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| .ds LF Ylonen |
| .ds RF FORMFEED[Page %] |
| .ds CF |
| .ds LH Internet-Draft |
| .ds RH 15 November 1995 |
| .ds CH SSH (Secure Shell) Remote Login Protocol |
| .na |
| .hy 0 |
| .in 0 |
| Network Working Group T. Ylonen |
| Internet-Draft Helsinki University of Technology |
| draft-ylonen-ssh-protocol-00.txt 15 November 1995 |
| Expires: 15 May 1996 |
| |
| .in 3 |
| |
| .ce |
| The SSH (Secure Shell) Remote Login Protocol |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Status of This Memo |
| |
| This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working |
| documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, |
| and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute |
| working documents as Internet-Drafts. |
| |
| Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six |
| months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other docu- |
| ments at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as |
| reference material or to cite them other than as ``work in pro- |
| gress.'' |
| |
| To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the |
| ``1id-abstracts.txt'' listing contained in the Internet- Drafts Shadow |
| Directories on ftp.is.co.za (Africa), nic.nordu.net (Europe), |
| munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ds.internic.net (US East Coast), or |
| ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast). |
| |
| The distribution of this memo is unlimited. |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Introduction |
| |
| 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 networks. Its features include |
| the following: |
| .IP o |
| Closes several security holes (e.g., IP, routing, and DNS spoofing). |
| New authentication methods: .rhosts together with RSA [RSA] based host |
| authentication, and pure RSA authentication. |
| .IP o |
| All communications are automatically and transparently encrypted. |
| Encryption is also used to protect integrity. |
| .IP o |
| X11 connection forwarding provides secure X11 sessions. |
| .IP o |
| Arbitrary TCP/IP ports can be redirected over the encrypted channel |
| in both directions. |
| .IP 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). |
| .IP o |
| An authentication agent, running in the user's local workstation or |
| laptop, can be used to hold the user's RSA authentication keys. |
| .RT |
| |
| The goal has been to make the software as easy to use as possible for |
| ordinary users. The protocol has been designed to be as secure as |
| possible while making it possible to create implementations that |
| are easy to use and install. The sample implementation has a number |
| of convenient features that are not described in this document as they |
| are not relevant for the protocol. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Overview of the Protocol |
| |
| The software consists of a server program running on a server machine, |
| and a client program running on a client machine (plus a few auxiliary |
| programs). The machines are connected by an insecure IP [RFC0791] |
| network (that can be monitored, tampered with, and spoofed by hostile |
| parties). |
| |
| A connection is always initiated by the client side. The server |
| listens on a specific port waiting for connections. Many clients may |
| connect to the same server machine. |
| |
| The client and the server are connected via a TCP/IP [RFC0793] socket |
| that is used for bidirectional communication. Other types of |
| transport can be used but are currently not defined. |
| |
| When the client connects the server, the server accepts the connection |
| and responds by sending back its version identification string. The |
| client parses the server's identification, and sends its own |
| identification. The purpose of the identification strings is to |
| validate that the connection was to the correct port, declare the |
| protocol version number used, and to declare the software version used |
| on each side (for debugging purposes). The identification strings are |
| human-readable. If either side fails to understand or support the |
| other side's version, it closes the connection. |
| |
| After the protocol identification phase, both sides switch to a packet |
| based binary protocol. The server starts by sending its host key |
| (every host has an RSA key used to authenticate the host), server key |
| (an RSA key regenerated every hour), and other information to the |
| client. The client then generates a 256 bit session key, encrypts it |
| using both RSA keys (see below for details), and sends the encrypted |
| session key and selected cipher type to the server. Both sides then |
| turn on encryption using the selected algorithm and key. The server |
| sends an encrypted confirmation message to the client. |
| |
| The client then authenticates itself using any of a number of |
| authentication methods. The currently supported authentication |
| methods are .rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv authentication (disabled by |
| default), the same with RSA-based host authentication, RSA |
| authentication, and password authentication. |
| |
| After successful authentication, the client makes a number of requests |
| to prepare for the session. Typical requests include allocating a |
| pseudo tty, starting X11 [X11] or TCP/IP port forwarding, starting |
| authentication agent forwarding, and executing the shell or a command. |
| |
| When a shell or command is executed, the connection enters interactive |
| session mode. In this mode, data is passed in both directions, |
| new forwarded connections may be opened, etc. The interactive session |
| normally terminates when the server sends the exit status of the |
| program to the client. |
| |
| |
| The protocol makes several reservations for future extensibility. |
| First of all, the initial protocol identification messages include the |
| protocol version number. Second, the first packet by both sides |
| includes a protocol flags field, which can be used to agree on |
| extensions in a compatible manner. Third, the authentication and |
| session preparation phases work so that the client sends requests to |
| the server, and the server responds with success or failure. If the |
| client sends a request that the server does not support, the server |
| simply returns failure for it. This permits compatible addition of |
| new authentication methods and preparation operations. The |
| interactive session phase, on the other hand, works asynchronously and |
| does not permit the use of any extensions (because there is no easy |
| and reliable way to signal rejection to the other side and problems |
| would be hard to debug). Any compatible extensions to this phase must |
| be agreed upon during any of the earlier phases. |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| The Binary Packet Protocol |
| |
| After the protocol identification strings, both sides only send |
| specially formatted packets. The packet layout is as follows: |
| .IP o |
| Packet length: 32 bit unsigned integer, coded as four 8-bit bytes, msb |
| first. Gives the length of the packet, not including the length field |
| and padding. The maximum length of a packet (not including the length |
| field and padding) is 262144 bytes. |
| .IP o |
| Padding: 1-8 bytes of random data (or zeroes if not encrypting). The |
| amount of padding is (8 - (length % 8)) bytes (where % stands for the |
| modulo operator). The rationale for always having some random padding |
| at the beginning of each packet is to make known plaintext attacks |
| more difficult. |
| .IP o |
| Packet type: 8-bit unsigned byte. The value 255 is reserved for |
| future extension. |
| .IP o |
| Data: binary data bytes, depending on the packet type. The number of |
| data bytes is the "length" field minus 5. |
| .IP o |
| Check bytes: 32-bit crc, four 8-bit bytes, msb first. The crc is the |
| Cyclic Redundancy Check, with the polynomial 0xedb88320, of the |
| Padding, Packet type, and Data fields. The crc is computed before |
| any encryption. |
| .RT |
| |
| The packet, except for the length field, may be encrypted using any of |
| a number of algorithms. The length of the encrypted part (Padding + |
| Type + Data + Check) is always a multiple of 8 bytes. Typically the |
| cipher is used in a chained mode, with all packets chained together as |
| if it was a single data stream (the length field is never included in |
| the encryption process). Details of encryption are described below. |
| |
| When the session starts, encryption is turned off. Encryption is |
| enabled after the client has sent the session key. The encryption |
| algorithm to use is selected by the client. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Packet Compression |
| |
| If compression is supported (it is an optional feature, see |
| SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_COMPRESSION below), the packet type and data fields |
| of the packet are compressed using the gzip deflate algorithm [GZIP]. |
| If compression is in effect, the packet length field indicates the |
| length of the compressed data, plus 4 for the crc. The amount of |
| padding is computed from the compressed data, so that the amount of |
| data to be encrypted becomes a multiple of 8 bytes. |
| |
| When compressing, the packets (type + data portions) in each direction |
| are compressed as if they formed a continuous data stream, with only the |
| current compression block flushed between packets. This corresponds |
| to the GNU ZLIB library Z_PARTIAL_FLUSH option. The compression |
| dictionary is not flushed between packets. The two directions are |
| compressed independently of each other. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Packet Encryption |
| |
| The protocol supports several encryption methods. During session |
| initialization, the server sends a bitmask of all encryption methods |
| that it supports, and the client selects one of these methods. The |
| client also generates a 256-bit random session key (32 8-bit bytes) and |
| sends it to the server. |
| |
| The encryption methods supported by the current implementation, and |
| their codes are: |
| .TS |
| center; |
| l r l. |
