| Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program to log into another computer over a |
| network, to execute commands in a remote machine, and to move files |
| from one machine to another. It provides strong authentication and |
| secure communications over insecure channels. It is inteded as a |
| replacement for rlogin, rsh, rcp, and rdist. |
| |
| See the file INSTALL for installation instructions. See COPYING for |
| license terms and other legal issues. See RFC for a description of |
| the protocol. There is a WWW page for ssh; see http://www.cs.hut.fi/ssh. |
| |
| This file has been updated to match ssh-1.2.12. |
| |
| |
| FEATURES |
| |
| o Strong authentication. Closes several security holes (e.g., IP, |
| routing, and DNS spoofing). New authentication methods: .rhosts |
| together with RSA based host authentication, and pure RSA |
| authentication. |
| |
| o Improved privacy. All communications are automatically and |
| transparently encrypted. RSA is used for key exchange, and a |
| conventional cipher (normally IDEA, DES, or triple-DES) for |
| encrypting the session. Encryption is started before |
| authentication, and no passwords or other information is |
| transmitted in the clear. Encryption is also used to protect |
| against spoofed packets. |
| |
| o Secure X11 sessions. The program automatically sets DISPLAY on |
| the server machine, and forwards any X11 connections over the |
| secure channel. Fake Xauthority information is automatically |
| generated and forwarded to the remote machine; the local client |
| automatically examines incoming X11 connections and replaces the |
| fake authorization data with the real data (never telling the |
| remote machine the real information). |
| |
| o Arbitrary TCP/IP ports can be redirected through the encrypted channel |
| in both directions (e.g., for e-cash transactions). |
| |
| o No retraining needed for normal users; everything happens |
| automatically, and old .rhosts files will work with strong |
| authentication if administration installs host key files. |
| |
| o Never trusts the network. Minimal trust on the remote side of |
| the connection. Minimal trust on domain name servers. Pure RSA |
| authentication never trusts anything but the private key. |
| |
| o Client RSA-authenticates the server machine in the beginning of |
| every connection to prevent trojan horses (by routing or DNS |
| spoofing) and man-in-the-middle attacks, and the server |
| RSA-authenticates the client machine before accepting .rhosts or |
| /etc/hosts.equiv authentication (to prevent DNS, routing, or |
| IP-spoofing). |
| |
| o Host authentication key distribution can be centrally by the |
| administration, automatically when the first connection is made |
| to a machine (the key obtained on the first connection will be |
| recorded and used for authentication in the future), or manually |
| by each user for his/her own use. The central and per-user host |
| key repositories are both used and complement each other. Host |
| keys can be generated centrally or automatically when the software |
| is installed. Host authentication keys are typically 1024 bits. |
| |
| o Any user can create any number of user authentication RSA keys for |
| his/her own use. Each user has a file which lists the RSA public |
| keys for which proof of possession of the corresponding private |
| key is accepted as authentication. User authentication keys are |
| typically 1024 bits. |
| |
| o The server program has its own server RSA key which is |
| automatically regenerated every hour. This key is never saved in |
| any file. Exchanged session keys are encrypted using both the |
| server key and the server host key. The purpose of the separate |
| server key is to make it impossible to decipher a captured session by |
| breaking into the server machine at a later time; one hour from |
| the connection even the server machine cannot decipher the session |
| key. The key regeneration interval is configurable. The server |
| key is normally 768 bits. |
| |
| o An authentication agent, running in the user's laptop or local |
| workstation, can be used to hold the user's RSA authentication |
| keys. Ssh automatically forwards the connection to the |
| authentication agent over any connections, and there is no need to |
| store the RSA authentication keys on any machine in the network |
| (except the user's own local machine). The authentication |
| protocols never reveal the keys; they can only be used to verify |
| that the user's agent has a certain key. Eventually the agent |
| could rely on a smart card to perform all authentication |
| computations. |
| |
| o The software can be installed and used (with restricted |
