xref: /freebsd/crypto/openssh/sshd.8 (revision d4ae33f0721c1b170fe37d97e395228ffcfb3f80)
1.\"
2.\" Author: Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>
3.\" Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>, Espoo, Finland
4.\"                    All rights reserved
5.\"
6.\" As far as I am concerned, the code I have written for this software
7.\" can be used freely for any purpose.  Any derived versions of this
8.\" software must be clearly marked as such, and if the derived work is
9.\" incompatible with the protocol description in the RFC file, it must be
10.\" called by a name other than "ssh" or "Secure Shell".
11.\"
12.\" Copyright (c) 1999,2000 Markus Friedl.  All rights reserved.
13.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Aaron Campbell.  All rights reserved.
14.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Theo de Raadt.  All rights reserved.
15.\"
16.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
17.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
18.\" are met:
19.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
20.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
21.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
22.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
23.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
24.\"
25.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
26.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
27.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
28.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
29.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
30.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
31.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
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33.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
34.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
35.\"
36.\" $OpenBSD: sshd.8,v 1.270 2013/06/27 14:05:37 jmc Exp $
37.\" $FreeBSD$
38.Dd June 27, 2013
39.Dt SSHD 8
40.Os
41.Sh NAME
42.Nm sshd
43.Nd OpenSSH SSH daemon
44.Sh SYNOPSIS
45.Nm sshd
46.Bk -words
47.Op Fl 46DdeiqTt
48.Op Fl b Ar bits
49.Op Fl C Ar connection_spec
50.Op Fl c Ar host_certificate_file
51.Op Fl E Ar log_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 ,
119.Dq laddr ,
120.Dq lport ,
121and
122.Dq addr .
123All are required and may be supplied in any order, either with multiple
124.Fl C
125options or as a comma-separated list.
126.It Fl c Ar host_certificate_file
127Specifies a path to a certificate file to identify
128.Nm
129during key exchange.
130The certificate file must match a host key file specified using the
131.Fl h
132option or the
133.Cm HostKey
134configuration directive.
135.It Fl D
136When this option is specified,
137.Nm
138will not detach and does not become a daemon.
139This allows easy monitoring of
140.Nm sshd .
141.It Fl d
142Debug mode.
143The server sends verbose debug output to standard error,
144and does not put itself in the background.
145The server also will not fork and will only process one connection.
146This option is only intended for debugging for the server.
147Multiple
148.Fl d
149options increase the debugging level.
150Maximum is 3.
151.It Fl E Ar log_file
152Append debug logs to
153.Ar log_file
154instead of the system log.
155.It Fl e
156Write debug logs to standard error instead of the system log.
157.It Fl f Ar config_file
158Specifies the name of the configuration file.
159The default is
160.Pa /etc/ssh/sshd_config .
161.Nm
162refuses to start if there is no configuration file.
163.It Fl g Ar login_grace_time
164Gives the grace time for clients to authenticate themselves (default
165120 seconds).
166If the client fails to authenticate the user within
167this many seconds, the server disconnects and exits.
168A value of zero indicates no limit.
169.It Fl h Ar host_key_file
170Specifies a file from which a host key is read.
171This option must be given if
172.Nm
173is not run as root (as the normal
174host key files are normally not readable by anyone but root).
175The default is
176.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key
177for protocol version 1, and
178.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key ,
179.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
180and
181.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
182for protocol version 2.
183It is possible to have multiple host key files for
184the different protocol versions and host key algorithms.
185.It Fl i
186Specifies that
187.Nm
188is being run from
189.Xr inetd 8 .
190.Nm
191is normally not run
192from inetd because it needs to generate the server key before it can
193respond to the client, and this may take tens of seconds.
194Clients would have to wait too long if the key was regenerated every time.
195However, with small key sizes (e.g. 512) using
196.Nm
197from inetd may
198be feasible.
199.It Fl k Ar key_gen_time
200Specifies how often the ephemeral protocol version 1 server key is
201regenerated (default 3600 seconds, or one hour).
202The motivation for regenerating the key fairly
203often is that the key is not stored anywhere, and after about an hour
204it becomes impossible to recover the key for decrypting intercepted
205communications even if the machine is cracked into or physically
206seized.
