# SSH 1. [TL;DR](#tldr) 1. [Server installation on Windows](#server-installation-on-windows) 1. [Key Management](#key-management) 1. [Configuration](#configuration) 1. [Client](#client) 1. [Append domains to a hostname before attempting to check if they exist](#append-domains-to-a-hostname-before-attempting-to-check-if-they-exist) 1. [Optimize connection handling](#optimize-connection-handling) 1. [Server](#server) 1. [Change port](#change-port) 1. [Disable password authentication](#disable-password-authentication) 1. [Permit root login](#permit-root-login) 1. [Conditional blocks](#conditional-blocks) 1. [SSHFS](#sshfs) 1. [Installation](#installation) 1. [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) 1. [No matching host key type found](#no-matching-host-key-type-found) 1. [Further readings](#further-readings) 1. [Sources](#sources) ## TL;DR ```sh # Load keys from '~/.ssh' and add them to the agent. eval `ssh-agent` && ssh-add # Create new keys. ssh-keygen -t 'rsa' -b '4096' ssh-keygen -t 'dsa' ssh-keygen -t 'ecdsa' -b '521' ssh-keygen -t 'ed25519' -f ~/.ssh/keys/id_ed25519 -C 'test@winzoz' ssh-keygen -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa -N '' -C 'batch-generated key with no password' # Remove elements from the known hosts list. ssh-keygen -R 'pi4.lan' ssh-keygen -R '192.168.1.237' -f '.ssh/known_hosts' ssh-keygen -R 'pi.lan' -f "${HOME}/.ssh/known_hosts" # Change the password of a key. ssh-keygen -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa -p # Mount a remote folder. sshfs 'nas.lan:/mnt/data' 'Data' \ -o 'auto_cache,reconnect,defer_permissions,noappledouble,volname=Data' # List keys added to the agent by fingerprint. ssh-add -l ssh-add -L # full key in OpenSSH format # Authorize keys for passwordless access. ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub user@nas.lan # Connect to an unreachable host tunnelling the session through a bastion. ssh -t 'bastion-host' ssh 'unreachable-host' ``` ## Server installation on Windows Needs Administrator privileges.
Tested on Window 11 22H2. Via PowerShell: 1. Install the server component: ```ps1 Add-WindowsCapability -Online -Name OpenSSH.Server ``` 1. Start and enable the service: ```ps1 Start-Service sshd Set-Service -Name sshd -StartupType 'Automatic' ``` 1. Verify the firewall rule has been created automatically during the installation: ```ps1 if (!(Get-NetFirewallRule -Name "OpenSSH-Server-In-TCP" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | Select-Object Name, Enabled)) { Write-Output "Firewall Rule 'OpenSSH-Server-In-TCP' does not exist, creating it..." New-NetFirewallRule -Name 'OpenSSH-Server-In-TCP' -DisplayName 'OpenSSH Server (sshd)' -Enabled True -Direction Inbound -Protocol TCP -Action Allow -LocalPort 22 } else { Write-Output "Firewall rule 'OpenSSH-Server-In-TCP' has been created and exists." } ``` Via GUI: 1. Open _Settings_ > _Apps_, then select _Optional features_ 1. Scan the list to see if the OpenSSH server is not already installed 1. At the top of the page, select _View features_ in the _Add an optional feature_ field 1. Find _OpenSSH Server_ and select _Install_ 1. Once the setup completes, return to _Apps_ > _Optional features_ and confirm OpenSSH is now listed 1. Open the _Services_ desktop app: 1. Select Start 1. Type `services.msc` in the search box 1. Select the _Services_ app or just press ENTER 1. In the details panel, double-click _OpenSSH SSH Server_ to enter its properties 1. On the _General_ tab, from the _Startup type_ drop-down menu, select _Automatic_ to enable the service 1. In the same tab, select _Start_ to start the service ## Key Management Create a new key: ```sh ssh-keygen -t 'rsa' -b '4096' ssh-keygen -t 'dsa' ssh-keygen -t 'ecdsa' -b '521' ssh-keygen -t 'ed25519' -f '.ssh/id_ed25519' -C 'test@winzoz' ``` ```plaintext Generating public/private ed25519 key pair. Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again: Your identification has been saved in C:\Users\test/.ssh/id_ed25519. Your public key has been saved in C:\Users\test/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub. The key fingerprint is: SHA256:lFrpPyqTy0d30TfnN0QRY678LnyCzmvMDbl1Qj2/U/w test@winzoz The key's randomart image is: +--[ED25519 256]--+ | +o.o++| | ==*O| | . .X*| | o . +=| | S S +..==| | . .+..*E| | + ...o| | .+ .o = | | =+ .o .| +----[SHA256]-----+ ``` Remove a host from the list of known hosts: ```sh ssh-keygen -R 'pi4.lan' ssh-keygen -R '192.168.1.237' -f '.ssh/known_hosts' ssh-keygen -R 'raspberrypi.lan' -f '.ssh/known_hosts' ``` ```plaintext Host pi4.lan found: line 5 /home/user/.ssh/known_hosts updated. Original contents retained as /home/user/.ssh/known_hosts.old ``` Change password of a key file ```sh ssh-keygen -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa -p ``` ## Configuration ### Client When connecting to a host, the SSH client will use settings: 1. from the command line, 1. from the user's `~/.ssh/config` file, 1. from the `/etc/ssh/ssh_config` file Settings are loaded in a first-come-first-served way. They should hence appear from the most specific to the most generic, both by file and by position in those files: ```ssh-config Host targaryen HostName targaryen.example.com User john Port 2322 IdentityFile ~/.ssh/targaryen.key LogLevel INFO Compression yes Host *ell user oberyn sendenv BE_SASSY StrictHostKeyChecking no Host * !martell LogLevel INFO StrictHostKeyChecking accept-new UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null Host * User root Compression yes SendEnv -LC_* -LANG* SetEnv MYENV=itsvalue ``` #### Append domains to a hostname before attempting to check if they exist ```ssh-config CanonicalizeHostname yes CanonicalDomains xxx.auckland.ac.nz yyy.auckland.ac.nz Host *.xxx.auckland.ac.nz User user_xxx Host *.yyy.auckland.ac.nz User user_yyy ``` #### Optimize connection handling ```ssh-config # Keep a connection open for 30s and reuse it when possible. # Save the above pipe in a safe directory, and use a hash of different data to # identify it. # source: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-reuse-openssh-connection/ ControlMaster auto ControlPath ~/.ssh/control-%C ControlPersist 30s ``` ### Server Config file defaults to `/etc/ssh/sshd_config`.