| SSH_CIPHER_NONE 0 No encryption |
| SSH_CIPHER_IDEA 1 IDEA in CFB mode |
| SSH_CIPHER_DES 2 DES in CBC mode |
| SSH_CIPHER_3DES 3 Triple-DES in CBC mode |
| SSH_CIPHER_TSS 4 An experimental stream cipher |
| SSH_CIPHER_RC4 5 RC4 |
| .TE |
| |
| All implementations are required to support SSH_CIPHER_DES and |
| SSH_CIPHER_3DES. Supporting SSH_CIPHER_IDEA, SSH_CIPHER_RC4, and |
| SSH_CIPHER_NONE is recommended. Support for SSH_CIPHER_TSS is |
| optional (and it is not described in this document). Other ciphers |
| may be added at a later time; support for them is optional. |
| |
| For encryption, the encrypted portion of the packet is considered a |
| linear byte stream. The length of the stream is always a multiple of |
| 8. The encrypted portions of consecutive packets (in the same |
| direction) are encrypted as if they were a continuous buffer (that is, |
| any initialization vectors are passed from the previous packet to the |
| next packet). Data in each direction is encrypted independently. |
| .IP SSH_CIPHER_DES |
| The key is taken from the first 8 bytes of the session key. The least |
| significant bit of each byte is ignored. This results in 56 bits of |
| key data. DES [DES] is used in CBC mode. The iv (initialization vector) is |
| initialized to all zeroes. |
| .IP SSH_CIPHER_3DES |
| The variant of triple-DES used here works as follows: there are three |
| independent DES-CBC ciphers, with independent initialization vectors. |
| The data (the whole encrypted data stream) is first encrypted with the |
| first cipher, then decrypted with the second cipher, and finally |
| encrypted with the third cipher. All these operations are performed |
| in CBC mode. |
| |
| The key for the first cipher is taken from the first 8 bytes of the |
| session key; the key for the next cipher from the next 8 bytes, and |
| the key for the third cipher from the following 8 bytes. All three |
| initialization vectors are initialized to zero. |
| |
| (Note: the variant of 3DES used here differs from some other |
| descriptions.) |
| .IP SSH_CIPHER_IDEA |
| The key is taken from the first 16 bytes of the session key. IDEA |
| [IDEA] is used in CFB mode. The initialization vector is initialized |
| to all zeroes. |
| .IP SSH_CIPHER_TSS |
| All 32 bytes of the session key are used as the key. |
| |
| There is no reference available for the TSS algorithm; it is currently |
| only documented in the sample implementation source code. The |
| security of this cipher is unknown (but it is quite fast). The cipher |
| is basically a stream cipher that uses MD5 as a random number |
| generator and takes feedback from the data. |
| .IP SSH_CIPHER_RC4 |
| The first 16 bytes of the session key are used as the key for the |
| server to client direction. The remaining 16 bytes are used as the |
| key for the client to server direction. This gives independent |
| 128-bit keys for each direction. |
| |
| This algorithm is the alleged RC4 cipher posted to the Usenet in 1995. |
| It is widely believed to be equivalent with the original RSADSI RC4 |
| cipher. This is a very fast algorithm. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Data Type Encodings |
| |
| The Data field of each packet contains data encoded as described in |
| this section. There may be several data items; each item is coded as |
| described here, and their representations are concatenated together |
| (without any alignment or padding). |
| |
| Each data type is stored as follows: |
| .IP "8-bit byte" |
| The byte is stored directly as a single byte. |
| .IP "32-bit unsigned integer" |
| Stored in 4 bytes, msb first. |
| .IP "Arbitrary length binary string" |
| First 4 bytes are the length of the string, msb first (not including |
| the length itself). The following "length" bytes are the string |
| value. There are no terminating null characters. |
| .IP "Multiple-precision integer" |
| First 2 bytes are the number of bits in the integer, msb first (for |
| example, the value 0x00012345 would have 17 bits). The value zero has |
| zero bits. It is permissible that the number of bits be larger than the |
| real number of bits. |
| |
| The number of bits is followed by (bits + 7) / 8 bytes of binary data, |
| msb first, giving the value of the integer. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| TCP/IP Port Number and Other Options |
| |
| The server listens for connections on TCP/IP port 22. |
| |
| The client may connect the server from any port. However, if the |
| client wishes to use any form of .rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv |
| authentication, it must connect from a privileged port (less than |
| 1024). |
| |
| For the IP Type of Service field [RFC0791], it is recommended that |
| interactive sessions (those having a user terminal or forwarding X11 |
| connections) use the IPTOS_LOWDELAY, and non-interactive connections |
| use IPTOS_THROUGHPUT. |
| |
| It is recommended that keepalives are used, because otherwise programs |
| on the server may never notice if the other end of the connection is |
| rebooted. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Protocol Version Identification |
| |
| After the socket is opened, the server sends an identification string, |
| which is of the form |
| "SSH-<protocolmajor>.<protocolminor>-<version>\\n", where |
| <protocolmajor> and <protocolminor> are integers and specify the |
| protocol version number (not software distribution version). |
| <version> is server side software version string (max 40 characters); |
| it is not interpreted by the remote side but may be useful for |
| debugging. |
| |
| The client parses the server's string, and sends a corresponding |
| string with its own information in response. If the server has lower |
| version number, and the client contains special code to emulate it, |
| the client responds with the lower number; otherwise it responds with |
| its own number. The server then compares the version number the |
| client sent with its own, and determines whether they can work |
| together. The server either disconnects, or sends the first packet |
| using the binary packet protocol and both sides start working |
| according to the lower of the protocol versions. |
| |
| By convention, changes which keep the protocol compatible with |
| previous versions keep the same major protocol version; changes that |
| are not compatible increment the major version (which will hopefully |
| never happen). The version described in this document is 1.3. |
| |
| The client will |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Key Exchange and Server Host Authentication |
| |
| The first message sent by the server using the packet protocol is |
| SSH_SMSG_PUBLIC_KEY. It declares the server's host key, server public |
| key, supported ciphers, supported authentication methods, and flags |
| for protocol extensions. It also contains a 64-bit random number |
| (cookie) that must be returned in the client's reply (to make IP |
| spoofing more difficult). No encryption is used for this message. |
| |
| Both sides compute a session id as follows. The modulus of the server |
| key is interpreted as a byte string (without explicit length field, |
| with minimum length able to hold the whole value), most significant |
| byte first. This string is concatenated with the server host key |
| interpreted the same way. Additionally, the cookie is concatenated |
| with this. Both sides compute MD5 of the resulting string. The |
| resulting 16 bytes (128 bits) are stored by both parties and are |
| called the session id. |
| |
| The client responds with a SSH_CMSG_SESSION_KEY message, which |
| contains the selected cipher type, a copy of the 64-bit cookie sent by |
| the server, client's protocol flags, and a session key encrypted |
| with both the server's host key and server key. No encryption is used |
| for this message. |
| |
| The session key is 32 8-bit bytes (a total of 256 random bits |
| generated by the client). The client first xors the 16 bytes of the |
| session id with the first 16 bytes of the session key. The resulting |
| string is then encrypted using the smaller key (one with smaller |
| modulus), and the result is then encrypted using the other key. The |
| number of bits in the public modulus of the two keys must differ by at |
| least 128 bits. |
| |
| At each encryption step, a multiple-precision integer is constructed |
| from the data to be encrypted as follows (the integer is here |
| interpreted as a sequence of bytes, msb first; the number of bytes is |
| the number of bytes needed to represent the modulus). |
| |
| The most significant byte (which is only partial as the value must be |
| less than the public modulus, which is never a power of two) is zero. |
| |
| The next byte contains the value 2 (which stands for public-key |
| encrypted data in the PKCS standard [PKCS#1]). Then, there are |
| non-zero random bytes to fill any unused space, a zero byte, and the |
| data to be encrypted in the least significant bytes, the last byte of |
| the data in the least significant byte. |
| |
| This algorithm is used twice. First, it is used to encrypt the 32 |
| random bytes generated by the client to be used as the session key |
| (xored by the session id). This value is converted to an integer as |
| described above, and encrypted with RSA using the key with the smaller |
| modulus. The resulting integer is converted to a byte stream, msb |
| first. This byte stream is padded and encrypted identically using the |
| key with the larger modulus. |
| |
| After the client has sent the session key, it starts to use the |
| selected algorithm and key for decrypting any received packets, and |
| for encrypting any sent packets. Separate ciphers are used for |
| different directions (that is, both directions have separate |
| initialization vectors or other state for the ciphers). |
| |
| When the server has received the session key message, and has turned |
| on encryption, it sends a SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS message to the client. |
| |
| The recommended size of the host key is 1024 bits, and 768 bits for |
| the server key. The minimum size is 512 bits for the smaller key. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Declaring the User Name |
