SSH: Difference between revisions

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/usr/sbin/dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server
/usr/sbin/dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server
</source>
</source>



Or manually:
Or manually:
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ssh-keygen -t rsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
ssh-keygen -t rsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
ssh-keygen -t ecdsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
ssh-keygen -t ecdsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
</source>


Afterwards, you must delete the old host key from {{file|known_hosts}} file of any client connecting to that server:
<source lang=bash>
ssh-keygen -R server_hostname
</source>
</source>



Revision as of 12:40, 22 June 2015

Reference

On this Wiki:

Tips

On ssh command:

ssh -F hostname                             # Find hostname in ~/.ssh/known_hosts (useful if HashKnowHosts enabled)
ssh -l -f ~/.ssh/known_hosts                # Print fingerprint of known host keys
ssh -Lport:host:hostport hostname sleep 60  # Forward port, and exit after 60s if no connection is made
ssh -f -N -n -q -L ${BINDADDR}:port:host:hostport hostname # Idem, with 'go backg', 'no remote cmd', 'redir stdin from /dev/nul', 'quiet'

If a script is to be called as a ssh command, use 1>&2 instead of >/dev/stderr to redirect a message to stderr (if not, you'll get an error undefined /dev/stderr):

#! /bin/bash
# This script is called as an ssh command with
#   ssh hostname thisscript.sh
echo "This will go to stdin"
echo "This will go to stderr" 1>&2

Install

After installing ssh (client & server), you have to create an ssh-key:

ssh-keygen

Regenerate SSH host key

The easiest is to delete all keys and reconfigure openssh package:

rm /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*
/usr/sbin/dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server

Or manually:

ssh-keygen -t dsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
ssh-keygen -t rsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
ssh-keygen -t ecdsa -N "" -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key


Afterwards, you must delete the old host key from known_hosts file of any client connecting to that server:

ssh-keygen -R server_hostname

Configuration

SSH can be configured through file ~/.ssh/config. See man ssh_config for more information. The format is as follows:

# Specific configuration options for host host1
Host host1
  Option1     parameter
  Option2     parameter

# General configuration options for all hosts. 
# Options in this section applies if same option was *not already specified* in a relevant host section above.
Host *
  Option1     parameter
  Option2     parameter

The value to use for each option is given by the first section that matches the host specification and that provides a value for that option. So section Host * should always be at the end of the file, since any subsequent section will be ignored.

Connect through a Proxy

SSH can be said to establish the connection to the server through a proxy by using the option ProxyCommand. Example of ProxyCommand in the SSH config file:

# none
  ProxyCommand   none                                            # No proxy
# using nc
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/nc -X connect -x 192.0.2.0:8080 %h %p  # Example in ssh_config manpage but DOES NOT WORK
# using connect (or connect-proxy)
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect %h %p                          # No proxy as well
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect -H proxyserver:8080 %h %p      # Using HTTP proxy proxyserver:8080
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect -h %h %p                       # Using HTTP proxy defined in env. var HTTP_PROXY
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect -S socks5server:1080 %h %p     # Using SOCKS5 proxy server socks5server:1080
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect -s %h %p                       # Using SOCKS5 proxy defined in env. var SOCKS5_SERVER
  ProxyCommand   /usr/bin/connect -S socks4server:1080 -4 %h %p  # Using SOCKS4 proxy server socks4server:1080
# Using socat
  ProxyCommand   socat -ly - PROXY:proxy:%h:%p,proxyport=8080,proxyauth=user:pass
                                                                 # HTTP Proxy
  ProxyCommand   socat -ly - SOCKS4A:socksserver:%h:%p,socksport=1080,socksuser=user
                                                                 # SOCKS4A proxy (%h is resolved by proxy)
# Using ssh-tunnel
  ProxyCommand   /usr/local/bin/ssh-tunnel.pl -f - - %h %p

If a hostname matches several sections, first match found is used. Use ProxyCommand none to override a default proxy configuration:

Host 192.*
  ProxyCommand none                                              # Otherwise setting in Host * would be taken
Host *
  ProxyCommand /usr/local/bin/ssh-tunnel.pl -f - - %h %p         # Default proxy settings

Dealing with Proxy Time-Out

In some case, the proxy might wait for the client (ie. local pc) to send an authentication string as it is the case in the SSL protocol. A solution for this is described in Yobi. It consists in sending immediately the client SSH banner, and strip it when it is sent by the client. The solution described uses a custom Perl script as ProxyCommand: ssh-tunnel.pl.

