SSH-Authentifizierung mit Schlüsselpaaren

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Was sind SSH-Schlüsselpaare?

Wenn man SSH-Schlüsselpaare (einen öffentlichen und privaten Schlüssel) benutzt, kann man einfach und sicher eine SSH-Verbindung zu einem Server herstellen, ohne ein Passwort für eines der Systeme eingeben zu müssen.

Es ist möglich, diese Schlüssel ohne ein Passwort einzurichten, jedoch ist es sicherer, eines zu benutzen, für den Fall, dass ungewollt ein Dritter an diesen Schlüssel kommt. Deshalb beschreibt diese Anleitung auch, wie man das benutzte Passwort sicher auf seinem System speichern kann.

Generating SSH Keys

If you don't already have OpenSSH installed, install it now as it is not installed by default on Arch.

# pacman -S openssh

The keys can then be generated by running the ssh-keygen command as a user:

$ ssh-keygen -b 1024 -t dsa
Generating public/private dsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/mith/.ssh/id_dsa):
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in /home/mith/.ssh/id_dsa.
Your public key has been saved in /home/mith/.ssh/id_dsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
x6:68:xx:93:98:8x:87:95:7x:2x:4x:x9:81:xx:56:94 mith@middleearth

It will prompt you for a location (which you should leave as the default), however the passphrase is the important bit! You should already be aware of the criteria that make a good passphrase.

So what did we just do? We generated a 1024 bit long (Vorlage:Codeline) public/private dsa (Vorlage:Codeline) key pair with the Vorlage:Codeline command.

If you want to create a RSA key pair instead of DSA just use Vorlage:Codeline (do not specify key length "-b" as default key length for RSA is 2048 and is sufficient).

Vorlage:Note

Copying the keys to the remote server

Now you have generated the keys you need to copy them to the remote server. By default, for OpenSSH, the public key needs to be concatenated into Vorlage:Filename.

$ scp ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub mith@metawire.org:

This copies the public key (Vorlage:Filename) to your remote server via Vorlage:Codeline (note the Vorlage:Codeline at the end of the server address). The file ends up in the home directory, but you can specify another path if you like.

Next up, on the remote server, you need to create the Vorlage:Filename directory if it doesn't exist and concatenate the key Vorlage:Filename file:

$ ssh mith@metawire.org
mith@metawire.org's password:
$ mkdir ~/.ssh
$ cat ~/id_dsa.pub >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
$ rm ~/id_dsa.pub
$ chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys

The last two commands remove the public key from the server (which isn't needed now), and sets the correct permissions on the authorized_keys file.

If you now disconnect from the server, and attempt to reconnect, you should be asked for the passphrase of the key:

$ ssh mith@metawire.org
Enter passphrase for key '/home/mith/.ssh/id_dsa':

If you are unable to login with the key, double check the permissions on the Vorlage:Filename file.

Also check the permissions on the Vorlage:Filename directory, which should have write permissions off for 'group' and 'other'. Run the following command to disable 'group' and 'other' write permissions for the Vorlage:Filename directory:

$ chmod go-w ~/.ssh

Remember key passphrases

Now you can login to your servers by using a key instead of a password, but how is this any easier, as you still need to enter the key passphrase? The answer is to use a SSH agent, a program which remembers the passphrases of your keys! There a number of different tools available, so have a read through and choose the one which seems best for you.

ssh-agent

ssh-agent is the default agent included with OpenSSH.

$ ssh-agent
SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-vEGjCM2147/agent.2147; export SSH_AUTH_SOCK;
SSH_AGENT_PID=2148; export SSH_AGENT_PID;
echo Agent pid 2148;

When you run Vorlage:Codeline, it will print out what environment variables it would use. To make use of these variables, run the command through the Vorlage:Codeline command.

$ eval `ssh-agent`
Agent pid 2157

You can add this to Vorlage:Filename so that it will be run whenever you open a session:

# echo 'eval `ssh-agent`' >> /etc/profile

Note the correct quotes, the first ones are single quotes, where as the second are backticks!