| |
| The client then sends a SSH_CMSG_USER message to the server. This |
| message specifies the user name to log in as. |
| |
| The server validates that such a user exists, checks whether |
| authentication is needed, and responds with either SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS or |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS indicates that no authentication |
| is needed for this user (no password), and authentication phase has |
| now been completed. SSH_SMSG_FAILURE indicates that authentication is |
| needed (or the user does not exist). |
| |
| If the user does not exist, it is recommended that this returns |
| failure, but the server keeps reading messages from the client, and |
| responds to any messages (except SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT, SSH_MSG_IGNORE, |
| and SSH_MSG_DEBUG) with SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. This way the client cannot |
| be certain whether the user exists. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Authentication Phase |
| |
| Provided the server didn't immediately accept the login, an |
| authentication exchange begins. The client sends messages to the |
| server requesting different types of authentication in arbitrary order as |
| many times as desired (however, the server may close the connection |
| after a timeout). The server always responds with SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if |
| it has accepted the authentication, and with SSH_SMSG_FAILURE if it has |
| denied authentication with the requested method or it does not |
| recognize the message. Some authentication methods cause an exchange |
| of further messages before the final result is sent. The |
| authentication phase ends when the server responds with success. |
| |
| The recommended value for the authentication timeout (timeout before |
| disconnecting if no successful authentication has been made) is 5 |
| minutes. |
| |
| The following authentication methods are currently supported: |
| .TS |
| center; |
| l r l. |
| SSH_AUTH_RHOSTS 1 .rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv |
| SSH_AUTH_RSA 2 pure RSA authentication |
| SSH_AUTH_PASSWORD 3 password authentication |
| SSH_AUTH_RHOSTS_RSA 4 .rhosts with RSA host authentication |
| .TE |
| .IP SSH_AUTH_RHOSTS |
| |
| This is the authentication method used by rlogin and rsh [RFC1282]. |
| |
| The client sends SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RHOSTS with the client-side user name |
| as an argument. |
| |
| The server checks whether to permit authentication. On UNIX systems, |
| this is usually done by checking /etc/hosts.equiv, and .rhosts in the |
| user's home directory. The connection must come from a privileged |
| port. |
| |
| It is recommended that the server checks that there are no IP options |
| (such as source routing) specified for the socket before accepting |
| this type of authentication. The client host name should be |
| reverse-mapped and then forward mapped to ensure that it has the |
| proper IP-address. |
| |
| This authentication method trusts the remote host (root on the remote |
| host can pretend to be any other user on that host), the name |
| services, and partially the network: anyone who can see packets coming |
| out from the server machine can do IP-spoofing and pretend to be any |
| machine; however, the protocol prevents blind IP-spoofing (which used |
| to be possible with rlogin). |
| |
| Many sites probably want to disable this authentication method because |
| of the fundamental insecurity of conventional .rhosts or |
| /etc/hosts.equiv authentication when faced with spoofing. It is |
| recommended that this method not be supported by the server by |
| default. |
| .IP SSH_AUTH_RHOSTS_RSA |
| |
| In addition to conventional .rhosts and hosts.equiv authentication, |
| this method additionally requires that the client host be |
| authenticated using RSA. |
| |
| The client sends SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RHOSTS_RSA specifying the client-side |
| user name, and the public host key of the client host. |
| |
| The server first checks if normal .rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv |
| authentication would be accepted, and if not, responds with |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. Otherwise, it checks whether it knows the host key |
| for the client machine (using the same name for the host that was used |
| for checking the .rhosts and /etc/hosts.equiv files). If it does not |
| know the RSA key for the client, access is denied and SSH_SMSG_FAILURE |
| is sent. |
| |
| If the server knows the host key of the client machine, it verifies |
| that the given host key matches that known for the client. If not, |
| access is denied and SSH_SMSG_FAILURE is sent. |
| |
| The server then sends a SSH_SMSG_AUTH_RSA_CHALLENGE message containing |
| an encrypted challenge for the client. The challenge is 32 8-bit |
| random bytes (256 bits). When encrypted, the highest (partial) byte |
| is left as zero, the next byte contains the value 2, the following are |
| non-zero random bytes, followed by a zero byte, and the challenge put |
| in the remaining bytes. This is then encrypted using RSA with the |
| client host's public key. (The padding and encryption algorithm is |
| the same as that used for the session key.) |
| |
| The client decrypts the challenge using its private host key, |
| concatenates this with the session id, and computes an MD5 checksum |
| of the resulting 48 bytes. The MD5 output is returned as 16 bytes in |
| a SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA_RESPONSE message. (MD5 is used to deter chosen |
| plaintext attacks against RSA; the session id binds it to a specific |
| session). |
| |
| The server verifies that the MD5 of the decrypted challenge returned by |
| the client matches that of the original value, and sends SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if |
| so. Otherwise it sends SSH_SMSG_FAILURE and refuses the |
| authentication attempt. |
| |
| This authentication method trusts the client side machine in that root |
| on that machine can pretend to be any user on that machine. |
| Additionally, it trusts the client host key. The name and/or IP |
| address of the client host is only used to select the public host key. |
| The same host name is used when scanning .rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv |
| and when selecting the host key. It would in principle be possible to |
| eliminate the host name entirely and substitute it directly by the |
| host key. IP and/or DNS [RFC1034] spoofing can only be used |
| to pretend to be a host for which the attacker has the private host |
| key. |
| .IP SSH_AUTH_RSA |
| |
| The idea behind RSA authentication is that the server recognizes the |
| public key offered by the client, generates a random challenge, and |
| encrypts the challenge with the public key. The client must then |
| prove that it has the corresponding private key by decrypting the |
| challenge. |
| |
| The client sends SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA with public key modulus (n) as an |
| argument. |
| |
| The server may respond immediately with SSH_SMSG_FAILURE if it does |
| not permit authentication with this key. Otherwise it generates a |
| challenge, encrypts it using the user's public key (stored on the |
| server and identified using the modulus), and sends |
| SSH_SMSG_AUTH_RSA_CHALLENGE with the challenge (mp-int) as an |
| argument. |
| |
| The challenge is 32 8-bit random bytes (256 bits). When encrypted, |
| the highest (partial) byte is left as zero, the next byte contains the |
| value 2, the following are non-zero random bytes, followed by a zero |
| byte, and the challenge put in the remaining bytes. This is then |
| encrypted with the public key. (The padding and encryption algorithm |
| is the same as that used for the session key.) |
| |
| The client decrypts the challenge using its private key, concatenates |
| it with the session id, and computes an MD5 checksum of the resulting |
| 48 bytes. The MD5 output is returned as 16 bytes in a |
| SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA_RESPONSE message. (Note that the MD5 is necessary |
| to avoid chosen plaintext attacks against RSA; the session id binds it |
| to a specific session.) |
| |
| The server verifies that the MD5 of the decrypted challenge returned |
| by the client matches that of the original value, and sends |
| SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if so. Otherwise it sends SSH_SMSG_FAILURE and |
| refuses the authentication attempt. |
| |
| This authentication method does not trust the remote host, the |
| network, name services, or anything else. Authentication is based |
| solely on the possession of the private identification keys. Anyone |
| in possession of the private keys can log in, but nobody else. |
| |
| The server may have additional requirements for a successful |
| authentiation. For example, to limit damage due to a compromised RSA |
| key, a server might restrict access to a limited set of hosts. |
| .IP SSH_AUTH_PASSWORD |
| |
| The client sends a SSH_CMSG_AUTH_PASSWORD message with the plain text |
| password. (Note that even though the password is plain text inside |
| the message, it is normally encrypted by the packet mechanism.) |
| |
| The server verifies the password, and sends SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if |
| authentication was accepted and SSH_SMSG_FAILURE otherwise. |
| |
| Note that the password is read from the user by the client; the user |
| never interacts with a login program. |
| |
| This authentication method does not trust the remote host, the |
| network, name services or anything else. Authentication is based |
| solely on the possession of the password. Anyone in possession of the |
| password can log in, but nobody else. |
| .RT |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Preparatory Operations |
| |
| After successful authentication, the server waits for a request from |
| the client, processes the request, and responds with SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS |
| whenever a request has been successfully processed. If it receives a |