ssh-tunnel

First install the following packages:

  • ssh, libssl-dev (cygwin: openssh, openssl, openssl-devel)

Launch CPAN:

sudo cpan
# on first run, autoconfig starts - see wiki for more details
# Also if proxy must be set, run:
#  o conf init urllist
#  o conf commit
reload cpan
install Getopt::Long
install MIME::Base64
install Net::SSLeay
install IO::Socket::SSL
install Authen::NTLM

Then install ssh-tunnel (if needed, create ~/bin first and don't forget to add ~/bin in the path in .bashrc before /usr/bin and /usr/local/bin):

tar -xvzf ssh-tunnel-2.26.tgz
make install
#Create an empty ssh banner (will be updated at the first connection)
touch ~/.ssh/clbanner.txt
#Create the links
ln -s /usr/local/bin/ssh.pl ~/bin/ssh

Edit ~/.ssh/config and ~/.ssh/proxy.conf as needed.

Command-Line

Remote Command Execution

  • SSH allows to execute any command on remote SSH host. The syntax is
ssh -t SSH_HOST COMMAND
  • To execute a remote command on remote host and stay connected afterwards, use ssh -t, along with bash rcfile, like:
ssh -t SSH_HOST "bash --rcfile PATH_TO_RC_FILE"

Don't miss the quotes around the command. Bash will execute the commands in the rc file, and will open a session. Connection remains open because stdin/stdout is not closed. Option -t allows for connecting with current terminal. Without this option, there will be no terminal connection, so bash would run in batch mode (no prompt), and terminal features like tab completion or color would be missing.

  • Another solution is to force bash interactive mode:
ssh SSH_HOST "bash --rcfile PATH_TO_RC_FILE -i"

Since there is no terminal, bash goes by default in non-interactive mode. Interactive mode is forced with option -i, and so prompt will be printed, etc. But this is only a partial solution because there is still no terminal, ie. no color, no TAB auto-completion.

Port Forwarding

Here two drawings that illustrate very clearly the mechanisms of port forwarding in SSH.

First the case of direct port forwarding, where a port is opened for listening on the (local) SSH Client, and forwarded to the given host and port on the remote side (i.e. accessible from SSH server).

Ssh port forwarding direct.png

Then the case of reverse port forwarding, where a port is opened for listening on the (remote) SSH Server, and forwarded to the given host and port locally (i.e. accessible from SSH client).

Ssh port forwarding reverse.png

SSHFS

SSH FileSystem using FUSE.

References:

Install

sudo apt-get install sshfs
sudo gpasswd -a $USER fuse

Mount / Unmount

mkdir ~/far_projects
sshfs -o idmap=user $USER@far:/projects ~/far_projects   
fusermount -u ~/far_projects

The idmap=user option ensures that files owned by the remote user are owned by the local user. This is to deal with situations where these users have different UID. This option does not translate UIDs for other users.

/etc/fstab

Line to add to /etc/fstab:

sshfs#$USER@far:/projects /home/$USER/far_projects fuse defaults,idmap=user 0 0

Controlling access

By editing .ssh/authorized_keys (see man authorized_keys) one can restrict the access a client has on the remote server.

port-forwarding connection only
  • Edit authorized_keys as follows (from Stack-Overflow [1]):
no-pty,no-X11-forwarding,permitopen="localhost:6379",command="/bin/echo do-not-send-commands" ssh-rsa rsa-public-key-code-goes-here keyuser@keyhost
  • Create the reverse port-forwarding with:
autossh -M 0 -f -T -N -n -q -R $PORT:localhost:22 noekeon

Reuse connection to boost performance

From http://www.debian-administration.org/article/290/Reusing_existing_OpenSSH_v4_connections:

Add the following to ~/.ssh/config:

Host *
  ControlPath /tmp/%r@%h:%p

Now we can connect as normal, so long as we make the first connection to any host with -M (for "Master") all subsequent connections will be much faster.