| functionality) even without root privileges. |
| |
| o The client is customizable in system-wide and per-user |
| configuration files. Most aspects of the client's operation can |
| be configured. Different options can be specified on a per-host basis. |
| |
| o Automatically executes conventional rsh (after displaying a |
| warning) if the server machine is not running sshd. |
| |
| o Optional compression of all data with gzip (including forwarded X11 |
| and TCP/IP port data), which may result in significant speedups on |
| slow connections. |
| |
| o Complete replacement for rlogin, rsh, and rcp. |
| |
| |
| WHY TO USE SECURE SHELL |
| |
| Currently, almost all communications in computer networks are done |
| without encryption. As a consequence, anyone who has access to any |
| machine connected to the network can listen in on any communication. |
| This is being done by hackers, curious administrators, employers, |
| criminals, industrial spies, and governments. Some networks leak off |
| enough electromagnetic radiation that data may be captured even from a |
| distance. |
| |
| When you log in, your password goes in the network in plain |
| text. Thus, any listener can then use your account to do any evil he |
| likes. Many incidents have been encountered worldwide where crackers |
| have started programs on workstations without the owners knowledge |
| just to listen to the network and collect passwords. Programs for |
| doing this are available on the Internet, or can be built by a |
| competent programmer in a few hours. |
| |
| Any information that you type or is printed on your screen can be |
| monitored, recorded, and analyzed. For example, an intruder who has |
| penetrated a host connected to a major network can start a program |
| that listens to all data flowing in the network, and whenever it |
| encounters a 16-digit string, it checks if it is a valid credit card |
| number (using the check digit), and saves the number plus any |
| surrounding text (to catch expiration date and holder) in a file. |
| When the intruder has collected a few thousand credit card numbers, he |
| makes smallish mail-order purchases from a few thousand stores around |
| the world, and disappears when the goods arrive but before anyone |
| suspects anything. |
| |
| Businesses have trade secrets, patent applications in preparation, |
| pricing information, subcontractor information, client data, personnel |
| data, financial information, etc. Currently, anyone with access to |
| the network (any machine on the network) can listen to anything that |
| goes in the network, without any regard to normal access restrictions. |
| |
| Many companies are not aware that information can so easily be |
| recovered from the network. They trust that their data is safe |
| since nobody is supposed to know that there is sensitive information |
| in the network, or because so much other data is transferred in the |
| network. This is not a safe policy. |
| |
| Individual persons also have confidential information, such as |
| diaries, love letters, health care documents, information about their |
| personal interests and habits, professional data, job applications, |
| tax reports, political documents, unpublished manuscripts, etc. |
| |
| One should also be aware that economical intelligence and industrial |
| espionage has recently become a major priority of the intelligence |
| agencies of major governments. President Clinton recently assigned |
| economical espionage as the primary task of the CIA, and the French |
| have repeatedly been publicly boasting about their achievements on |
| this field. |
| |
| |
| There is also another frightening aspect about the poor security of |
| communications. Computer storage and analysis capability has |
| increased so much that it is feasible for governments, major |
| companies, and criminal organizations to automatically analyze, |
| identify, classify, and file information about millions of people over |
| the years. Because most of the work can be automated, the cost of |
| collecting this information is getting very low. |
| |
| Government agencies may be able to monitor major communication |
| systems, telephones, fax, computer networks, etc., and passively |
| collect huge amounts of information about all people with any |
| significant position in the society. Most of this information is not |
| sensitive, and many people would say there is no harm in someone |
| getting that information. However, the information starts to get |
| sensitive when someone has enough of it. You may not mind someone |
| knowing what you bought from the shop one random day, but you might |
| not like someone knowing every small thing you have bought in the last |
