user name on $remote_host>

So, if you want to use the recipes below, first set these variables to the remote computer name and the user name on that remote computer. Then cut and paste of the commands below should work. remote_host may also be an IP-address.

Remote login

If you want to login to $remote_host as user $remote_user simply type

ssh $remote_user@$remote_host

If the usernames on the local and the remote computer are identical, you can drop the $remote_user@-part and simply write

ssh $remote_host

If this is the first time you login to the remote machine, ssh will ask you whether you are sure you want to connect to the remote computer. Answer 'yes' and then type in your password, and ssh will do a remote login for you.

Remote commands

If you just want to run one command on the remote computer, you don't need to login. You can tell ssh to run the command without login, for instance,

ssh $remote_user@$remote_host 'ls *.txt'

lists all files with extension .txt on the remote computer. This works with single tick quotes '...' as shown here, with double tick quotes "...", and without quotes. There may be differences between these three cases, though, not yet documented here.

ssh without password

If you work on a remote computer often, typing in the password each time you use ssh becomes annoying. You can configure ssh such that it does not ask you for a password anymore for that particular connection. You have to generate a private and public encryption key on your local machine and provide the public key to the remote machine.

To generate the keys run

ssh-keygen

and reply to all questions just with return.

To provide the public key to the remote machine first create there an .ssh directory (if not present already) and then append the public key of your local machine to the authorized_keys file on the remote machine.

ssh $remote_user@$remote_host mkdir -p .ssh
cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh $remote_user@$remote_host 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys'

Note that here the cat command within the ssh command takes its input from the pipe.

or you can use

ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub $remote_user@$remote_host

From now on, you should be able to login with ssh without password.

  • REMARK: If the usernames on the local and the remote machine are identical, and if the local and the remote computer have access to the same home-directory of that user, e.g. because they are different clients in the same LAN with a common home directory mounted via nfs, then the private key, the public key, and the authorized_keys file all reside in the same directory. Thus you cannot only login without password from the local to the remote machine but also vice versa. In fact you can login from any computer in the LAN to any other computer. (The username@hostname entry at the end of the public key in the authorized_keys file has no relevance to ssh, you may delete it or change it if you like (I think)).

    REMARK: The example above assumes SSH protocol 2 and uses RSA encryption by default. DSA for SSH protocol 2 and SSH protocol 1 are both obsolete3 and not recommended4

    TROUBLESHOOTING (ssh still asks for a password): Login without password does not work if group or world has write permissions for the home directory on the remote machine. To fix that, run

    ssh $remote_user@$remote_host chmod g-w,o-w /home/$remote_user

    SOURCE: Mathias Kettner, SSH login without password, http://www.linuxproblem.org/art_9.html, visited 2007-10-06.

SSH into Debian from another OS

SSH and security

SSH Server

  • Consider using fail2ban which is a log file monitor that automatically bans an ip address after a predefined number of failed login attempts. Guards against brute force attacks.

  • Use SSH keys rather than password.

SSH Client