OpenSSH

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OpenSSH (OpenBSD Secure Shell) is a set of computer programs providing encrypted communication sessions over a computer network using the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol. It was created as an open source alternative to the proprietary Secure Shell software suite offered by SSH Communications Security. OpenSSH is developed as part of the OpenBSD project, which is led by Theo de Raadt.

OpenSSH is occasionally confused with the similarly-named OpenSSL; however, the projects have different purposes and are developed by different teams, the similar name is drawn only from similar goals.

Installation

Install the openssh package.

Client usage

To connect to a server, run:

$ ssh -p port user@server-address

If the server only allows public-key authentication, follow SSH keys.

Configuration

This article or section needs expansion.

Reason: openssh 9.4p1-2 added Include /etc/ssh/ssh_config.d/*.conf to /etc/ssh/ssh_config. The instructions can now be made to use drop-in files. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

The client can be configured to store common options and hosts. All options can be declared globally or restricted to specific hosts. For example:

~/.ssh/config
# global options
User user

# host-specific options
Host myserver
    Hostname server-address
    Port     port

With such a configuration, the following commands are equivalent

$ ssh -p port user@server-address
$ ssh myserver

See ssh_config(5) for more information.

Some options do not have command line switch equivalents, but you can specify configuration options on the command line with -o. For example -oKexAlgorithms=+diffie-hellman-group1-sha1.

Server usage

This article or section needs expansion.

Reason: openssh 9.4p1-2 added Include /etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/*.conf to /etc/ssh/sshd_config. The instructions can now be made to use drop-in files. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

sshd is the OpenSSH server daemon, configured with /etc/ssh/sshd_config and managed by sshd.service. Whenever changing the configuration, use sshd in test mode before restarting the service to ensure it will be able to start cleanly. Valid configurations produce no output.

# sshd -t

Configuration

To allow access only for some users, add this line:

AllowUsers    user1 user2

To allow access only for some groups:

AllowGroups   group1 group2

To add a nice welcome message (e.g. from the /etc/issue file), configure the Banner option:

Banner /etc/issue

Public and private host keys are automatically generated in /etc/ssh by the sshdgenkeys service and regenerated if missing even if HostKeyAlgorithms option in sshd_config allows only some. Three key pairs are provided based on the algorithms rsa, ecdsa and ed25519. To have sshd use a particular key, specify the following option:

HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key

If the server is to be exposed to the WAN, it is recommended to change the default port from 22 to a random higher one like this:

Port 39901
Tip:
  • To help select an alternative port that is not already assigned to a common service, review the list of TCP and UDP port numbers. You can also find port information locally in /etc/services. A port change from default port 22 will reduce the number of log entries caused by automated authentication attempts but will not eliminate them. See Port knocking for related information.
  • It is recommended to disable password logins entirely. This will greatly increase security, see #Force public key authentication for more information. See #Protection for more recommend security methods.
  • OpenSSH can listen to multiple ports simply by having multiple Port port_number lines in the configuration file.
  • New (or missing) host key pairs can be generated by removing the pair(s) that you want to replace from /etc/ssh and running ssh-keygen -A as root.

Daemon management

Start/enable sshd.service. It will keep the SSH daemon permanently active and fork for each incoming connection.

Note: openssh 8.0p1-3 removed sshd.socket that used systemd's socket activation due to it being susceptible to denial of service. See FS#62248 for details. If sshd.socket is enabled when updating to openssh 8.0p1-3, the sshd.socket and sshd@.service units will be copied to /etc/systemd/system/ and reenabled. This is only done to not break existing setups; users are still advised to migrate to sshd.service.
Warning: If you continue using sshd.socket, be aware of its issues:
  • sshd.socket unit may fail (e.g. due to out-of-memory situation) and Restart=always cannot be specified on socket units. See systemd issue 11553.
  • Using socket activation can result in denial of service, as too many connections can cause refusal to further activate the service. See FS#62248.
Note: Using sshd.socket negates the ListenAddress setting, so it will allow connections over any address. To achieve the effect of setting ListenAddress, you must specify the port and IP for ListenStream (e.g. ListenStream=192.168.1.100:22) by editing sshd.socket. You must also add FreeBind=true under [Socket] or else setting the IP address will have the same drawback as setting ListenAddress: the socket will fail to start if the network is not up in time.
Tip: When using socket activation, a transient instance of sshd@.service will be started for each connection (with different instance names). Therefore, neither sshd.socket nor the daemon's regular sshd.service allow to monitor connection attempts in the log. The logs of socket-activated instances of SSH can be seen by running journalctl -u "sshd@*" as root or by running journalctl /usr/bin/sshd as root.