207A value of zero indicates that the key will never be regenerated.
208.It Fl o Ar option
209Can be used to give options in the format used in the configuration file.
210This is useful for specifying options for which there is no separate
211command-line flag.
212For full details of the options, and their values, see
213.Xr sshd_config 5 .
214.It Fl p Ar port
215Specifies the port on which the server listens for connections
216(default 22).
217Multiple port options are permitted.
218Ports specified in the configuration file with the
219.Cm Port
220option are ignored when a command-line port is specified.
221Ports specified using the
222.Cm ListenAddress
223option override command-line ports.
224.It Fl q
225Quiet mode.
226Nothing is sent to the system log.
227Normally the beginning,
228authentication, and termination of each connection is logged.
229.It Fl T
230Extended test mode.
231Check the validity of the configuration file, output the effective configuration
232to stdout and then exit.
233Optionally,
234.Cm Match
235rules may be applied by specifying the connection parameters using one or more
236.Fl C
237options.
238.It Fl t
239Test mode.
240Only check the validity of the configuration file and sanity of the keys.
241This is useful for updating
242.Nm
243reliably as configuration options may change.
244.It Fl u Ar len
245This option is used to specify the size of the field
246in the
247.Li utmp
248structure that holds the remote host name.
249If the resolved host name is longer than
250.Ar len ,
251the dotted decimal value will be used instead.
252This allows hosts with very long host names that
253overflow this field to still be uniquely identified.
254Specifying
255.Fl u0
256indicates that only dotted decimal addresses
257should be put into the
258.Pa utmp
259file.
260.Fl u0
261may also be used to prevent
262.Nm
263from making DNS requests unless the authentication
264mechanism or configuration requires it.
265Authentication mechanisms that may require DNS include
266.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication ,
267.Cm HostbasedAuthentication ,
268and using a
269.Cm from="pattern-list"
270option in a key file.
271Configuration options that require DNS include using a
272USER@HOST pattern in
273.Cm AllowUsers
274or
275.Cm DenyUsers .
276.El
277.Sh AUTHENTICATION
278The OpenSSH SSH daemon supports SSH protocols 1 and 2.
279The default is to use protocol 2 only,
280though this can be changed via the
281.Cm Protocol
282option in
283.Xr sshd_config 5 .
284Protocol 2 supports DSA, ECDSA and RSA keys;
285protocol 1 only supports RSA keys.
286For both protocols,
287each host has a host-specific key,
288normally 2048 bits,
289used to identify the host.
290.Pp
291Forward security for protocol 1 is provided through
292an additional server key,
293normally 768 bits,
294generated when the server starts.
295This key is normally regenerated every hour if it has been used, and
296is never stored on disk.
297Whenever a client connects, the daemon responds with its public
298host and server keys.
299The client compares the
300RSA host key against its own database to verify that it has not changed.
301The client then generates a 256-bit random number.
302It encrypts this
303random number using both the host key and the server key, and sends
304the encrypted number to the server.
305Both sides then use this
306random number as a session key which is used to encrypt all further
307communications in the session.
308The rest of the session is encrypted
309using a conventional cipher, currently Blowfish or 3DES, with 3DES
310being used by default.
311The client selects the encryption algorithm
312to use from those offered by the server.
313.Pp
314For protocol 2,
315forward security is provided through a Diffie-Hellman key agreement.
316This key agreement results in a shared session key.
317The rest of the session is encrypted using a symmetric cipher, currently
318128-bit AES, Blowfish, 3DES, CAST128, Arcfour, 192-bit AES, or 256-bit AES.
319The client selects the encryption algorithm
320to use from those offered by the server.
321Additionally, session integrity is provided
322through a cryptographic message authentication code
323(hmac-md5, hmac-sha1, umac-64, umac-128, hmac-ripemd160,
324hmac-sha2-256 or hmac-sha2-512).
325.Pp
326Finally, the server and the client enter an authentication dialog.
327The client tries to authenticate itself using
328host-based authentication,
329public key authentication,
330challenge-response authentication,
331or password authentication.