| message that it does not recognize or it fails to honor a request, it |
| returns SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. It is expected that new message types might |
| be added to this phase in future. |
| |
| The following messages are currently defined for this phase. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_COMPRESSION |
| Requests that compression be enabled for this session. A |
| gzip-compatible compression level (1-9) is passed as an argument. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_PTY |
| Requests that a pseudo terminal device be allocated for this session. |
| The user terminal type and terminal modes are supplied as arguments. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_X11_REQUEST_FORWARDING |
| Requests forwarding of X11 connections from the remote machine to the |
| local machine over the secure channel. Causes an internet-domain |
| socket to be allocated and the DISPLAY variable to be set on the server. |
| X11 authentication data is automatically passed to the server, and the |
| client may implement spoofing of authentication data for added |
| security. The authentication data is passed as arguments. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_PORT_FORWARD_REQUEST |
| Requests forwarding of a TCP/IP port on the server host over the |
| secure channel. What happens is that whenever a connection is made to |
| the port on the server, a connection will be made from the client end |
| to the specified host/port. Any user can forward unprivileged ports; |
| only the root can forward privileged ports (as determined by |
| authentication done earlier). |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_AGENT_REQUEST_FORWARDING |
| Requests forwarding of the connection to the authentication agent. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_EXEC_SHELL |
| Starts a shell (command interpreter) for the user, and moves into |
| interactive session mode. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_EXEC_CMD |
| Executes the given command (actually "<shell> -c <command>" or |
| equivalent) for the user, and moves into interactive session mode. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Interactive Session and Exchange of Data |
| |
| During the interactive session, any data written by the shell or |
| command running on the server machine is forwarded to stdin or |
| stderr on the client machine, and any input available from stdin on |
| the client machine is forwarded to the program on the server machine. |
| |
| All exchange is asynchronous; either side can send at any time, and |
| there are no acknowledgements (TCP/IP already provides reliable |
| transport, and the packet protocol protects against tampering or IP |
| spoofing). |
| |
| When the client receives EOF from its standard input, it will send |
| SSH_CMSG_EOF; however, this in no way terminates the exchange. The |
| exchange terminates and interactive mode is left when the server sends |
| SSH_SMSG_EXITSTATUS to indicate that the client program has |
| terminated. Alternatively, either side may disconnect at any time by |
| sending SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT or closing the connection. |
| |
| The server may send any of the following messages: |
| .IP SSH_SMSG_STDOUT_DATA |
| Data written to stdout by the program running on the server. The data |
| is passed as a string argument. The client writes this data to |
| stdout. |
| .IP SSH_SMSG_STDERR_DATA |
| Data written to stderr by the program running on the server. The data |
| is passed as a string argument. The client writes this data to |
| stderr. (Note that if the program is running on a tty, it is not |
| possible to separate stdout and stderr data, and all data will be sent |
| as stdout data.) |
| .IP SSH_SMSG_EXITSTATUS |
| Indicates that the shell or command has exited. Exit status is passed |
| as an integer argument. This message causes termination of the |
| interactive session. |
| .IP SSH_SMSG_AGENT_OPEN |
| Indicates that someone on the server side is requesting a connection |
| to the authentication agent. The server-side channel number is passed |
| as an argument. The client must respond with either |
| SSH_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or SSH_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. |
| .IP SSH_SMSG_X11_OPEN |
| Indicates that a connection has been made to the X11 socket on the |
| server side and should be forwarded to the real X server. An integer |
| argument indicates the channel number allocated for this connection on |
| the server side. The client should send back either |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE with |
| the same server side channel number. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_PORT_OPEN |
| Indicates that a connection has been made to a port on the server side |
| for which forwarding has been requested. Arguments are server side |
| channel number, host name to connect to, and port to connect to. The |
| client should send back either |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE with |
| the same server side channel number. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION |
| This is sent by the server to indicate that it has opened a connection |
| as requested in a previous message. The first argument indicates the |
| client side channel number, and the second argument is the channel number |
| that the server has allocated for this connection. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE |
| This is sent by the server to indicate that it failed to open a |
| connection as requested in a previous message. The client-side |
| channel number is passed as an argument. The client will close the |
| descriptor associated with the channel and free the channel. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA |
| This packet contains data for a channel from the server. The first |
| argument is the client-side channel number, and the second argument (a |
| string) is the data. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE |
| This is sent by the server to indicate that whoever was in the other |
| end of the channel has closed it. The argument is the client side channel |
| number. The client will let all buffered data in the channel to |
| drain, and when ready, will close the socket, free the channel, and |
| send the server a SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION message for the |
| channel. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION |
| This is send by the server to indicate that a channel previously |
| closed by the client has now been closed on the server side as well. |
| The argument indicates the client channel number. The client frees |
| the channel. |
| .RT |
| |
| The client may send any of the following messages: |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_STDIN_DATA |
| This is data to be sent as input to the program running on the server. |
| The data is passed as a string. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_EOF |
| Indicates that the client has encountered EOF while reading standard |
| input. The server will allow any buffered input data to drain, and |
| will then close the input to the program. |
| .IP SSH_CMSG_WINDOW_SIZE |
| Indicates that window size on the client has been changed. The server |
| updates the window size of the tty and causes SIGWINCH to be sent to |
| the program. The new window size is passed as four integer arguments: |
| row, col, xpixel, ypixel. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_PORT_OPEN |
| Indicates that a connection has been made to a port on the client side |
| for which forwarding has been requested. Arguments are client side |
| channel number, host name to connect to, and port to connect to. The |
| server should send back either SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE with the same client side channel number. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION |
| This is sent by the client to indicate that it has opened a connection |
| as requested in a previous message. The first argument indicates the |
| server side channel number, and the second argument is the channel |
| number that the client has allocated for this connection. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE |
| This is sent by the client to indicate that it failed to open a |
| connection as requested in a previous message. The server side |
| channel number is passed as an argument. The server will close the |
| descriptor associated with the channel and free the channel. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA |
| This packet contains data for a channel from the client. The first |
| argument is the server side channel number, and the second argument (a |
| string) is the data. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE |
| This is sent by the client to indicate that whoever was in the other |
| end of the channel has closed it. The argument is the server channel |
| number. The server will allow buffered data to drain, and when ready, |
| will close the socket, free the channel, and send the client a |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION message for the channel. |
| .IP SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION |
| This is send by the client to indicate that a channel previously |
| closed by the server has now been closed on the client side as well. |
| The argument indicates the server channel number. The server frees |
| the channel. |
| .RT |
| |
| Any unsupported messages during interactive mode cause the connection |
| to be terminated with SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT and an error message. |
| Compatible protocol upgrades should agree about any extensions during |
| the preparation phase or earlier. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Termination of the Connection |
| |
| Normal termination of the connection is always initiated by the server |
| by sending SSH_SMSG_EXITSTATUS after the program has exited. The |
| client responds to this message by sending SSH_CMSG_EXIT_CONFIRMATION |
| and closes the socket; the server then closes the socket. There are |
| two purposes for the confirmation: some systems may lose previously |