| ten years. |
| |
| If the government some day starts to move into a more totalitarian |
| direction (one should remember that Nazi Germany was created by |
| democratic elections), there is considerable danger of an ultimate |
| totalitarian state. With enough information (the automatically |
| collected records of an individual can be manually analyzed when the |
| person becomes interesting), one can form a very detailed picture of |
| the individual's interests, opinions, beliefs, habits, friends, |
| lovers, weaknesses, etc. This information can be used to 1) locate |
| any persons who might oppose the new system 2) use deception to |
| disturb any organizations which might rise against the government 3) |
| eliminate difficult individuals without anyone understanding what |
| happened. Additionally, if the government can monitor communications |
| too effectively, it becomes too easy to locate and eliminate any |
| persons distributing information contrary to the official truth. |
| |
| Fighting crime and terrorism are often used as grounds for domestic |
| surveillance and restricting encryption. These are good goals, but |
| there is considerable danger that the surveillance data starts to get |
| used for questionable purposes. I find that it is better to tolerate |
| a small amount of crime in the society than to let the society become |
| fully controlled. I am in favor of a fairly strong state, but the |
| state must never get so strong that people become unable to spread |
| contra-offical information and unable to overturn the government if it |
| is bad. The danger is that when you notice that the government is |
| too powerful, it is too late. Also, the real power may not be where |
| the official government is. |
| |
| For these reasons (privacy, protecting trade secrets, and making it |
| more difficult to create a totalitarian state), I think that strong |
| cryptography should be integrated to the tools we use every day. |
| Using it causes no harm (except for those who wish to monitor |
| everything), but not using it can cause huge problems. If the society |
| changes in undesirable ways, then it will be to late to start |
| encrypting. |
| |
| Encryption has had a "military" or "classified" flavor to it. There |
| are no longer any grounds for this. The military can and will use its |
| own encryption; that is no excuse to prevent the civilians from |
| protecting their privacy and secrets. Information on strong |
| encryption is available in every major bookstore, scientific library, |
| and patent office around the world, and strong encryption software is |
| available in every country on the Internet. |
| |
| Some people would like to make it illegal to use encryption, or to |
| force people to use encryption that governments can break. This |
| approach offers no protection if the government turns bad. Also, the |
| "bad guys" will be using true strong encryption anyway. Good |
| encryption techniques are too widely known to make them disappear. |
| Thus, any "key escrow encryption" or other restrictions will only help |
| monitor ordinary people and petty criminals. It does not help against |
| powerful criminals, terrorists, or espionage, because they will know |
| how to use strong encryption anyway. (One source for internationally |
| available encryption software is http://www.cs.hut.fi/crypto.) |
| |
| |
| OVERVIEW OF SECURE SHELL |
| |
| The software consists of a number of programs. |
| |
| sshd Server program run on the server machine. This |
| listens for connections from client machines, and |
| whenever it receives a connection, it performs |
| authentication and starts serving the client. |
| |
| ssh This is the client program used to log into another |
| machine or to execute commands on the other machine. |
| "slogin" is another name for this program. |
| |
| scp Securely copies files from one machine to another. |
| |
| ssh-keygen Used to create RSA keys (host keys and user |
| authentication keys). |
| |
| ssh-agent Authentication agent. This can be used to hold RSA |
| keys for authentication. |
| |
| ssh-add Used to register new keys with the agent. |
| |
| make-ssh-known-hosts |
| Used to create the /etc/ssh_known_hosts file. |
| |
| |
| Ssh is the program users normally use. It is started as |
| |
| ssh host |
| |
| or |
| |
| ssh host command |
| |
| The first form opens a new shell on the remote machine (after |
| authentication). The latter form executes the command on the remote |
| machine. |
| |
| When started, the ssh connects sshd on the server machine, verifies |
| that the server machine really is the machine it wanted to connect, |
