1.\" -*- nroff -*- 2.\" 3.\" Author: Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi> 4.\" Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>, Espoo, Finland 5.\" All rights reserved 6.\" 7.\" As far as I am concerned, the code I have written for this software 8.\" can be used freely for any purpose. Any derived versions of this 9.\" software must be clearly marked as such, and if the derived work is 10.\" incompatible with the protocol description in the RFC file, it must be 11.\" called by a name other than "ssh" or "Secure Shell". 12.\" 13.\" Copyright (c) 1999,2000 Markus Friedl. All rights reserved. 14.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Aaron Campbell. All rights reserved. 15.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Theo de Raadt. All rights reserved. 16.\" 17.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 18.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 19.\" are met: 20.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 21.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 22.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 23.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 24.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 25.\" 26.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR 27.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES 28.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. 29.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, 30.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT 31.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 32.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 33.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 34.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF 35.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 36.\" 37.\" $OpenBSD: sshd.8,v 1.255 2010/03/05 06:50:35 jmc Exp $ 38.\" $FreeBSD$ 39.Dd March 5, 2010 40.Dt SSHD 8 41.Os 42.Sh NAME 43.Nm sshd 44.Nd OpenSSH SSH daemon 45.Sh SYNOPSIS 46.Nm sshd 47.Bk -words 48.Op Fl 46DdeiqTt 49.Op Fl b Ar bits 50.Op Fl C Ar connection_spec 51.Op Fl c Ar host_certificate_file 52.Op Fl f Ar config_file 53.Op Fl g Ar login_grace_time 54.Op Fl h Ar host_key_file 55.Op Fl k Ar key_gen_time 56.Op Fl o Ar option 57.Op Fl p Ar port 58.Op Fl u Ar len 59.Ek 60.Sh DESCRIPTION 61.Nm 62(OpenSSH Daemon) is the daemon program for 63.Xr ssh 1 . 64Together these programs replace 65.Xr rlogin 1 66and 67.Xr rsh 1 , 68and provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts 69over an insecure network. 70.Pp 71.Nm 72listens for connections from clients. 73It is normally started at boot from 74.Pa /etc/rc.d/sshd . 75It forks a new 76daemon for each incoming connection. 77The forked daemons handle 78key exchange, encryption, authentication, command execution, 79and data exchange. 80.Pp 81.Nm 82can be configured using command-line options or a configuration file 83(by default 84.Xr sshd_config 5 ) ; 85command-line options override values specified in the 86configuration file. 87.Nm 88rereads its configuration file when it receives a hangup signal, 89.Dv SIGHUP , 90by executing itself with the name and options it was started with, e.g.\& 91.Pa /usr/sbin/sshd . 92.Pp 93The options are as follows: 94.Bl -tag -width Ds 95.It Fl 4 96Forces 97.Nm 98to use IPv4 addresses only. 99.It Fl 6 100Forces 101.Nm 102to use IPv6 addresses only. 103.It Fl b Ar bits 104Specifies the number of bits in the ephemeral protocol version 1 105server key (default 1024). 106.It Fl C Ar connection_spec 107Specify the connection parameters to use for the 108.Fl T 109extended test mode. 110If provided, any 111.Cm Match 112directives in the configuration file 113that would apply to the specified user, host, and address will be set before 114the configuration is written to standard output. 115The connection parameters are supplied as keyword=value pairs. 116The keywords are 117.Dq user , 118.Dq host , 119and 120.Dq addr . 121All are required and may be supplied in any order, either with multiple 122.Fl C 123options or as a comma-separated list. 124.It Fl c Ar host_certificate_file 125Specifies a path to a certificate file to identify 126.Nm 127during key exchange. 128The certificate file must match a host key file specified using the 129.Fl h 130option or the 131.Cm HostKey 132configuration directive. 133.It Fl D 134When this option is specified, 135.Nm 136will not detach and does not become a daemon. 137This allows easy monitoring of 138.Nm sshd . 139.It Fl d 140Debug mode. 141The server sends verbose debug output to standard error, 142and does not put itself in the background. 143The server also will not fork and will only process one connection. 144This option is only intended for debugging for the server. 145Multiple 146.Fl d 147options increase the debugging level. 148Maximum is 3. 