| sent data when the socket is closed, and closing the client side first |
| causes any TCP/IP TIME_WAIT [RFC0793] waits to occur on the client side, not |
| consuming server resources. |
| |
| If the program terminates due to a signal, the server will send |
| SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT with an appropriate message. If the connection is |
| closed, all file descriptors to the program will be closed and the |
| server will exit. If the program runs on a tty, the kernel sends it |
| the SIGHUP signal when the pty master side is closed. |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Protocol Flags |
| |
| Both the server and the client pass 32 bits of protocol flags to the |
| other side. The flags are intended for compatible protocol extension; |
| the server first announces which added capabilities it supports, and |
| the client then sends the capabilities that it supports. |
| |
| The following flags are currently defined (the values are bit masks): |
| .IP "1 SSH_PROTOFLAG_SCREEN_NUMBER" |
| This flag can only be sent by the client. It indicates that the X11 |
| forwarding requests it sends will include the screen number. |
| .IP "2 SSH_PROTOFLAG_HOST_IN_FWD_OPEN" |
| If both sides specify this flag, SSH_SMSG_X11_OPEN and |
| SSH_MSG_PORT_OPEN messages will contain an additional field containing |
| a description of the host at the other end of the connection. |
| .RT |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Detailed Description of Packet Types and Formats |
| |
| The supported packet types and the corresponding message numbers are |
| given in the following table. Messages with _MSG_ in their name may |
| be sent by either side. Messages with _CMSG_ are only sent by the |
| client, and messages with _SMSG_ only by the server. |
| |
| A packet may contain additional data after the arguments specified |
| below. Any such data should be ignored by the receiver. However, it |
| is recommended that no such data be stored without good reason. (This |
| helps build compatible extensions.) |
| .IP "0 SSH_MSG_NONE" |
| This code is reserved. This message type is never sent. |
| .IP "1 SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string Cause of disconnection |
| .TE |
| This message may be sent by either party at any time. It causes the |
| immediate disconnection of the connection. The message is intended to |
| be displayed to a human, and describes the reason for disconnection. |
| .IP "2 SSH_SMSG_PUBLIC_KEY" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 8 bytes anti_spoofing_cookie |
| 32-bit int server_key_bits |
| mp-int server_key_public_exponent |
| mp-int server_key_public_modulus |
| 32-bit int host_key_bits |
| mp-int host_key_public_exponent |
| mp-int host_key_public_modulus |
| 32-bit int protocol_flags |
| 32-bit int supported_ciphers_mask |
| 32-bit int supported_authentications_mask |
| .TE |
| Sent as the first message by the server. This message gives the |
| server's host key, server key, protocol flags (intended for compatible |
| protocol extension), supported_ciphers_mask (which is the |
| bitwise or of (1 << cipher_number), where << is the left shift |
| operator, for all supported ciphers), and |
| supported_authentications_mask (which is the bitwise or of (1 << |
| authentication_type) for all supported authentication types). The |
| anti_spoofing_cookie is 64 random bytes, and must be sent back |
| verbatim by the client in its reply. It is used to make IP-spoofing |
| more difficult (encryption and host keys are the real defense against |
| spoofing). |
| .IP "3 SSH_CMSG_SESSION_KEY" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 1 byte cipher_type (must be one of the supported values) |
| 8 bytes anti_spoofing_cookie (must match data sent by the server) |
| mp-int double-encrypted session key |
| 32-bit int protocol_flags |
| .TE |
| Sent by the client as the first message in the session. Selects the |
| cipher to use, and sends the encrypted session key to the server. The |
| anti_spoofing_cookie must be the same bytes that were sent by the |
| server. Protocol_flags is intended for negotiating compatible |
| protocol extensions. |
| .IP "4 SSH_CMSG_USER" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string user login name on server |
| .TE |
| Sent by the client to begin authentication. Specifies the user name |
| on the server to log in as. The server responds with SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS |
| if no authentication is needed for this user, or SSH_SMSG_FAILURE if |
| authentication is needed (or the user does not exist). [Note to the |
| implementator: the user name is of arbitrary size. The implementation |
| must be careful not to overflow internal buffers.] |
| .IP "5 SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RHOSTS" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string client-side user name |
| .TE |
| Requests authentication using /etc/hosts.equiv and .rhosts (or |
| equivalent mechanisms). This authentication method is normally |
| disabled in the server because it is not secure (but this is the |
| method used by rsh and rlogin). The server responds with |
| SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if authentication was successful, and |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE if access was not granted. The server should check |
| that the client side port number is less than 1024 (a privileged |
| port), and immediately reject authentication if it is not. Supporting |
| this authentication method is optional. This method should normally |
| not be enabled in the server because it is not safe. (However, not |
| enabling this only helps if rlogind and rshd are disabled.) |
| .IP "6 SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| mp-int identity_public_modulus |
| .TE |
| Requests authentication using pure RSA authentication. The server |
| checks if the given key is permitted to log in, and if so, responds |
| with SSH_SMSG_AUTH_RSA_CHALLENGE. Otherwise, it responds with |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. The client often tries several different keys in |
| sequence until one supported by the server is found. Authentication |
| is accepted if the client gives the correct response to the challenge. |
| The server is free to add other criteria for authentication, such as a |
| requirement that the connection must come from a certain host. Such |
| additions are not visible at the protocol level. Supporting this |
| authentication method is optional but recommended. |
| .IP "7 SSH_SMSG_AUTH_RSA_CHALLENGE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| mp-int encrypted challenge |
| .TE |
| Presents an RSA authentication challenge to the client. The challenge |
| is a 256-bit random value encrypted as described elsewhere in this |
| document. The client must decrypt the challenge using the RSA private |
| key, compute MD5 of the challenge plus session id, and send back the |
| resulting 16 bytes using SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA_RESPONSE. |
| .IP "8 SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA_RESPONSE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 16 bytes MD5 of decrypted challenge |
| .TE |
| This message is sent by the client in response to an RSA challenge. |
| The MD5 checksum is returned instead of the decrypted challenge to |
| deter known-plaintext attacks against the RSA key. The server |
| responds to this message with either SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS or |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. |
| .IP "9 SSH_CMSG_AUTH_PASSWORD" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string plain text password |
| .TE |
| Requests password authentication using the given password. Note that |
| even though the password is plain text inside the packet, the whole |
| packet is normally encrypted by the packet layer. It would not be |
| possible for the client to perform password encryption/hashing, |
| because it cannot know which kind of encryption/hashing, if any, the |
| server uses. The server responds to this message with |
| SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS or SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. |
| .IP "10 SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_PTY" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string TERM environment variable value (e.g. vt100) |
| 32-bit int terminal height, rows (e.g., 24) |
| 32-bit int terminal width, columns (e.g., 80) |
| 32-bit int terminal width, pixels (0 if no graphics) (e.g., 480) |
| 32-bit int terminal height, pixels (0 if no graphics) (e.g., 640) |
| n bytes tty modes encoded in binary |
| .TE |
| Requests a pseudo-terminal to be allocated for this command. This |
| message can be used regardless of whether the session will later |
| execute the shell or a command. If a pty has been requested with this |
| message, the shell or command will run on a pty. Otherwise it will |
| communicate with the server using pipes, sockets or some other similar |
| mechanism. |
| |
| The terminal type gives the type of the user's terminal. In the UNIX |
| environment it is passed to the shell or command in the TERM |
| environment variable. |
| |
| The width and height values give the initial size of the user's |
| terminal or window. All values can be zero if not supported by the |
| operating system. The server will pass these values to the kernel if |
| supported. |
| |
| Terminal modes are encoded into a byte stream in a portable format. |
| The exact format is described later in this document. |
| |
| The server responds to the request with either SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS or |
| SSH_SMSG_FAILURE. If the server does not have the concept of pseudo |
| terminals, it should return success if it is possible to execute a |
| shell or a command so that it looks to the client as if it was running |
| on a pseudo terminal. |
| .IP "11 SSH_CMSG_WINDOW_SIZE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int terminal height, rows |
| 32-bit int terminal width, columns |
| 32-bit int terminal width, pixels |
| 32-bit int terminal height, pixels |
| .TE |
| This message can only be sent by the client during the interactive |