| exchanges encryption keys (in a manner which prevents an outside |
| listener from getting the keys), performs authentication using .rhosts |
| and /etc/hosts.equiv, RSA authentication, or conventional password |
| based authentication. The server then (normally) allocates a |
| pseudo-terminal and starts an interactive shell or user program. |
| |
| The TERM environment variable (describing the type of the user's |
| terminal) is passed from the client side to the remote side. Also, |
| terminal modes will be copied from the client side to the remote side |
| to preserve user preferences (e.g., the erase character). |
| |
| If the DISPLAY variable is set on the client side, the server will |
| create a dummy X server and set DISPLAY accordingly. Any connections |
| to the dummy X server will be forwarded through the secure channel, |
| and will be made to the real X server from the client side. An |
| arbitrary number of X programs can be started during the session, and |
| starting them does not require anything special from the user. (Note |
| that the user must not manually set DISPLAY, because then it would |
| connect directly to the real display instead of going through the |
| encrypted channel). This behavior can be disabled in the |
| configuration file or by giving the -x option to the client. |
| |
| Arbitrary IP ports can be forwarded over the secure channel. The |
| program then creates a port on one side, and whenever a connection is |
| opened to this port, it will be passed over the secure channel, and a |
| connection will be made from the other side to a specified host:port |
| pair. Arbitrary IP forwarding must always be explicitly requested, |
| and cannot be used to forward privileged ports (unless the user is |
| root). It is possible to specify automatic forwards in a per-user |
| configuration file, for example to make electronic cash systems work |
| securely. |
| |
| If there is an authentication agent on the client side, connection to |
| it will be automatically forwarded to the server side. |
| |
| For more infomation, see the manual pages ssh(1), sshd(8), scp(1), |
| ssh-keygen(1), ssh-agent(1), ssh-add(1), and make-ssh-known-hosts(1) |
| included in this distribution. |
| |
| |
| X11 CONNECTION FORWARDING |
| |
| X11 forwarding serves two purposes: it is a convenience to the user |
| because there is no need to set the DISPLAY variable, and it provides |
| encrypted X11 connections. I cannot think of any other easy way to |
| make X11 connections encrypted; modifying the X server, clients or |
| libraries would require special work for each machine, vendor and |
| application. Widely used IP-level encryption does not seem likely for |
| several years. Thus what we have left is faking an X server on the |
| same machine where the clients are run, and forwarding the connections |
| to a real X server over the secure channel. |
| |
| X11 forwarding works as follows. The client extracts Xauthority |
| information for the server. It then creates random authorization |
| data, and sends the random data to the server. The server allocates |
| an X11 display number, and stores the (fake) Xauthority data for this |
| display. Whenever an X11 connection is opened, the server forwards |
| the connection over the secure channel to the client, and the client |
| parses the first packet of the X11 protocol, substitutes real |
| authentication data for the fake data (if the fake data matched), and |
| forwards the connection to the real X server. |
| |
| If the display does not have Xauthority data, the server will create a |
| unix domain socket in /tmp/.X11-unix, and use the unix domain socket |
| as the display. No authentication information is forwarded in this |
| case. X11 connections are again forwarded over the secure channel. |
| To the X server the connections appear to come from the client |
| machine, and the server must have connections allowed from the local |
| machine. Using authentication data is always recommended because not |
| using it makes the display insecure. If XDM is used, it automatically |
| generates the authentication data. |
| |
| One should be careful not to use "xin" or "xstart" or other similar |
| scripts that explicitly set DISPLAY to start X sessions in a remote |
| machine, because the connection will then not go over the secure |
| channel. The recommended way to start a shell in a remote machine is |
| |
| xterm -e ssh host & |
| |
| and the recommended way to execute an X11 application in a remote |
| machine is |
| |
| ssh -n host emacs & |
| |
| If you need to type a password/passphrase for the remote machine, |
| |
| ssh -f host emacs |
| |
| may be useful. |
| |
| |
| |
| RSA AUTHENTICATION |
| |