149.It Fl e 150When this option is specified, 151.Nm 152will send the output to the standard error instead of the system log. 153.It Fl f Ar config_file 154Specifies the name of the configuration file. 155The default is 156.Pa /etc/ssh/sshd_config . 157.Nm 158refuses to start if there is no configuration file. 159.It Fl g Ar login_grace_time 160Gives the grace time for clients to authenticate themselves (default 161120 seconds). 162If the client fails to authenticate the user within 163this many seconds, the server disconnects and exits. 164A value of zero indicates no limit. 165.It Fl h Ar host_key_file 166Specifies a file from which a host key is read. 167This option must be given if 168.Nm 169is not run as root (as the normal 170host key files are normally not readable by anyone but root). 171The default is 172.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key 173for protocol version 1, and 174.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key 175and 176.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key 177for protocol version 2. 178It is possible to have multiple host key files for 179the different protocol versions and host key algorithms. 180.It Fl i 181Specifies that 182.Nm 183is being run from 184.Xr inetd 8 . 185.Nm 186is normally not run 187from inetd because it needs to generate the server key before it can 188respond to the client, and this may take tens of seconds. 189Clients would have to wait too long if the key was regenerated every time. 190However, with small key sizes (e.g. 512) using 191.Nm 192from inetd may 193be feasible. 194.It Fl k Ar key_gen_time 195Specifies how often the ephemeral protocol version 1 server key is 196regenerated (default 3600 seconds, or one hour). 197The motivation for regenerating the key fairly 198often is that the key is not stored anywhere, and after about an hour 199it becomes impossible to recover the key for decrypting intercepted 200communications even if the machine is cracked into or physically 201seized. 202A value of zero indicates that the key will never be regenerated. 203.It Fl o Ar option 204Can be used to give options in the format used in the configuration file. 205This is useful for specifying options for which there is no separate 206command-line flag. 207For full details of the options, and their values, see 208.Xr sshd_config 5 . 209.It Fl p Ar port 210Specifies the port on which the server listens for connections 211(default 22). 212Multiple port options are permitted. 213Ports specified in the configuration file with the 214.Cm Port 215option are ignored when a command-line port is specified. 216Ports specified using the 217.Cm ListenAddress 218option override command-line ports. 219.It Fl q 220Quiet mode. 221Nothing is sent to the system log. 222Normally the beginning, 223authentication, and termination of each connection is logged. 224.It Fl T 225Extended test mode. 226Check the validity of the configuration file, output the effective configuration 227to stdout and then exit. 228Optionally, 229.Cm Match 230rules may be applied by specifying the connection parameters using one or more 231.Fl C 232options. 233.It Fl t 234Test mode. 235Only check the validity of the configuration file and sanity of the keys. 236This is useful for updating 237.Nm 238reliably as configuration options may change. 239.It Fl u Ar len 240This option is used to specify the size of the field 241in the 242.Li utmp 243structure that holds the remote host name. 244If the resolved host name is longer than 245.Ar len , 246the dotted decimal value will be used instead. 247This allows hosts with very long host names that 248overflow this field to still be uniquely identified. 249Specifying 250.Fl u0 251indicates that only dotted decimal addresses 252should be put into the 253.Pa utmp 254file. 255.Fl u0 256may also be used to prevent 257.Nm 258from making DNS requests unless the authentication 259mechanism or configuration requires it. 260Authentication mechanisms that may require DNS include 261.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication , 262.Cm HostbasedAuthentication , 263and using a 264.Cm from="pattern-list" 265option in a key file. 266Configuration options that require DNS include using a 267USER@HOST pattern in 268.Cm AllowUsers 269or 270.Cm DenyUsers . 271.El 272.Sh AUTHENTICATION 273The OpenSSH SSH daemon supports SSH protocols 1 and 2. 274The default is to use protocol 2 only, 275though this can be changed via the 276.Cm Protocol 277option in 278.Xr sshd_config 5 . 279Protocol 2 supports both RSA and DSA keys; 280protocol 1 only supports RSA keys. 281For both protocols, 282each host has a host-specific key, 283normally 2048 bits, 284used to identify the host. 285.Pp 286Forward security for protocol 1 is provided through 287an additional server key, 288normally 768 bits, 289generated when the server starts. 