| session. This indicates that the size of the user's window has |
| changed, and provides the new size. The server will update the |
| kernel's notion of the window size, and a SIGWINCH signal or |
| equivalent will be sent to the shell or command (if supported by the |
| operating system). |
| .IP "12 SSH_CMSG_EXEC_SHELL" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| Starts a shell (command interpreter), and enters interactive session |
| mode. |
| .IP "13 SSH_CMSG_EXEC_CMD" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string command to execute |
| .TE |
| Starts executing the given command, and enters interactive session |
| mode. On UNIX, the command is run as "<shell> -c <command>", where |
| <shell> is the user's login shell. |
| .IP "14 SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| This message is sent by the server in response to the session key, a |
| successful authentication request, and a successfully completed |
| preparatory operation. |
| .IP "15 SSH_SMSG_FAILURE" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| This message is sent by the server in response to a failed |
| authentication operation to indicate that the user has not yet been |
| successfully authenticated, and in response to a failed preparatory |
| operation. This is also sent in response to an authentication or |
| preparatory operation request that is not recognized or supported. |
| .IP "16 SSH_CMSG_STDIN_DATA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string data |
| .TE |
| Delivers data from the client to be supplied as input to the shell or |
| program running on the server side. This message can only be used in |
| the interactive session mode. No acknowledgement is sent for this |
| message. |
| .IP "17 SSH_SMSG_STDOUT_DATA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string data |
| .TE |
| Delivers data from the server that was read from the standard output of |
| the shell or program running on the server side. This message can |
| only be used in the interactive session mode. No acknowledgement is |
| sent for this message. |
| .IP "18 SSH_SMSG_STDERR_DATA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string data |
| .TE |
| Delivers data from the server that was read from the standard error of |
| the shell or program running on the server side. This message can |
| only be used in the interactive session mode. No acknowledgement is |
| sent for this message. |
| .IP "19 SSH_CMSG_EOF" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| This message is sent by the client to indicate that EOF has been |
| reached on the input. Upon receiving this message, and after all |
| buffered input data has been sent to the shell or program, the server |
| will close the input file descriptor to the program. This message can |
| only be used in the interactive session mode. No acknowledgement is |
| sent for this message. |
| .IP "20 SSH_SMSG_EXITSTATUS" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int exit status of the command |
| .TE |
| Returns the exit status of the shell or program after it has exited. |
| The client should respond with SSH_CMSG_EXIT_CONFIRMATION when it has |
| received this message. This will be the last message sent by the |
| server. If the program being executed dies with a signal instead of |
| exiting normally, the server should terminate the session with |
| SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT (which can be used to pass a human-readable string |
| indicating that the program died due to a signal) instead of using |
| this message. |
| .IP "21 SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int remote_channel |
| 32-bit int local_channel |
| .TE |
| This is sent in response to any channel open request if the channel |
| has been successfully opened. Remote_channel is the channel number |
| received in the initial open request; local_channel is the channel |
| number the side sending this message has allocated for the channel. |
| Data can be transmitted on the channel after this message. |
| .IP "22 SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int remote_channel |
| .TE |
| This message indicates that an earlier channel open request by the |
| other side has failed or has been denied. Remote_channel is the |
| channel number given in the original request. |
| .IP "23 SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int remote_channel |
| string data |
| .TE |
| Data is transmitted in a channel in these messages. A channel is |
| bidirectional, and both sides can send these messages. There is no |
| acknowledgement for these messages. It is possible that either side |
| receives these messages after it has sent SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE for |
| the channel. These messages cannot be received after the party has |
| sent or received SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION. |
| .IP "24 SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int remote_channel |
| .TE |
| When a channel is closed at one end of the connection, that side sends |
| this message. Upon receiving this message, the channel should be |
| closed. When this message is received, if the channel is already |
| closed (the receiving side has sent this message for the same channel |
| earlier), the channel is freed and no further action is taken; |
| otherwise the channel is freed and SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION |
| is sent in response. (It is possible that the channel is closed |
| simultaneously at both ends.) |
| .IP "25 SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE_CONFIRMATION" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int remote_channel |
| .TE |
| This message is sent in response to SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE unless the |
| channel was already closed. When this message is sent or received, |
| the channel is freed. |
| .IP "26 (OBSOLETED; was unix-domain X11 forwarding) |
| .IP "27 SSH_SMSG_X11_OPEN" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int local_channel |
| string originator_string (see below) |
| .TE |
| This message can be sent by the server during the interactive session |
| mode to indicate that a client has connected the fake X server. |
| Local_channel is the channel number that the server has allocated for |
| the connection. The client should try to open a connection to the |
| real X server, and respond with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. |
| |
| The field originator_string is present if both sides |
| specified SSH_PROTOFLAG_HOST_IN_FWD_OPEN in the protocol flags. It |
| contains a description of the host originating the connection. |
| .IP "28 SSH_CMSG_PORT_FORWARD_REQUEST" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int server_port |
| string host_to_connect |
| 32-bit int port_to_connect |
| .TE |
| Sent by the client in the preparatory phase, this message requests |
| that server_port on the server machine be forwarded over the secure |
| channel to the client machine, and from there to the specified host |
| and port. The server should start listening on the port, and send |
| SSH_MSG_PORT_OPEN whenever a connection is made to it. Supporting |
| this message is optional, and the server is free to reject any forward |
| request. For example, it is highly recommended that unless the user |
| has been authenticated as root, forwarding any privileged port numbers |
| (below 1024) is denied. |
| .IP "29 SSH_MSG_PORT_OPEN" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int local_channel |
| string host_name |
| 32-bit int port |
| string originator_string (see below) |
| .TE |
| Sent by either party in interactive session mode, this message |
| indicates that a connection has been opened to a forwarded TCP/IP |
| port. Local_channel is the channel number that the sending party has |
| allocated for the connection. Host_name is the host the connection |
| should be be forwarded to, and the port is the port on that host to |
| connect. The receiving party should open the connection, and respond |
| with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION or |
| SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. It is recommended that the receiving |
| side check the host_name and port for validity to avoid compromising |
| local security by compromised remote side software. Particularly, it |
| is recommended that the client permit connections only to those ports |
| for which it has requested forwarding with SSH_CMSG_PORT_FORWARD_REQUEST. |
| |
| The field originator_string is present if both sides |
| specified SSH_PROTOFLAG_HOST_IN_FWD_OPEN in the protocol flags. It |
| contains a description of the host originating the connection. |
| .IP "30 SSH_CMSG_AGENT_REQUEST_FORWARDING" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| Requests that the connection to the authentication agent be forwarded |
| over the secure channel. The method used by clients to contact the |
| authentication agent within each machine is implementation and machine |
| dependent. If the server accepts this request, it should arrange that |
| any clients run from this session will actually contact the server |
| program when they try to contact the authentication agent. The server |
| should then send a SSH_SMSG_AGENT_OPEN to open a channel to the agent, |
| and the client should forward the connection to the real |
| authentication agent. Supporting this message is optional. |
| .IP "31 SSH_SMSG_AGENT_OPEN" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int local_channel |
| .TE |
| Sent by the server in interactive session mode, this message requests |
| opening a channel to the authentication agent. The client should open |
| a channel, and respond with either SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION |
| or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. |
| .IP "32 SSH_MSG_IGNORE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string data |
| .TE |
| Either party may send this message at any time. This message, and the |
| argument string, is silently ignored. This message might be used in |
| some implementations to make traffic analysis more difficult. This |
| message is not currently sent by the implementation, but all |