332.Pp
333Regardless of the authentication type, the account is checked to
334ensure that it is accessible.  An account is not accessible if it is
335locked, listed in
336.Cm DenyUsers
337or its group is listed in
338.Cm DenyGroups
339\&.  The definition of a locked account is system dependant. Some platforms
340have their own account database (eg AIX) and some modify the passwd field (
341.Ql \&*LK\&*
342on Solaris and UnixWare,
343.Ql \&*
344on HP-UX, containing
345.Ql Nologin
346on Tru64,
347a leading
348.Ql \&*LOCKED\&*
349on FreeBSD and a leading
350.Ql \&!
351on most Linuxes).
352If there is a requirement to disable password authentication
353for the account while allowing still public-key, then the passwd field
354should be set to something other than these values (eg
355.Ql NP
356or
357.Ql \&*NP\&*
358).
359.Pp
360If the client successfully authenticates itself, a dialog for
361preparing the session is entered.
362At this time the client may request
363things like allocating a pseudo-tty, forwarding X11 connections,
364forwarding TCP connections, or forwarding the authentication agent
365connection over the secure channel.
366.Pp
367After this, the client either requests a shell or execution of a command.
368The sides then enter session mode.
369In this mode, either side may send
370data at any time, and such data is forwarded to/from the shell or
371command on the server side, and the user terminal in the client side.
372.Pp
373When the user program terminates and all forwarded X11 and other
374connections have been closed, the server sends command exit status to
375the client, and both sides exit.
376.Sh LOGIN PROCESS
377When a user successfully logs in,
378.Nm
379does the following:
380.Bl -enum -offset indent
381.It
382If the login is on a tty, and no command has been specified,
383prints last login time and
384.Pa /etc/motd
385(unless prevented in the configuration file or by
386.Pa ~/.hushlogin ;
387see the
388.Sx FILES
389section).
390.It
391If the login is on a tty, records login time.
392.It
393Checks
394.Pa /etc/nologin and
395.Pa /var/run/nologin ;
396if one exists, it prints the contents and quits
397(unless root).
398.It
399Changes to run with normal user privileges.
400.It
401Sets up basic environment.
402.It
403Reads the file
404.Pa ~/.ssh/environment ,
405if it exists, and users are allowed to change their environment.
406See the
407.Cm PermitUserEnvironment
408option in
409.Xr sshd_config 5 .
410.It
411Changes to user's home directory.
412.It
413If
414.Pa ~/.ssh/rc
415exists, runs it; else if
416.Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc
417exists, runs
418it; otherwise runs
419.Xr xauth 1 .
420The
421.Dq rc
422files are given the X11
423authentication protocol and cookie in standard input.
424See
425.Sx SSHRC ,
426below.
427.It
428Runs user's shell or command.
429.El
430.Sh SSHRC
431If the file
432.Pa ~/.ssh/rc
433exists,
434.Xr sh 1
435runs it after reading the
436environment files but before starting the user's shell or command.
437It must not produce any output on stdout; stderr must be used
438instead.
439If X11 forwarding is in use, it will receive the "proto cookie" pair in
440its standard input (and
441.Ev DISPLAY
442in its environment).
443The script must call
444.Xr xauth 1
445because
446.Nm
447will not run xauth automatically to add X11 cookies.
448.Pp
449The primary purpose of this file is to run any initialization routines
450which may be needed before the user's home directory becomes
451accessible; AFS is a particular example of such an environment.
452.Pp
453This file will probably contain some initialization code followed by
454something similar to:
455.Bd -literal -offset 3n
456if read proto cookie && [ -n "$DISPLAY" ]; then
457	if [ `echo $DISPLAY | cut -c1-10` = 'localhost:' ]; then
458		# X11UseLocalhost=yes
459		echo add unix:`echo $DISPLAY |
460		    cut -c11-` $proto $cookie
461	else
462		# X11UseLocalhost=no
463		echo add $DISPLAY $proto $cookie
464	fi | xauth -q -
465fi
466.Ed
467.Pp
468If this file does not exist,
469.Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc
470is run, and if that
471does not exist either, xauth is used to add the cookie.
472.Sh AUTHORIZED_KEYS FILE FORMAT
473.Cm AuthorizedKeysFile
474specifies the files containing public keys for
475public key authentication;
476if none is specified, the default is
477.Pa ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
478and
479.Pa ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2 .
480Each line of the file contains one
481key (empty lines and lines starting with a
482.Ql #
483are ignored as
484comments).