Protection

Allowing remote log-on through SSH is good for administrative purposes, but can pose a threat to your server's security. Often the target of brute force attacks, SSH access needs to be limited properly to prevent third parties gaining access to your server.

ssh-audit offers an automated analysis of server and client configuration. Several other good guides and tools are available on the topic, for example:

Force public key authentication

If a client cannot authenticate through a public key, by default, the SSH server falls back to password authentication, thus allowing a malicious user to attempt to gain access by brute-forcing the password. One of the most effective ways to protect against this attack is to disable password logins entirely, and force the use of SSH keys. This can be accomplished by setting the following options in the daemon configuration file:

/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/20-force_publickey_auth.conf
PasswordAuthentication no
AuthenticationMethods publickey
Warning: Before adding this to your configuration, make sure that all accounts which require SSH access have public-key authentication set up in the corresponding authorized_keys files. See SSH keys#Copying the public key to the remote server for more information.

Two-factor authentication and public keys

SSH can be set up to require multiple ways of authentication; you can tell which authentication methods are required using the AuthenticationMethods option. This enables you to use public keys as well as a two-factor authorization.

Authentication providers

See Google Authenticator to set up Google Authenticator.

For Duo, install duo_unixAUR which will supply the pam_duo.so module. Read the Duo Unix documentation for instructions on how to setup the necessary Duo credentials (Integration Key, Secret Key, API Hostname).

PAM setup

To use PAM with OpenSSH, edit the following files:

/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/20-pam.conf
KbdInteractiveAuthentication yes
AuthenticationMethods publickey keyboard-interactive:pam

Then you can log in with either a publickey or the user authentication as required by your PAM setup.

If, on the other hand, you want to authenticate the user on both a publickey and the user authentication as required by your PAM setup, use a comma instead of a space to separate the AuthenticationMethods:

/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/20-pam.conf
KbdInteractiveAuthentication yes
AuthenticationMethods publickey,keyboard-interactive:pam

With required pubkey and pam authentication, you may wish to disable the password requirement:

/etc/pam.d/sshd
auth      required  pam_securetty.so     #disable remote root
#Require google authenticator
auth      required  pam_google_authenticator.so
#But not password
#auth      include   system-remote-login
account   include   system-remote-login
password  include   system-remote-login
session   include   system-remote-login

Protecting against brute force attacks

Brute forcing is a simple concept: one continuously tries to log in to a webpage or server log-in prompt like SSH with a high number of random username and password combinations.

See ufw#Rate limiting with ufw or Simple stateful firewall#Bruteforce attacks for iptables.

Alternatively, you can protect yourself from brute force attacks by using an automated script that blocks anybody trying to brute force their way in, for example fail2ban or sshguard.

  • Only allow incoming SSH connections from trusted locations
  • Use fail2ban or sshguard to automatically block IP addresses that fail password authentication too many times.
  • Use pam_shield to block IP addresses that perform too many login attempts within a certain period of time. In contrast to fail2ban or sshguard, this program does not take login success or failure into account.

Limit root login

This article or section is out of date.

Reason: Root login has been disabled by default upstream in the current version. Unclear to me what parts of this section and subsections are redundant. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

It is generally considered bad practice to allow the root user to log in without restraint over SSH. There are two methods by which SSH root access can be restricted for increased security.

Deny

Sudo selectively provides root rights for actions requiring these without requiring authenticating against the root account. This allows locking the root account against access via SSH and potentially functions as a security measure against brute force attacks, since now an attacker must guess the account name in addition to the password.