Restart the server upon config file change. #### Change port ```sshd-config Port 2222 ``` #### Disable password authentication ```sshd-config PasswordAuthentication no ChallengeResponseAuthentication no ``` #### Permit root login ```sshd-config PermitRootLogin yes ``` #### Conditional blocks > Only a subset of keywords may be used in a _Match_ block. Check the `SSHD_CONFIG(5)` man page. ```sshd-config Match Address 192.168.111.0/24 PasswordAuthentication no PermitRootLogin no ``` ## SSHFS Options: - `auto_cache` enables caching based on modification times; - `reconnect` reconnects to the server; - `defer_permissions` works around the issue where certain shares may mount properly, but cause _permissions denied_ errors when accessed (caused by how Mac OS X's Finder translates and interprets permissions; - `noappledouble` prevents Mac OS X to write `.DS_Store` files on the remote file system; - `volname` defines the name to use for the volume. Usage: ```sh sshfs -o $OPTIONS_LIST $HOST:$REMOTE_PATH $LOCAL_PATH ``` ```sh sshfs 'user@nas.lan:/mnt/data' 'Data' -o 'auto_cache,reconnect,defer_permissions,noappledouble,volname=Data' ``` ### Installation ```sh # Mac OS X requires `macports`, since `brew` does not offer 'sshfs' anymore sudo port install 'sshfs' ``` ## Troubleshooting ### No matching host key type found Error message example: > Unable to negotiate with XXX port 22: no matching host key type found. Their offer: ssh-rsa. Cause: the server only supports the kind of RSA with SHA-1, which is considered weak and deprecated in newer SSH versions. Workaround: explicitly set your client to use the specified key type adding ```ssh_config HostkeyAlgorithms +ssh-rsa PubkeyAcceptedAlgorithms +ssh-rsa ``` to your `~/.ssh/config` like so: ```diff Host azure-devops IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa IdentitiesOnly yes + HostkeyAlgorithms +ssh-rsa + PubkeyAcceptedAlgorithms +ssh-rsa ``` Solution: update the SSH server. ## Further readings - [`ssh_config`][ssh_config] file example - [`sshd_config`][sshd_config] file example - [ssh-agent] ## Sources - [Use SSHFS to mount a remote directory as a volume on OSX] - [Using the SSH config file] - [How to list keys added to ssh-agent with ssh-add?] - [Multiple similar entries in ssh config] - [How to enable SSH access using a GPG key for authentication] - [How to perform hostname canonicalization] - [How to reuse SSH connection to speed up remote login process using multiplexing] - [Get started with OpenSSH for Windows] [ssh-agent]: https://www.ssh.com/academy/ssh/agent [ssh_config]: ../examples/ssh/ssh_config [sshd_config]: ../examples/ssh/sshd_config [get started with openssh for windows]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/openssh/openssh_install_firstuse?tabs=gui [how to enable ssh access using a gpg key for authentication]: https://opensource.com/article/19/4/gpg-subkeys-ssh [how to list keys added to ssh-agent with ssh-add?]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/58969/how-to-list-keys-added-to-ssh-agent-with-ssh-add [how to perform hostname canonicalization]: https://sleeplessbeastie.eu/2020/08/24/how-to-perform-hostname-canonicalization/ [how to reuse ssh connection to speed up remote login process using multiplexing]: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-reuse-openssh-connection/ [multiple similar entries in ssh config]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/61655/multiple-similar-entries-in-ssh-config [use sshfs to mount a remote directory as a volume on osx]: https://benohead.com/mac-os-x-use-sshfs-to-mount-a-remote-directory-as-a-volume/ [using the ssh config file]: https://linuxize.com/post/using-the-ssh-config-file/