485Protocol 1 public keys consist of the following space-separated fields:
486options, bits, exponent, modulus, comment.
487Protocol 2 public key consist of:
488options, keytype, base64-encoded key, comment.
489The options field is optional;
490its presence is determined by whether the line starts
491with a number or not (the options field never starts with a number).
492The bits, exponent, modulus, and comment fields give the RSA key for
493protocol version 1; the
494comment field is not used for anything (but may be convenient for the
495user to identify the key).
496For protocol version 2 the keytype is
497.Dq ecdsa-sha2-nistp256 ,
498.Dq ecdsa-sha2-nistp384 ,
499.Dq ecdsa-sha2-nistp521 ,
500.Dq ssh-dss
501or
502.Dq ssh-rsa .
503.Pp
504Note that lines in this file are usually several hundred bytes long
505(because of the size of the public key encoding) up to a limit of
5068 kilobytes, which permits DSA keys up to 8 kilobits and RSA
507keys up to 16 kilobits.
508You don't want to type them in; instead, copy the
509.Pa identity.pub ,
510.Pa id_dsa.pub ,
511.Pa id_ecdsa.pub ,
512or the
513.Pa id_rsa.pub
514file and edit it.
515.Pp
516.Nm
517enforces a minimum RSA key modulus size for protocol 1
518and protocol 2 keys of 768 bits.
519.Pp
520The options (if present) consist of comma-separated option
521specifications.
522No spaces are permitted, except within double quotes.
523The following option specifications are supported (note
524that option keywords are case-insensitive):
525.Bl -tag -width Ds
526.It Cm cert-authority
527Specifies that the listed key is a certification authority (CA) that is
528trusted to validate signed certificates for user authentication.
529.Pp
530Certificates may encode access restrictions similar to these key options.
531If both certificate restrictions and key options are present, the most
532restrictive union of the two is applied.
533.It Cm command="command"
534Specifies that the command is executed whenever this key is used for
535authentication.
536The command supplied by the user (if any) is ignored.
537The command is run on a pty if the client requests a pty;
538otherwise it is run without a tty.
539If an 8-bit clean channel is required,
540one must not request a pty or should specify
541.Cm no-pty .
542A quote may be included in the command by quoting it with a backslash.
543This option might be useful
544to restrict certain public keys to perform just a specific operation.
545An example might be a key that permits remote backups but nothing else.
546Note that the client may specify TCP and/or X11
547forwarding unless they are explicitly prohibited.
548The command originally supplied by the client is available in the
549.Ev SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND
550environment variable.
551Note that this option applies to shell, command or subsystem execution.
552Also note that this command may be superseded by either a
553.Xr sshd_config 5
554.Cm ForceCommand
555directive or a command embedded in a certificate.
556.It Cm environment="NAME=value"
557Specifies that the string is to be added to the environment when
558logging in using this key.
559Environment variables set this way
560override other default environment values.
561Multiple options of this type are permitted.
562Environment processing is disabled by default and is
563controlled via the
564.Cm PermitUserEnvironment
565option.
566This option is automatically disabled if
567.Cm UseLogin
568is enabled.
569.It Cm from="pattern-list"
570Specifies that in addition to public key authentication, either the canonical
571name of the remote host or its IP address must be present in the
572comma-separated list of patterns.
573See PATTERNS in
574.Xr ssh_config 5
575for more information on patterns.
576.Pp
577In addition to the wildcard matching that may be applied to hostnames or
578addresses, a
579.Cm from
580stanza may match IP addresses using CIDR address/masklen notation.
581.Pp
582The purpose of this option is to optionally increase security: public key
583authentication by itself does not trust the network or name servers or
584anything (but the key); however, if somebody somehow steals the key, the key
585permits an intruder to log in from anywhere in the world.
586This additional option makes using a stolen key more difficult (name
587servers and/or routers would have to be compromised in addition to
588just the key).
589.It Cm no-agent-forwarding
590Forbids authentication agent forwarding when this key is used for
591authentication.
592.It Cm no-port-forwarding
593Forbids TCP forwarding when this key is used for authentication.
594Any port forward requests by the client will return an error.
595This might be used, e.g. in connection with the
596.Cm command
597option.