SSH can be configured to deny remote logins with the root user by editing the "Authentication" section in the daemon configuration file. Simply set PermitRootLogin to no:

/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/20-deny_root.conf
PermitRootLogin no

Next, restart the SSH daemon.

You will now be unable to log in through SSH under root, but will still be able to log in with your normal user and use su or sudo to do system administration.

Restrict

Some automated tasks such as remote, full-system backup require full root access. To allow these in a secure way, instead of disabling root login via SSH, it is possible to only allow root logins for selected commands. This can be achieved by editing ~root/.ssh/authorized_keys, by prefixing the desired key, e.g. as follows:

command="rrsync -ro /" ssh-rsa …

This will allow any login with this specific key only to execute the command specified between the quotes.

The increased attack surface created by exposing the root user name at login can be compensated by adding the following to sshd_config:

PermitRootLogin forced-commands-only

This setting will not only restrict the commands which root may execute via SSH, but it will also disable the use of passwords, forcing use of public key authentication for the root account.

A slightly less restrictive alternative will allow any command for root, but makes brute force attacks infeasible by enforcing public key authentication. For this option, set:

PermitRootLogin prohibit-password

Locking the authorized_keys file

Warning: Locking this file only protects against user mistakes and a particular naive in-person attack. It does not provide any protection against malicious programs or breaches. Use multi-factor authentication, firewalling and practice defence in depth to prevent breaches in the first place.

If, for whatever reason, you think that the user in question should not be able to add or change existing keys, you can prevent them from manipulating the file.

On the server, make the authorized_keys file read-only for the user and deny all other permissions:

$ chmod 400 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys

To prevent the user from simply changing the permissions back, set the immutable bit on the authorized_keys file. To prevent the user from renaming the ~/.ssh directory and creating a new ~/.ssh directory and authorized_keys file, set the immutable bit on the ~/.ssh directory too. To add or remove keys, you will have to remove the immutable bit from authorized_keys and make it writable temporarily.

Tip: It is recommended to log changes to any authorized_keys file via e.g auditd.

SSH certificates

While common SSH keys and manual fingerprint verification may be easy to use with a handful of hosts that are managed by a single administrator, this method of authentication does not scale at all. When a number of servers need to be accessed through SSH by several users, manually verifying ssh public key fingerprints of every host becomes nearly impossible to do securely and reliably.

The solution for this is to use SSH certificates that provide automatic verification of public key identities through a chain of trust that scales significantly better than the default trust-on-first-use approach of SSH. SSH certificates are basically nothing else than normal public SSH keys, but with an additional signature from a trusted certificate authority that verifies the key identity.

Create a host certificate authority key for your infrastructure
$ ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f ~/.ssh/ca_host_key -C 'Host certificate authority for *.example.com'

The private certificate authority key should be stored securely, ideally on a smartcard or hardware token that prevents key extraction like the Nitrokey or YubiKey.

Sign a server's public SSH host key

Copy the public server key to your local system containing the private certificate authority key to sign it:

$ ssh-keygen -h -s ~/.ssh/ca_key -I certLabel -n server01.example.com ./ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub
Move the new certificate and configure sshd to use it

The generated certificate ssh_host_ed25519_key-cert.pub should be copied to the server at /etc/ssh/.

/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/20-ed25519_key.conf
HostCertificate /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key-cert.pub
Configure all clients to trust the certificate authority
~/.ssh/known_hosts
@cert-authority  *.example.com ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIKL8gB/pjuff005YNazwMCqJpgsXAbQ3r4VStd/CRKwU Host certificate authority for *.example.com
Warning: When a server does not provide a certificate for identification, public key authentication is used as fallback by default.
SSH user certificates

Depending on the number of users and method of deployment, SSH User keys can also be used with Certificates. For organizations with many ssh users, this is strongly advised to manage User key deployment securely.

The deployment of user certificates works basically the same as for server identities. More details and instructions can be found at Wikibooks:OpenSSH/Cookbook/Certificate-based Authentication.

Certificate deployment automation

Automated deployment of SSH certificates can be provided by a number of open source tools. Popular examples are:

SSHFP record

The Secure Shell fingerprint record (SSHFP) is an optional resource record in the domain name system that associates SSH keys to a host name. It can be used to verify the SSH fingerprint on public servers by using DNSSEC instead of deploying trusted CA certificates, which allows even unmanaged clients to verify the validity of key fingerprints.