| implementations are required to recognize and ignore it. |
| .IP "33 SSH_CMSG_EXIT_CONFIRMATION" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| Sent by the client in response to SSH_SMSG_EXITSTATUS. This is the |
| last message sent by the client. |
| .IP "34 SSH_CMSG_X11_REQUEST_FORWARDING" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string x11_authentication_protocol |
| string x11_authentication_data |
| 32-bit int screen number (if SSH_PROTOFLAG_SCREEN_NUMBER) |
| .TE |
| Sent by the client during the preparatory phase, this message requests |
| that the server create a fake X11 display and set the DISPLAY |
| environment variable accordingly. An internet-domain display is |
| preferable. The given authentication protocol and the associated data |
| should be recorded by the server so that it is used as authentication |
| on connections (e.g., in .Xauthority). The authentication protocol |
| must be one of the supported X11 authentication protocols, e.g., |
| "MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1". Authentication data must be a lowercase hex |
| string of even length. Its interpretation is protocol dependent. |
| The data is in a format that can be used with e.g. the xauth program. |
| Supporting this message is optional. |
| |
| The client is permitted (and recommended) to generate fake |
| authentication information and send fake information to the server. |
| This way, a corrupt server will not have access to the user's terminal |
| after the connection has terminated. The correct authorization codes |
| will also not be left hanging around in files on the server (many |
| users keep the same X session for months, thus protecting the |
| authorization data becomes important). |
| |
| X11 authentication spoofing works by initially sending fake (random) |
| authentication data to the server, and interpreting the first packet |
| sent by the X11 client after the connection has been opened. The |
| first packet contains the client's authentication. If the packet |
| contains the correct fake data, it is replaced by the client by the |
| correct authentication data, and then sent to the X server. |
| .IP "35 SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RHOSTS_RSA" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string clint-side user name |
| 32-bit int client_host_key_bits |
| mp-int client_host_key_public_exponent |
| mp-int client_host_key_public_modulus |
| .TE |
| Requests authentication using /etc/hosts.equiv and .rhosts (or |
| equivalent) together with RSA host authentication. The server should |
| check that the client side port number is less than 1024 (a privileged |
| port), and immediately reject authentication if it is not. The server |
| responds with SSH_SMSG_FAILURE or SSH_SMSG_AUTH_RSA_CHALLENGE. The |
| client must respond to the challenge with the proper |
| SSH_CMSG_AUTH_RSA_RESPONSE. The server then responds with success if |
| access was granted, or failure if the client gave a wrong response. |
| Supporting this authentication method is optional but recommended in |
| most environments. |
| .IP "36 SSH_MSG_DEBUG" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| string debugging message sent to the other side |
| .TE |
| This message may be sent by either party at any time. It is used to |
| send debugging messages that may be informative to the user in |
| solving various problems. For example, if authentication fails |
| because of some configuration error (e.g., incorrect permissions for |
| some file), it can be very helpful for the user to make the cause of |
| failure available. On the other hand, one should not make too much |
| information available for security reasons. It is recommended that |
| the client provides an option to display the debugging information |
| sent by the sender (the user probably does not want to see it by default). |
| The server can log debugging data sent by the client (if any). Either |
| party is free to ignore any received debugging data. Every |
| implementation must be able to receive this message, but no |
| implementation is required to send these. |
| .IP "37 SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_COMPRESSION" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int gzip compression level (1-9) |
| .TE |
| This message can be sent by the client in the preparatory operations |
| phase. The server responds with SSH_SMSG_FAILURE if it does not |
| support compression or does not want to compress; it responds with |
| SSH_SMSG_SUCCESS if it accepted the compression request. In the |
| latter case the response to this packet will still be uncompressed, |
| but all further packets in either direction will be compressed by gzip. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Encoding of Terminal Modes |
| |
| Terminal modes (as passed in SSH_CMSG_REQUEST_PTY) are encoded into a |
| byte stream. It is intended that the coding be portable across |
| different environments. |
| |
| The tty mode description is a stream of bytes. The stream consists of |
| opcode-argument pairs. It is terminated by opcode TTY_OP_END (0). |
| Opcodes 1-127 have one-byte arguments. Opcodes 128-159 have 32-bit |
| integer arguments (stored msb first). Opcodes 160-255 are not yet |
| defined, and cause parsing to stop (they should only be used after any |
| other data). |
| |
| The client puts in the stream any modes it knows about, and the server |
| ignores any modes it does not know about. This allows some degree of |
| machine-independence, at least between systems that use a POSIX-like |
| [POSIX] tty interface. The protocol can support other systems as |
| well, but the client may need to fill reasonable values for a number |
| of parameters so the server pty gets set to a reasonable mode (the |
| server leaves all unspecified mode bits in their default values, and |
| only some combinations make sense). |
| |
| The following opcodes have been defined. The naming of opcodes mostly |
| follows the POSIX terminal mode flags. |
| .IP "0 TTY_OP_END" |
| Indicates end of options. |
| .IP "1 VINTR" |
| Interrupt character; 255 if none. Similarly for the other characters. |
| Not all of these characters are supported on all systems. |
| .IP "2 VQUIT" |
| The quit character (sends SIGQUIT signal on UNIX systems). |
| .IP "3 VERASE" |
| Erase the character to left of the cursor. |
| .IP "4 VKILL" |
| Kill the current input line. |
| .IP "5 VEOF " |
| End-of-file character (sends EOF from the terminal). |
| .IP "6 VEOL " |
| End-of-line character in addition to carriage return and/or linefeed. |
| .IP "7 VEOL2" |
| Additional end-of-line character. |
| .IP "8 VSTART" |
| Continues paused output (normally ^Q). |
| .IP "9 VSTOP" |
| Pauses output (^S). |
| .IP "10 VSUSP" |
| Suspends the current program. |
| .IP "11 VDSUSP" |
| Another suspend character. |
| .IP "12 VREPRINT" |
| Reprints the current input line. |
| .IP "13 VWERASE" |
| Erases a word left of cursor. |
| .IP "14 VLNEXT" |
| More special input characters; these are probably not supported on |
| most systems. |
| .IP "15 VFLUSH" |
| .IP "16 VSWTCH" |
| .IP "17 VSTATUS" |
| .IP "18 VDISCARD" |
| |
| .IP "30 IGNPAR" |
| The ignore parity flag. The next byte should be 0 if this flag is not |
| set, and 1 if it is set. |
| .IP "31 PARMRK" |
| More flags. The exact definitions can be found in the POSIX standard. |
| .IP "32 INPCK" |
| .IP "33 ISTRIP" |
| .IP "34 INLCR" |
| .IP "35 IGNCR" |
| .IP "36 ICRNL" |
| .IP "37 IUCLC" |
| .IP "38 IXON" |
| .IP "39 IXANY" |
| .IP "40 IXOFF" |
| .IP "41 IMAXBEL" |
| |
| .IP "50 ISIG" |
| .IP "51 ICANON" |
| .IP "52 XCASE" |
| .IP "53 ECHO" |
| .IP "54 ECHOE" |
| .IP "55 ECHOK" |
| .IP "56 ECHONL" |
| .IP "57 NOFLSH" |
| .IP "58 TOSTOP" |
| .IP "59 IEXTEN" |
| .IP "60 ECHOCTL" |
| .IP "61 ECHOKE" |
| .IP "62 PENDIN" |
| |
| .IP "70 OPOST" |
| .IP "71 OLCUC" |
| .IP "72 ONLCR" |
| .IP "73 OCRNL" |
| .IP "74 ONOCR" |
| .IP "75 ONLRET" |
| |
| .IP "90 CS7" |
| .IP "91 CS8" |
| .IP "92 PARENB" |
| .IP "93 PARODD" |
| |
| .IP "192 TTY_OP_ISPEED" |
| Specifies the input baud rate in bits per second. |
| .IP "193 TTY_OP_OSPEED" |
| Specifies the output baud rate in bits per second. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| The Authentication Agent Protocol |
| |
| The authentication agent is a program that can be used to hold RSA |
| authentication keys for the user (in future, it might hold data for |
| other authentication types as well). An authorized program can send |
| requests to the agent to generate a proper response to an RSA |
| challenge. How the connection is made to the agent (or its |
| representative) inside a host and how access control is done inside a |
| host is implementation-dependent; however, how it is forwarded and how |
| one interacts with it is specified in this protocol. The connection |
| to the agent is normally automatically forwarded over the secure |
| channel. |
| |
| A program that wishes to use the agent first opens a connection to its |
| local representative (typically, the agent itself or an SSH server). |
| It then writes a request to the connection, and waits for response. |
| It is recommended that at least five minutes of timeout are provided |
| waiting for the agent to respond to an authentication challenge (this |
| gives sufficient time for the user to cut-and-paste the challenge to a |
| separate machine, perform the computation there, and cut-and-paste the |
| result back if so desired). |
| |
| Messages sent to and by the agent are in the following format: |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 4 bytes Length, msb first. Does not include length itself. |
| 1 byte Packet type. The value 255 is reserved for future extensions. |
| data Any data, depending on packet type. Encoding as in the ssh packet |
| protocol. |
| .TE |
| |
| The following message types are currently defined: |
| .IP "1 SSH_AGENTC_REQUEST_RSA_IDENTITIES" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| Requests the agent to send a list of all RSA keys for which it can |
| answer a challenge. |
| .IP "2 SSH_AGENT_RSA_IDENTITIES_ANSWER" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int howmany |
| howmany times: |
| 32-bit int bits |
| mp-int public exponent |
| mp-int public modulus |