598.It Cm no-pty
599Prevents tty allocation (a request to allocate a pty will fail).
600.It Cm no-user-rc
601Disables execution of
602.Pa ~/.ssh/rc .
603.It Cm no-X11-forwarding
604Forbids X11 forwarding when this key is used for authentication.
605Any X11 forward requests by the client will return an error.
606.It Cm permitopen="host:port"
607Limit local
608.Li ``ssh -L''
609port forwarding such that it may only connect to the specified host and
610port.
611IPv6 addresses can be specified by enclosing the address in square brackets.
612Multiple
613.Cm permitopen
614options may be applied separated by commas.
615No pattern matching is performed on the specified hostnames,
616they must be literal domains or addresses.
617A port specification of
618.Cm *
619matches any port.
620.It Cm principals="principals"
621On a
622.Cm cert-authority
623line, specifies allowed principals for certificate authentication as a
624comma-separated list.
625At least one name from the list must appear in the certificate's
626list of principals for the certificate to be accepted.
627This option is ignored for keys that are not marked as trusted certificate
628signers using the
629.Cm cert-authority
630option.
631.It Cm tunnel="n"
632Force a
633.Xr tun 4
634device on the server.
635Without this option, the next available device will be used if
636the client requests a tunnel.
637.El
638.Pp
639An example authorized_keys file:
640.Bd -literal -offset 3n
641# Comments allowed at start of line
642ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nza...LiPk== user@example.net
643from="*.sales.example.net,!pc.sales.example.net" ssh-rsa
644AAAAB2...19Q== john@example.net
645command="dump /home",no-pty,no-port-forwarding ssh-dss
646AAAAC3...51R== example.net
647permitopen="192.0.2.1:80",permitopen="192.0.2.2:25" ssh-dss
648AAAAB5...21S==
649tunnel="0",command="sh /etc/netstart tun0" ssh-rsa AAAA...==
650jane@example.net
651.Ed
652.Sh SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS FILE FORMAT
653The
654.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
655and
656.Pa ~/.ssh/known_hosts
657files contain host public keys for all known hosts.
658The global file should
659be prepared by the administrator (optional), and the per-user file is
660maintained automatically: whenever the user connects from an unknown host,
661its key is added to the per-user file.
662.Pp
663Each line in these files contains the following fields: markers (optional),
664hostnames, bits, exponent, modulus, comment.
665The fields are separated by spaces.
666.Pp
667The marker is optional, but if it is present then it must be one of
668.Dq @cert-authority ,
669to indicate that the line contains a certification authority (CA) key,
670or
671.Dq @revoked ,
672to indicate that the key contained on the line is revoked and must not ever
673be accepted.
674Only one marker should be used on a key line.
675.Pp
676Hostnames is a comma-separated list of patterns
677.Pf ( Ql *
678and
679.Ql \&?
680act as
681wildcards); each pattern in turn is matched against the canonical host
682name (when authenticating a client) or against the user-supplied
683name (when authenticating a server).
684A pattern may also be preceded by
685.Ql \&!
686to indicate negation: if the host name matches a negated
687pattern, it is not accepted (by that line) even if it matched another
688pattern on the line.
689A hostname or address may optionally be enclosed within
690.Ql \&[
691and
692.Ql \&]
693brackets then followed by
694.Ql \&:
695and a non-standard port number.
696.Pp
697Alternately, hostnames may be stored in a hashed form which hides host names
698and addresses should the file's contents be disclosed.
699Hashed hostnames start with a
700.Ql |
701character.
702Only one hashed hostname may appear on a single line and none of the above
703negation or wildcard operators may be applied.
704.Pp
705Bits, exponent, and modulus are taken directly from the RSA host key; they
706can be obtained, for example, from
707.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub .
708The optional comment field continues to the end of the line, and is not used.
709.Pp
710Lines starting with
711.Ql #
712and empty lines are ignored as comments.
713.Pp
714When performing host authentication, authentication is accepted if any
715matching line has the proper key; either one that matches exactly or,
716if the server has presented a certificate for authentication, the key
717of the certification authority that signed the certificate.
718For a key to be trusted as a certification authority, it must use the
719.Dq @cert-authority
720marker described above.