290This key is normally regenerated every hour if it has been used, and 291is never stored on disk. 292Whenever a client connects, the daemon responds with its public 293host and server keys. 294The client compares the 295RSA host key against its own database to verify that it has not changed. 296The client then generates a 256-bit random number. 297It encrypts this 298random number using both the host key and the server key, and sends 299the encrypted number to the server. 300Both sides then use this 301random number as a session key which is used to encrypt all further 302communications in the session. 303The rest of the session is encrypted 304using a conventional cipher, currently Blowfish or 3DES, with 3DES 305being used by default. 306The client selects the encryption algorithm 307to use from those offered by the server. 308.Pp 309For protocol 2, 310forward security is provided through a Diffie-Hellman key agreement. 311This key agreement results in a shared session key. 312The rest of the session is encrypted using a symmetric cipher, currently 313128-bit AES, Blowfish, 3DES, CAST128, Arcfour, 192-bit AES, or 256-bit AES. 314The client selects the encryption algorithm 315to use from those offered by the server. 316Additionally, session integrity is provided 317through a cryptographic message authentication code 318(hmac-md5, hmac-sha1, umac-64 or hmac-ripemd160). 319.Pp 320Finally, the server and the client enter an authentication dialog. 321The client tries to authenticate itself using 322host-based authentication, 323public key authentication, 324challenge-response authentication, 325or password authentication. 326.Pp 327Regardless of the authentication type, the account is checked to 328ensure that it is accessible. An account is not accessible if it is 329locked, listed in 330.Cm DenyUsers 331or its group is listed in 332.Cm DenyGroups 333\&. The definition of a locked account is system dependant. Some platforms 334have their own account database (eg AIX) and some modify the passwd field ( 335.Ql \&*LK\&* 336on Solaris and UnixWare, 337.Ql \&* 338on HP-UX, containing 339.Ql Nologin 340on Tru64, 341a leading 342.Ql \&*LOCKED\&* 343on FreeBSD and a leading 344.Ql \&! 345on most Linuxes). 346If there is a requirement to disable password authentication 347for the account while allowing still public-key, then the passwd field 348should be set to something other than these values (eg 349.Ql NP 350or 351.Ql \&*NP\&* 352). 353.Pp 354If the client successfully authenticates itself, a dialog for 355preparing the session is entered. 356At this time the client may request 357things like allocating a pseudo-tty, forwarding X11 connections, 358forwarding TCP connections, or forwarding the authentication agent 359connection over the secure channel. 360.Pp 361After this, the client either requests a shell or execution of a command. 362The sides then enter session mode. 363In this mode, either side may send 364data at any time, and such data is forwarded to/from the shell or 365command on the server side, and the user terminal in the client side. 366.Pp 367When the user program terminates and all forwarded X11 and other 368connections have been closed, the server sends command exit status to 369the client, and both sides exit. 370.Sh LOGIN PROCESS 371When a user successfully logs in, 372.Nm 373does the following: 374.Bl -enum -offset indent 375.It 376If the login is on a tty, and no command has been specified, 377prints last login time and 378.Pa /etc/motd 379(unless prevented in the configuration file or by 380.Pa ~/.hushlogin ; 381see the 382.Sx FILES 383section). 384.It 385If the login is on a tty, records login time. 386.It 387Checks 388.Pa /etc/nologin and 389.Pa /var/run/nologin ; 390if one exists, it prints the contents and quits 391(unless root). 392.It 393Changes to run with normal user privileges. 394.It 395Sets up basic environment. 396.It 397Reads the file 398.Pa ~/.ssh/environment , 399if it exists, and users are allowed to change their environment. 400See the 401.Cm PermitUserEnvironment 402option in 403.Xr sshd_config 5 . 404.It 405Changes to user's home directory. 406.It 407If 408.Pa ~/.ssh/rc 409exists, runs it; else if 410.Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc 411exists, runs 412it; otherwise runs 413.Xr xauth 1 . 414The 415.Dq rc 416files are given the X11 417authentication protocol and cookie in standard input. 418See 419.Sx SSHRC , 420below. 421.It 422Runs user's shell or command. 423.El 424.Sh SSHRC 425If the file 426.Pa ~/.ssh/rc 427exists, 428.Xr sh 1 429runs it after reading the 430environment files but before starting the user's shell or command. 431It must not produce any output on stdout; stderr must be used 432instead. 