| RSA authentication is based on public key cryptograpy. The idea is |
| that there are two encryption keys, one for encryption and another for |
| decryption. It is not possible (on human timescale) to derive the |
| decryption key from the encryption key. The encryption key is called |
| the public key, because it can be given to anyone and it is not |
| secret. The decryption key, on the other hand, is secret, and is |
| called the private key. |
| |
| RSA authentication is based on the impossibility of deriving the |
| private key from the public key. The public key is stored on the |
| server machine in the user's $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys file. The |
| private key is only kept on the user's local machine, laptop, or other |
| secure storage. Then the user tries to log in, the client tells the |
| server the public key that the user wishes to use for authentication. |
| The server then checks if this public key is admissible. If so, it |
| generates a 256 bit random number, encrypts it with the public key, |
| and sends the value to the client. The client then decrypts the |
| number with its private key, computes a 128 bit MD5 checksum from the |
| resulting data, and sends the checksum back to the server. (Only a |
| checksum is sent to prevent chosen-plaintext attacks against RSA.) |
| The server checks computes a checksum from the correct data, |
| and compares the checksums. Authentication is accepted if the |
| checksums match. (Theoretically this indicates that the client |
| only probably knows the correct key, but for all practical purposes |
| there is no doubt.) |
| |
| The RSA private key can be protected with a passphrase. The |
| passphrase can be any string; it is hashed with MD5 to produce an |
| encryption key for IDEA, which is used to encrypt the private part of |
| the key file. With passphrase, authorization requires access to the key |
| file and the passphrase. Without passphrase, authorization only |
| depends on possession of the key file. |
| |
| RSA authentication is the most secure form of authentication supported |
| by this software. It does not rely on the network, routers, domain |
| name servers, or the client machine. The only thing that matters is |
| access to the private key. |
| |
| All this, of course, depends on the security of the RSA algorithm |
| itself. RSA has been widely known since about 1978, and no effective |
| methods for breaking it are known if it is used properly. Care has |
| been taken to avoid the well-known pitfalls. Breaking RSA is widely |
| believed to be equivalent to factoring, which is a very hard |
| mathematical problem that has received considerable public research. |
| So far, no effective methods are known for numbers bigger than about |
| 512 bits. However, as computer speeds and factoring methods are |
| increasing, 512 bits can no longer be considered secure. The |
| factoring work is exponential, and 768 or 1024 bits are widely |
| considered to be secure in the near future. |
| |
| |
| RHOSTS AUTHENTICATION |
| |
| Conventional .rhosts and hosts.equiv based authentication mechanisms |
| are fundamentally insecure due to IP, DNS (domain name server) and |
| routing spoofing attacks. Additionally this authentication method |
| relies on the integrity of the client machine. These weaknesses is |
| tolerable, and been known and exploited for a long time. |
| |
| Ssh provides an improved version of these types of authentication, |
| because they are very convenient for the user (and allow easy |
| transition from rsh and rlogin). It permits these types of |
| authentication, but additionally requires that the client host be |
| authenticated using RSA. |
| |
| The server has a list of host keys stored in /etc/ssh_known_host, and |
| additionally each user has host keys in $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts. Ssh |
| uses the name servers to obtain the canonical name of the client host, |
| looks for its public key in its known host files, and requires the |
| client to prove that it knows the private host key. This prevents IP |
| and routing spoofing attacks (as long as the client machine private |
| host key has not been compromized), but is still vulnerable to DNS |
| attacks (to a limited extent), and relies on the integrity of the |
| client machine as to who is requesting to log in. This prevents |
| outsiders from attacking, but does not protect against very powerful |
| attackers. If maximal security is desired, only RSA authentication |
| should be used. |
| |
| It is possible to enable conventional .rhosts and /etc/hosts.equiv |
| authentication (without host authentication) at compile time by giving |