721.Pp
722The known hosts file also provides a facility to mark keys as revoked,
723for example when it is known that the associated private key has been
724stolen.
725Revoked keys are specified by including the
726.Dq @revoked
727marker at the beginning of the key line, and are never accepted for
728authentication or as certification authorities, but instead will
729produce a warning from
730.Xr ssh 1
731when they are encountered.
732.Pp
733It is permissible (but not
734recommended) to have several lines or different host keys for the same
735names.
736This will inevitably happen when short forms of host names
737from different domains are put in the file.
738It is possible
739that the files contain conflicting information; authentication is
740accepted if valid information can be found from either file.
741.Pp
742Note that the lines in these files are typically hundreds of characters
743long, and you definitely don't want to type in the host keys by hand.
744Rather, generate them by a script,
745.Xr ssh-keyscan 1
746or by taking
747.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub
748and adding the host names at the front.
749.Xr ssh-keygen 1
750also offers some basic automated editing for
751.Pa ~/.ssh/known_hosts
752including removing hosts matching a host name and converting all host
753names to their hashed representations.
754.Pp
755An example ssh_known_hosts file:
756.Bd -literal -offset 3n
757# Comments allowed at start of line
758closenet,...,192.0.2.53 1024 37 159...93 closenet.example.net
759cvs.example.net,192.0.2.10 ssh-rsa AAAA1234.....=
760# A hashed hostname
761|1|JfKTdBh7rNbXkVAQCRp4OQoPfmI=|USECr3SWf1JUPsms5AqfD5QfxkM= ssh-rsa
762AAAA1234.....=
763# A revoked key
764@revoked * ssh-rsa AAAAB5W...
765# A CA key, accepted for any host in *.mydomain.com or *.mydomain.org
766@cert-authority *.mydomain.org,*.mydomain.com ssh-rsa AAAAB5W...
767.Ed
768.Sh FILES
769.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact
770.It Pa ~/.hushlogin
771This file is used to suppress printing the last login time and
772.Pa /etc/motd ,
773if
774.Cm PrintLastLog
775and
776.Cm PrintMotd ,
777respectively,
778are enabled.
779It does not suppress printing of the banner specified by
780.Cm Banner .
781.Pp
782.It Pa ~/.rhosts
783This file is used for host-based authentication (see
784.Xr ssh 1
785for more information).
786On some machines this file may need to be
787world-readable if the user's home directory is on an NFS partition,
788because
789.Nm
790reads it as root.
791Additionally, this file must be owned by the user,
792and must not have write permissions for anyone else.
793The recommended
794permission for most machines is read/write for the user, and not
795accessible by others.
796.Pp
797.It Pa ~/.shosts
798This file is used in exactly the same way as
799.Pa .rhosts ,
800but allows host-based authentication without permitting login with
801rlogin/rsh.
802.Pp
803.It Pa ~/.ssh/
804This directory is the default location for all user-specific configuration
805and authentication information.
806There is no general requirement to keep the entire contents of this directory
807secret, but the recommended permissions are read/write/execute for the user,
808and not accessible by others.
809.Pp
810.It Pa ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
811Lists the public keys (DSA/ECDSA/RSA) that can be used for logging in
812as this user.
813The format of this file is described above.
814The content of the file is not highly sensitive, but the recommended
815permissions are read/write for the user, and not accessible by others.
816.Pp
817If this file, the
818.Pa ~/.ssh
819directory, or the user's home directory are writable
820by other users, then the file could be modified or replaced by unauthorized
821users.
822In this case,
823.Nm
824will not allow it to be used unless the
825.Cm StrictModes
826option has been set to
827.Dq no .
828.Pp
829.It Pa ~/.ssh/environment
830This file is read into the environment at login (if it exists).
831It can only contain empty lines, comment lines (that start with
832.Ql # ) ,
833and assignment lines of the form name=value.
834The file should be writable
835only by the user; it need not be readable by anyone else.
836Environment processing is disabled by default and is
837controlled via the
838.Cm PermitUserEnvironment
839option.
840.Pp
841.It Pa ~/.ssh/known_hosts
842Contains a list of host keys for all hosts the user has logged into
843that are not already in the systemwide list of known host keys.
844The format of this file is described above.