433If X11 forwarding is in use, it will receive the "proto cookie" pair in 434its standard input (and 435.Ev DISPLAY 436in its environment). 437The script must call 438.Xr xauth 1 439because 440.Nm 441will not run xauth automatically to add X11 cookies. 442.Pp 443The primary purpose of this file is to run any initialization routines 444which may be needed before the user's home directory becomes 445accessible; AFS is a particular example of such an environment. 446.Pp 447This file will probably contain some initialization code followed by 448something similar to: 449.Bd -literal -offset 3n 450if read proto cookie && [ -n "$DISPLAY" ]; then 451 if [ `echo $DISPLAY | cut -c1-10` = 'localhost:' ]; then 452 # X11UseLocalhost=yes 453 echo add unix:`echo $DISPLAY | 454 cut -c11-` $proto $cookie 455 else 456 # X11UseLocalhost=no 457 echo add $DISPLAY $proto $cookie 458 fi | xauth -q - 459fi 460.Ed 461.Pp 462If this file does not exist, 463.Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc 464is run, and if that 465does not exist either, xauth is used to add the cookie. 466.Sh AUTHORIZED_KEYS FILE FORMAT 467.Cm AuthorizedKeysFile 468specifies the file containing public keys for 469public key authentication; 470if none is specified, the default is 471.Pa ~/.ssh/authorized_keys . 472Each line of the file contains one 473key (empty lines and lines starting with a 474.Ql # 475are ignored as 476comments). 477Protocol 1 public keys consist of the following space-separated fields: 478options, bits, exponent, modulus, comment. 479Protocol 2 public key consist of: 480options, keytype, base64-encoded key, comment. 481The options field is optional; 482its presence is determined by whether the line starts 483with a number or not (the options field never starts with a number). 484The bits, exponent, modulus, and comment fields give the RSA key for 485protocol version 1; the 486comment field is not used for anything (but may be convenient for the 487user to identify the key). 488For protocol version 2 the keytype is 489.Dq ssh-dss 490or 491.Dq ssh-rsa . 492.Pp 493Note that lines in this file are usually several hundred bytes long 494(because of the size of the public key encoding) up to a limit of 4958 kilobytes, which permits DSA keys up to 8 kilobits and RSA 496keys up to 16 kilobits. 497You don't want to type them in; instead, copy the 498.Pa identity.pub , 499.Pa id_dsa.pub , 500or the 501.Pa id_rsa.pub 502file and edit it. 503.Pp 504.Nm 505enforces a minimum RSA key modulus size for protocol 1 506and protocol 2 keys of 768 bits. 507.Pp 508The options (if present) consist of comma-separated option 509specifications. 510No spaces are permitted, except within double quotes. 511The following option specifications are supported (note 512that option keywords are case-insensitive): 513.Bl -tag -width Ds 514.It Cm cert-authority 515Specifies that the listed key is a certification authority (CA) that is 516trusted to validate signed certificates for user authentication. 517.Pp 518Certificates may encode access restrictions similar to these key options. 519If both certificate restrictions and key options are present, the most 520restrictive union of the two is applied. 521.It Cm command="command" 522Specifies that the command is executed whenever this key is used for 523authentication. 524The command supplied by the user (if any) is ignored. 525The command is run on a pty if the client requests a pty; 526otherwise it is run without a tty. 527If an 8-bit clean channel is required, 528one must not request a pty or should specify 529.Cm no-pty . 530A quote may be included in the command by quoting it with a backslash. 531This option might be useful 532to restrict certain public keys to perform just a specific operation. 533An example might be a key that permits remote backups but nothing else. 534Note that the client may specify TCP and/or X11 535forwarding unless they are explicitly prohibited. 536The command originally supplied by the client is available in the 537.Ev SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND 538environment variable. 539Note that this option applies to shell, command or subsystem execution. 540Also note that this command may be superseded by either a 541.Xr sshd_config 5 542.Cm ForceCommand 543directive or a command embedded in a certificate. 544.It Cm environment="NAME=value" 545Specifies that the string is to be added to the environment when 546logging in using this key. 547Environment variables set this way 548override other default environment values. 549Multiple options of this type are permitted. 550Environment processing is disabled by default and is 551controlled via the 552.Cm PermitUserEnvironment 553option. 554This option is automatically disabled if 555.Cm UseLogin 556is enabled. 557.It Cm from="pattern-list" 558Specifies that in addition to public key authentication, either the canonical 559name of the remote host or its IP address must be present in the 560comma-separated list of patterns. 