Now that the Vorlage:Codeline is running, we need to tell it that we have a private key and where that is.

$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_dsa
Enter passphrase for /home/user/.ssh/id_dsa:
Identity added: /home/user/.ssh/id_dsa (/home/user/.ssh/id_dsa)

We were asked for our passphrase, entered it, that's all. Now you can login to your remote server without having to enter your password while your private key is password-protected. Sweet isn't it?

The only downside is that a new instance of Vorlage:Codeline needs to be created for every new console (shell) you open, that means you have to run Vorlage:Codeline every time again on each console. There is a workaround to that with a program or rather a script called keychain which is covered in the next section.

Using GnuPG Agent

The GnuPG agent, distributed with the Vorlage:Package Official package, has OpenSSH agent emulation. If you use GPG you might consider using its agent to take care of all of your keys. Otherwise you might like the PIN entry dialog it provides and its passphrase management, which is different from keychain.

To start using GPG agent for your SSH keys you should first start the gpg-agent with the Vorlage:Codeline option. Example (don't forget to make the file executable): Vorlage:File

Once gpg-agent is running you can use ssh-add to approve keys, just like you did with plain ssh-agent. The list of approved keys is stored in the Vorlage:Filename file. Once your key is approved you will get a PIN entry dialog every time your passphrase is needed. You can control passphrase caching in the Vorlage:Filename file. The following example would have gpg-agent cache your keys for 3 hours:

 # Cache settings
 default-cache-ttl 10800
 default-cache-ttl-ssh 10800

Other useful settings for this file include the PIN entry program (GTK, QT or ncurses version), keyboard grabbing and so on...:

 # Environment file
 write-env-file /home/username/.gnupg/gpg-agent.info
 
 # Keyboard control
 #no-grab
   
 # PIN entry program
 #pinentry-program /usr/bin/pinentry-curses
 #pinentry-program /usr/bin/pinentry-qt4
 pinentry-program /usr/bin/pinentry-gtk-2

Using keychain

Keychain manages one or more specified private keys. When initialized it will ask for the passphrase for the private key(s) and store it. That way your private key is password protected but you won't have to enter your password over and over again.

Install keychain from the extra repo:

# pacman -S keychain

Create the following file and make it executable: Vorlage:File

Or

Vorlage:File

Or

Append

eval `keychain --eval --agents ssh id_dsa`

to your Vorlage:Filename or Vorlage:Filename.

Vorlage:Tip

If necessary, replace Vorlage:Filename with Vorlage:Filename. For those using a non-Bash compatible shell, see Vorlage:Codeline or Vorlage:Codeline for details on other shells.

Close your shell and open it again. Keychain should come up and if it's your first run it will ask your for the passphrase of the specified private key.

Using ssh-agent and x11-ssh-askpass

You need to start the ssh-agent everytime you start a new Xsession. The ssh-agent will be closed when the X session ends.

Install x11-ssh-askpass which will ask your passphrase everytime you open a new Xsession:

# pacman -S x11-ssh-askpass

Prepend this into your Vorlage:Filename:

eval `/usr/bin/ssh-agent`
SSH_ASKPASS=/usr/lib/openssh/x11-ssh-askpass ssh-add < /dev/null
# then the end of the file with for example "exec dwm"

GNOME Keyring

If you use the GNOME desktop, the Gnome Keyring tool can be used as an SSH agent. Visit the Gnome Keyring article.

Troubleshooting

If it appears that the SSH server is ignoring your keys, ensure that you have the proper permissions set on all relevant files.

For the local machine:

$ chmod ~/ 755
$ chmod ~/.ssh 700
$ chmod ~/.ssh/id_rsa 600

For the remote machine:

$ chmod ~/ 755
$ chmod ~/.ssh 700
$ chmod ~/.ssh/authorized_keys 600

Failing this, run the sshd in debug mode and monitor the output while connecting:

# /usr/sbin/sshd -d

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