845This file should be writable only by root/the owner and
846can, but need not be, world-readable.
847.Pp
848.It Pa ~/.ssh/rc
849Contains initialization routines to be run before
850the user's home directory becomes accessible.
851This file should be writable only by the user, and need not be
852readable by anyone else.
853.Pp
854.It Pa /etc/hosts.allow
855.It Pa /etc/hosts.deny
856Access controls that should be enforced by tcp-wrappers are defined here.
857Further details are described in
858.Xr hosts_access 5 .
859.Pp
860.It Pa /etc/hosts.equiv
861This file is for host-based authentication (see
862.Xr ssh 1 ) .
863It should only be writable by root.
864.Pp
865.It Pa /etc/moduli
866Contains Diffie-Hellman groups used for the "Diffie-Hellman Group Exchange".
867The file format is described in
868.Xr moduli 5 .
869.Pp
870.It Pa /etc/motd
871See
872.Xr motd 5 .
873.Pp
874.It Pa /etc/nologin
875If this file exists,
876.Nm
877refuses to let anyone except root log in.
878The contents of the file
879are displayed to anyone trying to log in, and non-root connections are
880refused.
881The file should be world-readable.
882.Pp
883.It Pa /etc/shosts.equiv
884This file is used in exactly the same way as
885.Pa hosts.equiv ,
886but allows host-based authentication without permitting login with
887rlogin/rsh.
888.Pp
889.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key
890.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
891.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
892.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
893These files contain the private parts of the host keys.
894These files should only be owned by root, readable only by root, and not
895accessible to others.
896Note that
897.Nm
898does not start if these files are group/world-accessible.
899.Pp
900.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key.pub
901.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key.pub
902.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key.pub
903.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub
904These files contain the public parts of the host keys.
905These files should be world-readable but writable only by
906root.
907Their contents should match the respective private parts.
908These files are not
909really used for anything; they are provided for the convenience of
910the user so their contents can be copied to known hosts files.
911These files are created using
912.Xr ssh-keygen 1 .
913.Pp
914.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
915Systemwide list of known host keys.
916This file should be prepared by the
917system administrator to contain the public host keys of all machines in the
918organization.
919The format of this file is described above.
920This file should be writable only by root/the owner and
921should be world-readable.
922.Pp
923.It Pa /etc/ssh/sshd_config
924Contains configuration data for
925.Nm sshd .
926The file format and configuration options are described in
927.Xr sshd_config 5 .
928.Pp
929.It Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc
930Similar to
931.Pa ~/.ssh/rc ,
932it can be used to specify
933machine-specific login-time initializations globally.
934This file should be writable only by root, and should be world-readable.
935.Pp
936.It Pa /var/empty
937.Xr chroot 2
938directory used by
939.Nm
940during privilege separation in the pre-authentication phase.
941The directory should not contain any files and must be owned by root
942and not group or world-writable.
943.Pp
944.It Pa /var/run/sshd.pid
945Contains the process ID of the
946.Nm
947listening for connections (if there are several daemons running
948concurrently for different ports, this contains the process ID of the one
949started last).
950The content of this file is not sensitive; it can be world-readable.
951.El
952.Sh SEE ALSO
953.Xr scp 1 ,
954.Xr sftp 1 ,
955.Xr ssh 1 ,
956.Xr ssh-add 1 ,
957.Xr ssh-agent 1 ,
958.Xr ssh-keygen 1 ,
959.Xr ssh-keyscan 1 ,
960.Xr chroot 2 ,
961.Xr hosts_access 5 ,
962.Xr login.conf 5 ,
963.Xr moduli 5 ,
964.Xr sshd_config 5 ,
965.Xr inetd 8 ,
966.Xr sftp-server 8
967.Sh AUTHORS
968OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free
969ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen.
970Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos,
971Theo de Raadt and Dug Song
972removed many bugs, re-added newer features and
973created OpenSSH.
974Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH
975protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0.
976Niels Provos and Markus Friedl contributed support
977for privilege separation.
978.Sh CAVEATS
979System security is not improved unless
980.Nm rshd ,
981.Nm rlogind ,
982and
983.Nm rexecd
984are disabled (thus completely disabling
985.Xr rlogin
986and
987.Xr rsh
988into the machine).
989