561See 562.Sx PATTERNS 563in 564.Xr ssh_config 5 565for more information on patterns. 566.Pp 567In addition to the wildcard matching that may be applied to hostnames or 568addresses, a 569.Cm from 570stanza may match IP addresses using CIDR address/masklen notation. 571.Pp 572The purpose of this option is to optionally increase security: public key 573authentication by itself does not trust the network or name servers or 574anything (but the key); however, if somebody somehow steals the key, the key 575permits an intruder to log in from anywhere in the world. 576This additional option makes using a stolen key more difficult (name 577servers and/or routers would have to be compromised in addition to 578just the key). 579.It Cm no-agent-forwarding 580Forbids authentication agent forwarding when this key is used for 581authentication. 582.It Cm no-port-forwarding 583Forbids TCP forwarding when this key is used for authentication. 584Any port forward requests by the client will return an error. 585This might be used, e.g. in connection with the 586.Cm command 587option. 588.It Cm no-pty 589Prevents tty allocation (a request to allocate a pty will fail). 590.It Cm no-user-rc 591Disables execution of 592.Pa ~/.ssh/rc . 593.It Cm no-X11-forwarding 594Forbids X11 forwarding when this key is used for authentication. 595Any X11 forward requests by the client will return an error. 596.It Cm permitopen="host:port" 597Limit local 598.Li ``ssh -L'' 599port forwarding such that it may only connect to the specified host and 600port. 601IPv6 addresses can be specified with an alternative syntax: 602.Ar host Ns / Ns Ar port . 603Multiple 604.Cm permitopen 605options may be applied separated by commas. 606No pattern matching is performed on the specified hostnames, 607they must be literal domains or addresses. 608.It Cm tunnel="n" 609Force a 610.Xr tun 4 611device on the server. 612Without this option, the next available device will be used if 613the client requests a tunnel. 614.El 615.Pp 616An example authorized_keys file: 617.Bd -literal -offset 3n 618# Comments allowed at start of line 619ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nza...LiPk== user@example.net 620from="*.sales.example.net,!pc.sales.example.net" ssh-rsa 621AAAAB2...19Q== john@example.net 622command="dump /home",no-pty,no-port-forwarding ssh-dss 623AAAAC3...51R== example.net 624permitopen="192.0.2.1:80",permitopen="192.0.2.2:25" ssh-dss 625AAAAB5...21S== 626tunnel="0",command="sh /etc/netstart tun0" ssh-rsa AAAA...== 627jane@example.net 628.Ed 629.Sh SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS FILE FORMAT 630The 631.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts 632and 633.Pa ~/.ssh/known_hosts 634files contain host public keys for all known hosts. 635The global file should 636be prepared by the administrator (optional), and the per-user file is 637maintained automatically: whenever the user connects from an unknown host, 638its key is added to the per-user file. 639.Pp 640Each line in these files contains the following fields: markers (optional), 641hostnames, bits, exponent, modulus, comment. 642The fields are separated by spaces. 643.Pp 644The marker is optional, but if it is present then it must be one of 645.Dq @cert-authority , 646to indicate that the line contains a certification authority (CA) key, 647or 648.Dq @revoked , 649to indicate that the key contained on the line is revoked and must not ever 650be accepted. 651Only one marker should be used on a key line. 652.Pp 653Hostnames is a comma-separated list of patterns 654.Pf ( Ql * 655and 656.Ql \&? 657act as 658wildcards); each pattern in turn is matched against the canonical host 659name (when authenticating a client) or against the user-supplied 660name (when authenticating a server). 661A pattern may also be preceded by 662.Ql \&! 663to indicate negation: if the host name matches a negated 664pattern, it is not accepted (by that line) even if it matched another 665pattern on the line. 666A hostname or address may optionally be enclosed within 667.Ql \&[ 668and 669.Ql \&] 670brackets then followed by 671.Ql \&: 672and a non-standard port number. 673.Pp 674Alternately, hostnames may be stored in a hashed form which hides host names 675and addresses should the file's contents be disclosed. 676Hashed hostnames start with a 677.Ql | 678character. 679Only one hashed hostname may appear on a single line and none of the above 680negation or wildcard operators may be applied. 681.Pp 682Bits, exponent, and modulus are taken directly from the RSA host key; they 683can be obtained, for example, from 684.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub . 685The optional comment field continues to the end of the line, and is not used. 686.Pp 687Lines starting with 688.Ql # 689and empty lines are ignored as comments. 690.Pp 691When performing host authentication, authentication is accepted if any 692matching line has the proper key; either one that matches exactly or, 693if the server has presented a certificate for authentication, the key 694of the certification authority that signed the certificate. 695For a key to be trusted as a certification authority, it must use the 696.Dq @cert-authority 697marker described above. 698.Pp 699The known hosts file also provides a facility to mark keys as revoked, 700for example when it is known that the associated private key has been 701stolen. 702Revoked keys are specified by including the 703.Dq @revoked 704marker at the beginning of the key line, and are never accepted for 705authentication or as certification authorities, but instead will 706produce a warning from 707.Xr ssh 1 708when they are encountered. 709.Pp 710It is permissible (but not 711recommended) to have several lines or different host keys for the same 712names. 713This will inevitably happen when short forms of host names 714from different domains are put in the file. 715It is possible 716that the files contain conflicting information; authentication is 717accepted if valid information can be found from either file. 718.Pp 719Note that the lines in these files are typically hundreds of characters 720long, and you definitely don't want to type in the host keys by hand. 721Rather, generate them by a script, 722.Xr ssh-keyscan 1 723or by taking 724.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub 725and adding the host names at the front. 726.Xr ssh-keygen 1 727also offers some basic automated editing for 728.Pa ~/.ssh/known_hosts 729including removing hosts matching a host name and converting all host 730names to their hashed representations. 731.Pp 732An example ssh_known_hosts file: 733.Bd -literal -offset 3n 734# Comments allowed at start of line 735closenet,...,192.0.2.53 1024 37 159...93 closenet.example.net 736cvs.example.net,192.0.2.10 ssh-rsa AAAA1234.....= 737# A hashed hostname 738|1|JfKTdBh7rNbXkVAQCRp4OQoPfmI=|USECr3SWf1JUPsms5AqfD5QfxkM= ssh-rsa 739AAAA1234.....= 740# A revoked key 741@revoked * ssh-rsa AAAAB5W... 742# A CA key, accepted for any host in *.mydomain.com or *.mydomain.org 743@cert-authority *.mydomain.org,*.mydomain.com ssh-rsa AAAAB5W... 744.Ed 745.Sh FILES 746.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact 747.It ~/.hushlogin 748This file is used to suppress printing the last login time and 749.Pa /etc/motd , 750if 751.Cm PrintLastLog 752and 753.Cm PrintMotd , 754respectively, 755are enabled. 756It does not suppress printing of the banner specified by 757.Cm Banner . 758.Pp 759.It ~/.rhosts 760This file is used for host-based authentication (see 761.Xr ssh 1 762for more information). 763On some machines this file may need to be 764world-readable if the user's home directory is on an NFS partition, 765because 766.Nm 767reads it as root. 768Additionally, this file must be owned by the user, 769and must not have write permissions for anyone else. 770The recommended 771permission for most machines is read/write for the user, and not 772accessible by others. 773.Pp 774.It ~/.shosts 775This file is used in exactly the same way as 776.Pa .rhosts , 777but allows host-based authentication without permitting login with 778rlogin/rsh. 779.Pp 780.It ~/.ssh/ 781This directory is the default location for all user-specific configuration 782and authentication information. 783There is no general requirement to keep the entire contents of this directory 784secret, but the recommended permissions are read/write/execute for the user, 785and not accessible by others. 786.Pp 787.It ~/.ssh/authorized_keys 788Lists the public keys (RSA/DSA) that can be used for logging in as this user. 789The format of this file is described above. 790The content of the file is not highly sensitive, but the recommended 791permissions are read/write for the user, and not accessible by others. 792.Pp 793If this file, the 794.Pa ~/.ssh 795directory, or the user's home directory are writable 796by other users, then the file could be modified or replaced by unauthorized 797users. 798In this case, 799.Nm 800will not allow it to be used unless the 801.Cm StrictModes 802option has been set to 803.Dq no . 804.Pp 805.It ~/.ssh/environment 806This file is read into the environment at login (if it exists). 807It can only contain empty lines, comment lines (that start with 808.Ql # ) , 809and assignment lines of the form name=value. 810The file should be writable 811only by the user; it need not be readable by anyone else. 812Environment processing is disabled by default and is 813controlled via the 814.Cm PermitUserEnvironment 815option. 