Or, force the -M for the first connection automatically with

Host *
  ControlMaster auto
  ControlPath /tmp/%r@%h:%p

This trick can be used to boost the performance of file transfer using scp (to make it similar to tar+ssh, see [2])

Troubleshooting

Slow SSH connection setup

  • DNS time-out on the server
    Whenever a new client connects, the server does a reverse-DNS look-up. If the client IP can't be reversed, the SSH connection is suspended until DNS request times out.
    FIX: Adds client IP and name in /etc/hosts

Missing Locale in Perl

When logging in from a client with different locale from the server, perl returns a warning about missing locale:

perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
perl: warning: Please check that your locale settings:
	LANGUAGE = (unset),
	LC_ALL = (unset),
	LC_PAPER = "fr_BE.UTF-8",
	...
	LC_NAME = "fr_BE.UTF-8",
	LANG = "en_US.UTF-8"
    are supported and installed on your system.
perl: warning: Falling back to the standard locale ("C").
  • This is fixed by telling sshd not to accept locale env var. from the client. Edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
- AcceptEnv LANG LC_*
+ AcceptEnv LANG

VPN over SSH

SSH allows to setup a full VPN connection over SSH, although it requires some manipulations, and is slower than regular VPN solutions using UDP packets (VPN uses TCP packets, which are slower) .

References — with PermitRootLogin=no:

References — with PermitRootLogin=yes:

  • SSH_VPN (rules to make the process automatic)

Other references:

Preliminary Setup:

  • First on the server side, ssh daemon must allow creating of tunnels. For this setup however you don't need to enable PermitRootLogin. Edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
+PermitTunnel yes
  • Check if ip supports creation of tun/tap interfaces:
ip tuntap help
  • If not, install openVPN (or a recent version of tunctl):
sudo apt-get install openvpn
  • Unlike what is proposed in ssh manual, we are not going to use private addresses (10.*.*.*) but instead we are going to pick 1 address in the remote network that we hope is not used by any computer on the remote network. This is because it seems that packets with a private address range as origin are lost (no reply). Say we pick address 123.123.123.1 and 123.123.123.2
  • Also check that kernel on the client supports forwarding of packets, and that the firewall authorizes it as well ([4]):
sudo su
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
iptables -P FORWARD ACCEPT
iptables -F FORWARD

Setting up the VPN:

  • Log on the server, and create the tun0 interface with ip or openvpn, and configure the interface:
sudo ip tuntap add dev tun0 mode tun user $USER               # or 'sudo openvpn --mktun --dev tun0 --user $USER'
sudo ifconfig tun0 123.123.123.1 123.123.123.2 netmask 255.255.255.252  # Assign 123.123.123.2 as local IP addr on tun0 (and .1 as peer)
sudo route add -net 123.123.120.0/22 dev tun0                 # This will route all packets to 123.123.120.0/24 network through 
                                                              # ... our tun0 interface directly to the client.
                                                              # ... these packets will have 123.123.123.2 as source IP
  • On the client, create the tun0 interface, and setup the tunnel and route table:
sudo ip tuntap add dev tun0 mode tun user $USER               # or 'sudo openvpn --mktun --dev tun0 --user $USER'
sudo ifconfig tun0 123.123.123.2 123.123.123.1 netmask 255.255.255.252
sudo route add -host 123.123.123.2 dev tun0                   # Route all packets for 123.123.123.2 through tun0 itf
sudo arp  -Ds 123.123.123.2 eth0 pub                          # Tell all computers on eth0 that we'll take care of packets for IP 123.123.123.2
ssh -f -w 0:0 $SSHSERVER true                                 # SSH in background, tunnel from tun0:tun0

Troubleshooting

  • Setup tcpdump on 'tun0' on the client and server
sudo tcpdump -i tun0 -n icmp    # On the client and server
  • Then on the server, ping the client and verify that ICMP packets are sent back and forth:
ping 123.123.123.1            # peer on tun0 itf
  • Second, we will ping a computer on the remote netwrok from the server. On the client, setup tcpdump to now monitors packet on the 'eth0' interface:
sudo tcpdump -i etho0 -n icmp    # On the client
sudo tcpdump -i tun0 -n icmp    # On the server
  • Ping the remote computer, and observes that packet now also are forwarded by the client over the 'eth0' interface.
    If packets are sent, but none are received, likely it is because the ARP proxy is not setup correctly or is not published (pub keyword with arp). If no packets are sent or received, but packets are seen on the client tun0 interface, then probably packet forwarding is not enabled on the client kernel, or firewall forbids it.
ping 123.123.120.1            # On the server

Remarks:

  • SSH manpage creates tun device with different ID, but this is only needed if ssh'ing to localhost.
  • Use -w any:any to let ssh uses any available tun devices
  • Using -o Tunnel=Ethernet is mandatory for tap interfaces, or get a tunnel device open failed error.
  • Enabling PermitRootLogin offers more flexibility. Security impact can be greatly reduced by restricting root ssh access to execute a forced command (see [5] as an example)