| string comment |
| .TE |
| The agent sends this message in response to the to |
| SSH_AGENTC_REQUEST_RSA_IDENTITIES. The answer lists all RSA keys for |
| which the agent can answer a challenge. The comment field is intended |
| to help identify each key; it may be printed by an application to |
| indicate which key is being used. If the agent is not holding any |
| keys, howmany will be zero. |
| .IP "3 SSH_AGENTC_RSA_CHALLENGE |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int bits |
| mp-int public exponent |
| mp-int public modulus |
| mp-int challenge |
| 16 bytes session_id |
| 32-bit int response_type |
| .TE |
| Requests RSA decryption of random challenge to authenticate the other |
| side. The challenge will be decrypted with the RSA private key |
| corresponding to the given public key. |
| |
| The decrypted challenge must contain a zero in the highest (partial) |
| byte, 2 in the next byte, followed by non-zero random bytes, a zero |
| byte, and then the real challenge value in the lowermost bytes. The |
| real challenge must be 32 8-bit bytes (256 bits). |
| |
| Response_type indicates the format of the response to be returned. |
| Currently the only supported value is 1, which means to compute MD5 of |
| the real challenge plus session id, and return the resulting 16 bytes |
| in a SSH_AGENT_RSA_RESPONSE message. |
| .IP "4 SSH_AGENT_RSA_RESPONSE" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 16 bytes MD5 of decrypted challenge |
| .TE |
| Answers an RSA authentication challenge. The response is 16 bytes: |
| the MD5 checksum of the 32-byte challenge. |
| .IP "5 SSH_AGENT_FAILURE" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| This message is sent whenever the agent fails to answer a request |
| properly. For example, if the agent cannot answer a challenge (e.g., |
| no longer has the proper key), it can respond with this. The agent |
| also responds with this message if it receives a message it does not |
| recognize. |
| .IP "6 SSH_AGENT_SUCCESS" |
| |
| (no arguments) |
| |
| This message is sent by the agent as a response to certain requests |
| that do not otherwise cause a message be sent. Currently, this is |
| only sent in response to SSH_AGENTC_ADD_RSA_IDENTITY and |
| SSH_AGENTC_REMOVE_RSA_IDENTITY. |
| .IP "7 SSH_AGENTC_ADD_RSA_IDENTITY" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int bits |
| mp-int public modulus |
| mp-int public exponent |
| mp-int private exponent |
| mp-int multiplicative inverse of p mod q |
| mp-int p |
| mp-int q |
| string comment |
| .TE |
| Registers an RSA key with the agent. After this request, the agent can |
| use this RSA key to answer requests. The agent responds with |
| SSH_AGENT_SUCCESS or SSH_AGENT_FAILURE. |
| .IP "8 SSH_AGENT_REMOVE_RSA_IDENTITY" |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l l. |
| 32-bit int bits |
| mp-int public exponent |
| mp-int public modulus |
| .TE |
| Removes an RSA key from the agent. The agent will no longer accept |
| challenges for this key and will not list it as a supported identity. |
| The agent responds with SSH_AGENT_SUCCESS or SSH_AGENT_FAILURE. |
| .RT |
| |
| If the agent receives a message that it does not understand, it |
| responds with SSH_AGENT_FAILURE. This permits compatible future |
| extensions. |
| |
| It is possible that several clients have a connection open to the |
| authentication agent simultaneously. Each client will use a separate |
| connection (thus, any SSH connection can have multiple agent |
| connections active simultaneously). |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| References |
| |
| .IP "[DES] " |
| FIPS PUB 46-1: Data Encryption Standard. National Bureau of |
| Standards, January 1988. FIPS PUB 81: DES Modes of Operation. |
| National Bureau of Standards, December 1980. Bruce Schneier: Applied |
| Cryptography. John Wiley & Sons, 1994. J. Seberry and J. Pieprzyk: |
| Cryptography: An Introduction to Computer Security. Prentice-Hall, |
| 1989. |
| .IP "[GZIP] " |
| The GNU GZIP program; available for anonymous ftp at prep.ai.mit.edu. |
| Please let me know if you know a paper describing the algorithm. |
| .IP "[IDEA] " |
| Xuejia Lai: On the Design and Security of Block Ciphers, ETH Series in |
| Information Processing, vol. 1, Hartung-Gorre Verlag, Konstanz, |
| Switzerland, 1992. Bruce Schneier: Applied Cryptography, John Wiley & |
| Sons, 1994. See also the following patents: PCT/CH91/00117, EP 0 482 |
| 154 B1, US Pat. 5,214,703. |
| .IP [PKCS#1] |
| PKCS #1: RSA Encryption Standard. Version 1.5, RSA Laboratories, |
| November 1993. Available for anonymous ftp at ftp.rsa.com. |
| .IP [POSIX] |
| Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part 1: Application |
| Program Interface (API) [C language], ISO/IEC 9945-1, IEEE Std 1003.1, |
| 1990. |
| .IP [RFC0791] |
| J. Postel: Internet Protocol, RFC 791, USC/ISI, September 1981. |
| .IP [RFC0793] |
| J. Postel: Transmission Control Protocol, RFC 793, USC/ISI, September |
| 1981. |
| .IP [RFC1034] |
| P. Mockapetris: Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities, RFC 1034, |
| USC/ISI, November 1987. |
| .IP [RFC1282] |
| B. Kantor: BSD Rlogin, RFC 1258, UCSD, December 1991. |
| .IP "[RSA] " |
| Bruce Schneier: Applied Cryptography. John Wiley & Sons, 1994. See |
| also R. Rivest, A. Shamir, and L. M. Adleman: Cryptographic |
| Communications System and Method. US Patent 4,405,829, 1983. |
| .IP "[X11] " |
| R. Scheifler: X Window System Protocol, X Consortium Standard, Version |
| 11, Release 6. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Laboratory of |
| Computer Science, 1994. |
| .RT |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Security Considerations |
| |
| This protocol deals with the very issue of user authentication and |
| security. |
| |
| First of all, as an implementation issue, the server program will have |
| to run as root (or equivalent) on the server machine. This is because |
| the server program will need be able to change to an arbitrary user |
| id. The server must also be able to create a privileged TCP/IP port. |
| |
| The client program will need to run as root if any variant of .rhosts |
| authentication is to be used. This is because the client program will |
| need to create a privileged port. The client host key is also usually |
| stored in a file which is readable by root only. The client needs the |
| host key in .rhosts authentication only. Root privileges can be |
| dropped as soon as the privileged port has been created and the host |
| key has been read. |
| |
| The SSH protocol offers major security advantages over existing telnet |
| and rlogin protocols. |
| .IP o |
| IP spoofing is restricted to closing a connection (by encryption, host |
| keys, and the special random cookie). If encryption is not used, IP |
| spoofing is possible for those who can hear packets going out from the |
| server. |
| .IP o |
| DNS spoofing is made ineffective (by host keys). |
| .IP o |
| Routing spoofing is made ineffective (by host keys). |
| .IP o |
| All data is encrypted with strong algorithms to make eavesdropping as |
| difficult as possible. This includes encrypting any authentication |
| information such as passwords. The information for decrypting session |
| keys is destroyed every hour. |
| .IP o |
| Strong authentication methods: .rhosts combined with RSA host |
| authentication, and pure RSA authentication. |
| .IP o |
| X11 connections and arbitrary TCP/IP ports can be forwarded securely. |
| .IP o |
| Man-in-the-middle attacks are deterred by using the server host key to |
| encrypt the session key. |
| .IP o |
| Trojan horses to catch a password by routing manipulation are deterred |
| by checking that the host key of the server machine matches that |
| stored on the client host. |
| .RT |
| |
| The security of SSH against man-in-the-middle attacks and the security |
| of the new form of .rhosts authentication, as well as server host |
| validation, depends on the integrity of the host key and the files |
| containing known host keys. |
| |
| The host key is normally stored in a root-readable file. If the host |
| key is compromised, it permits attackers to use IP, DNS and routing |
| spoofing as with current rlogin and rsh. It should never be any worse |
| than the current situation. |
| |
| The files containing known host keys are not sensitive. However, if an |
| attacker gets to modify the known host key files, it has the same |
| consequences as a compromised host key, because the attacker can then |
| change the recorded host key. |
| |
| The security improvements obtained by this protocol for X11 are of |
| particular significance. Previously, there has been no way to protect |
| data communicated between an X server and a client running on a remote |
| machine. By creating a fake display on the server, and forwarding all |
| X11 requests over the secure channel, SSH can be used to run any X11 |
| applications securely without any cooperation with the vendors of the |
| X server or the application. |
| |
| Finally, the security of this program relies on the strength of the |
| underlying cryptographic algorithms. The RSA algorithm is used for |
| authentication key exchange. It is widely believed to be secure. Of |
| the algorithms used to encrypt the session, DES has a rather small key |
| these days, probably permitting governments and organized criminals to |
| break it in very short time with specialized hardware. 3DES is |
| probably safe (but slower). IDEA is widely believed to be secure. |
| People have varying degrees of confidence in the other algorithms. |
| This program is not secure if used with no encryption at all. |
| |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Additional Information |
| |
| Additional information (especially on the implementation and mailing |
| lists) is available via WWW at http://www.cs.hut.fi/ssh. |
| |
| Comments should be sent to Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi> or the SSH |
| Mailing List <ssh@clinet.fi>. |
| |
| .ti 0 |
| Author's Address |
| |
| .TS |
| ; |
| l. |
| Tatu Ylonen |
| Helsinki University of Technology |
| Otakaari 1 |
| FIN-02150 Espoo, Finland |
| |
| Phone: +358-0-451-3374 |
| Fax: +358-0-451-3293 |
| EMail: ylo@cs.hut.fi |
| .TE |