816.Pp 817.It ~/.ssh/known_hosts 818Contains a list of host keys for all hosts the user has logged into 819that are not already in the systemwide list of known host keys. 820The format of this file is described above. 821This file should be writable only by root/the owner and 822can, but need not be, world-readable. 823.Pp 824.It ~/.ssh/rc 825Contains initialization routines to be run before 826the user's home directory becomes accessible. 827This file should be writable only by the user, and need not be 828readable by anyone else. 829.Pp 830.It /etc/hosts.allow 831.It /etc/hosts.deny 832Access controls that should be enforced by tcp-wrappers are defined here. 833Further details are described in 834.Xr hosts_access 5 . 835.Pp 836.It /etc/hosts.equiv 837This file is for host-based authentication (see 838.Xr ssh 1 ) . 839It should only be writable by root. 840.Pp 841.It /etc/moduli 842Contains Diffie-Hellman groups used for the "Diffie-Hellman Group Exchange". 843The file format is described in 844.Xr moduli 5 . 845.Pp 846.It /etc/motd 847See 848.Xr motd 5 . 849.Pp 850.It /etc/nologin 851If this file exists, 852.Nm 853refuses to let anyone except root log in. 854The contents of the file 855are displayed to anyone trying to log in, and non-root connections are 856refused. 857The file should be world-readable. 858.Pp 859.It /etc/shosts.equiv 860This file is used in exactly the same way as 861.Pa hosts.equiv , 862but allows host-based authentication without permitting login with 863rlogin/rsh. 864.Pp 865.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key 866.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key 867.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key 868These three files contain the private parts of the host keys. 869These files should only be owned by root, readable only by root, and not 870accessible to others. 871Note that 872.Nm 873does not start if these files are group/world-accessible. 874.Pp 875.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub 876.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key.pub 877.It /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub 878These three files contain the public parts of the host keys. 879These files should be world-readable but writable only by 880root. 881Their contents should match the respective private parts. 882These files are not 883really used for anything; they are provided for the convenience of 884the user so their contents can be copied to known hosts files. 885These files are created using 886.Xr ssh-keygen 1 . 887.Pp 888.It /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts 889Systemwide list of known host keys. 890This file should be prepared by the 891system administrator to contain the public host keys of all machines in the 892organization. 893The format of this file is described above. 894This file should be writable only by root/the owner and 895should be world-readable. 896.Pp 897.It /etc/ssh/sshd_config 898Contains configuration data for 899.Nm sshd . 900The file format and configuration options are described in 901.Xr sshd_config 5 . 902.Pp 903.It /etc/ssh/sshrc 904Similar to 905.Pa ~/.ssh/rc , 906it can be used to specify 907machine-specific login-time initializations globally. 908This file should be writable only by root, and should be world-readable. 909.Pp 910.It /var/empty 911.Xr chroot 2 912directory used by 913.Nm 914during privilege separation in the pre-authentication phase. 915The directory should not contain any files and must be owned by root 916and not group or world-writable. 917.Pp 918.It /var/run/sshd.pid 919Contains the process ID of the 920.Nm 921listening for connections (if there are several daemons running 922concurrently for different ports, this contains the process ID of the one 923started last). 924The content of this file is not sensitive; it can be world-readable. 925.El 926.Sh SEE ALSO 927.Xr scp 1 , 928.Xr sftp 1 , 929.Xr ssh 1 , 930.Xr ssh-add 1 , 931.Xr ssh-agent 1 , 932.Xr ssh-keygen 1 , 933.Xr ssh-keyscan 1 , 934.Xr chroot 2 , 935.Xr hosts_access 5 , 936.Xr login.conf 5 , 937.Xr moduli 5 , 938.Xr sshd_config 5 , 939.Xr inetd 8 , 940.Xr sftp-server 8 941.Sh AUTHORS 942OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free 943ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen. 944Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos, 945Theo de Raadt and Dug Song 946removed many bugs, re-added newer features and 947created OpenSSH. 948Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH 949protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0. 950Niels Provos and Markus Friedl contributed support 951for privilege separation. 952.Sh CAVEATS 953System security is not improved unless 954.Nm rshd , 955.Nm rlogind , 956and 957.Nm rexecd 958are disabled (thus completely disabling 959.Xr rlogin 960and 961.Xr rsh 962into the machine). 963