| the option --with-rhosts to configure. However, this is not |
| recommended, and is not done by default. |
| |
| These weaknesses are present in rsh and rlogin. No improvement in |
| security will be obtained unless rlogin and rsh are completely |
| disabled (commented out in /etc/inetd.conf). This is highly |
| recommended. |
| |
| |
| WEAKEST LINKS IN SECURITY |
| |
| One should understand that while this software may provide |
| cryptographically secure communications, it may be easy to |
| monitor the communications at their endpoints. |
| |
| Basically, anyone with root access on the local machine on which you |
| are running the software may be able to do anything. Anyone with root |
| access on the server machine may be able to monitor your |
| communications, and a very talented root user might even be able to |
| send his/her own requests to your authentication agent. |
| |
| One should also be aware that computers send out electromagnetic |
| radition that can sometimes be picked up hundreds of meters away. |
| Your keyboard is particularly easy to listen to. The image on your |
| monitor might also be seen on another monitor in a van parked behind |
| your house. |
| |
| Beware that unwanted visitors might come to your home or office and |
| use your machine while you are away. They might also make |
| modifications or install bugs in your hardware or software. |
| |
| Beware that the most effective way for someone to decrypt your data |
| may be with a rubber hose. |
| |
| |
| LEGAL ISSUES |
| |
| As far as I am concerned, anyone is permitted to use this software |
| freely. However, see the file COPYING for detailed copying, |
| licensing, and distribution information. |
| |
| In some countries, particularly France, Russia, Iraq, and Pakistan, |
| it may be illegal to use any encryption at all without a special |
| permit, and the rumor has it that you cannot get a permit for any |
| strong encryption. |
| |
| This software may be freely imported into the United States; however, |
| the United States Government may consider re-exporting it a criminal |
| offence. |
| |
| Note that any information and cryptographic algorithms used in this |
| software are publicly available on the Internet and at any major |
| bookstore, scientific library, or patent office worldwide. |
| |
| THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THIS PROGRAM. Please consult the file |
| COPYING for more information. |
| |
| |
| MAILING LISTS AND OTHER INFORMATION |
| |
| There is a mailing list for ossh. It is ossh@sics.se. If you would |
| like to join, send a message to majordomo@sics.se with "subscribe |
| ssh" in body. |
| |
| The WWW home page for ssh is http://www.cs.hut.fi/ssh. It contains an |
| archive of the mailing list, and detailed information about new |
| releases, mailing lists, and other relevant issues. |
| |
| Bug reports should be sent to ossh-bugs@sics.se. |
| |
| |
| ABOUT THE AUTHOR |
| |
| This software was written by Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>. I work as a |
| researcher at Helsinki University of Technology, Finland. For more |
| information, see http://www.cs.hut.fi/~ylo/. My PGP public key is |
| available via finger from ylo@cs.hut.fi and from the key servers. I |
| prefer PGP encrypted mail. |
| |
| The author can be contacted via ordinary mail at |
| Tatu Ylonen |
| Helsinki University of Technology |
| Otakaari 1 |
| FIN-02150 ESPOO |
| Finland |
| |
| Fax. +358-0-4513293 |
| |
| |
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
| |
| I thank Tero Kivinen, Timo Rinne, Janne Snabb, and Heikki Suonsivu for |
| their help and comments in the design, implementation and porting of |
| this software. I also thank numerous contributors, including but not |
| limited to Walker Aumann, Jurgen Botz, Hans-Werner Braun, Stephane |
| Bortzmeyer, Adrian Colley, Michael Cooper, David Dombek, Jerome |
| Etienne, Bill Fithen, Mark Fullmer, Bert Gijsbers, Andreas Gustafsson, |
| Michael Henits, Steve Johnson, Thomas Koenig, Felix Leitner, Gunnar |
| Lindberg, Andrew Macpherson, Marc Martinec, Paul Mauvais, Donald |
| McKillican, Leon Mlakar, Robert Muchsel, Mark Treacy, Bryan |
| O'Sullivan, Mikael Suokas, Ollivier Robert, Jakob Schlyter, Tomasz |
| Surmacz, Alvar Vinacua, Petri Virkkula, Michael Warfield, and |
| Cristophe Wolfhugel. |
| |
| Thanks also go to Philip Zimmermann, whose PGP software and the |
| associated legal battle provided inspiration, motivation, and many |
| useful techniques, and to Bruce Schneier whose book Applied |
| Cryptography has done a great service in widely distributing knowledge |
| about cryptographic methods. |
| |
| |
| Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen, Espoo, Finland. |