Ssh Configure Public/Private Key Authentication: Difference between revisions
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
The keys can also be [[Openssl_Operations#Generate_a_Public.2FPrivate_Key_Pair|generated with OpenSSH]], the results are equivalent. | The keys can also be [[Openssl_Operations#Generate_a_Public.2FPrivate_Key_Pair|generated with OpenSSH]], the results are equivalent. | ||
For more general considerations on private keys, see: {{Internal|Public_Key_Security#Private_Key|Private Keys}} | |||
==Permissions== | ==Permissions== |
Revision as of 06:25, 8 April 2018
Internal
Procedure
Create the OpenSSH Private/Public Key Pair
This is the procedure to generate a public/private key pair. Run the following command on the machine you will be logging from and as the Unix user you will be using to connect:
ssh-keygen -q -b 2048 -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa -t rsa Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again:
The key is written in PEM format.
If you want password-less log in, use an empty string as passphrase.
The keys can also be generated with OpenSSH, the results are equivalent.
For more general considerations on private keys, see:
Permissions
Make sure ~/.ssh/id_rsa has the following permissions -rw-------.
Install the Public Key on All Machines to Log in Into
On all machines you will be logging in into, place the content of the previously generated id_rsa.pub into ~/.ssh/authorized_keys and make sure ~/.ssh/authorized_keys has the following permissions -rw-------.
Alternatively, the distribution can be done with ssh-copy-id:
File Permission Concerns
Make sure ~/.ssh/id_rsa is -rw-------.
Nake sure ~/.ssh/authorized_keys is -rw-------.
If the home directory in which .ssh resides is world writable, pub/pvt key authentication doesn't work and ssh falls back to password.
Configuring the Server to Allow Public Key Authentication
/etc/ssh/sshd_config must contain the following:
... RSAAuthentication yes PubkeyAuthentication yes AuthorizedKeysFile .ssh/authorized_keys ...
Note that I've seen server configured to use /etc/keys/%u/authorized_keys. If this is the case, place the authorized_keys file there, make it owned by the respective user and give it the appropriate permissions.
Optional: Some servers list the users allowed to authenticate with public key under the "AllowUsers" directive:
... AllowUsers admin jmp em ...