Generate record entry

To generate the required hexadecimal key fingerprint to be stored in the DNS record, create the hash on the target server.

$ ssh-keygen -r host.example.com

This will read all available SSH keys for the specified domain and output valid SSHFP records that can then be stored in the DNS entries of the affected domain.

Client configuration

In order to automatically retrive and trust SSH key fingerprints stored as SSHFP records, add the following to your ssh client configuration file:

~/.ssh/config
# global options
Host *
    VerifyHostKeyDNS yes

If the target host has a valid SSHFP record and this record is verified with a valid DNSSEC signature, the fingerprint is automatically accepted without prompting the user to verify the hosts identity. In case the DNS record is not verified by DNSSEC, the user will be prompted to verify the fingerprint instead.

Verify SSHFP records manually

To determine the SSH fingerprint of a specific domain, use ssh-keyscan to retrieve the the DNS record manually. (Note that by default fingerprints for every available key type is provided as both SHA1 and SHA256.)

$ ssh-keyscan -D github.com
; github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-57ca1323
; github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-57ca1323
github.com IN SSHFP 1 1 6f4c60375018bae0918e37d9162bc15ba40e6365
github.com IN SSHFP 1 2 b8d895ced92c0ac0e171cd2ef5ef01ba3417554a4a6480d331ccc2be3ded0f6b
; github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-57ca1323
github.com IN SSHFP 3 1 3358ab5dd3e306c461c840f7487e93b697e30600
github.com IN SSHFP 3 2 a764003173480b54c96167883adb6b55cf7cfd1d415055aedff2e2c8a8147d03
; github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-57ca1323
github.com IN SSHFP 4 1 e9619e2ed56c2f2a71729db80bacc2ce9ccce8d4
github.com IN SSHFP 4 2 f83898df0bef57a4ee24985ba598ac17fccb0c0d333cc4af1dd92be14bc23aa5
; github.com:22 SSH-2.0-babeld-57ca1323

Since the SSHFP record stores the key fingerprints as hexadecimal values while the common output for SSH fingerprints is the base64 encoded SHA256 hash of the public key, it is necessary to convert the record back to the base64 format in order to compare it with values in the known_hosts file or other documentation that commonly stores fingerprints as SHA256.

$ echo "SSHFP-fingerprint" | xxd -r -p | base64

Example for github.com using the hex value for the sha256 fingerprint of the key type ed25519

$ echo "f83898df0bef57a4ee24985ba598ac17fccb0c0d333cc4af1dd92be14bc23aa5" | xxd -r -p | base64
+DiY3wvvV6TuJJhbpZisF/zLDA0zPMSvHdkr4UvCOqU=

Compare with known_hosts entries:

$ ssh-keygen -l -f ~/.ssh/known_hosts

Tips and tricks

Encrypted SOCKS tunnel

This article or section needs language, wiki syntax or style improvements. See Help:Style for reference.

Reason: Written like a blog post. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

This is highly useful for laptop users connected to various unsafe wireless connections. The only thing you need is an SSH server running at a somewhat secure location, like your home or at work. It might be useful to use a dynamic DNS service like DynDNS so you do not have to remember your IP-address.

Step 1: start the connection

You only have to execute this single command to start the connection:

$ ssh -TND 4711 user@host

where user is your username at the SSH server running at the host. It will ask for your password, and then you are connected. The N flag disables the interactive prompt, and the D flag specifies the local port on which to listen on (you can choose any port number if you want). The T flag disables pseudo-tty allocation.

It is nice to add the verbose (-v) flag, because then you can verify that it is actually connected from that output.

Step 2 (Variant A): configure your browser (or other programs)

The above step is useful only in combination with a web browser or another program that uses this newly created SOCKS tunnel. Since SSH currently supports both SOCKS v4 and SOCKS v5, you can use either of them.

  • For Firefox: At Preferences > General navigates to the bottom of the page and click Settings..., which is to the right of the Network Settings title. Next, within the new semi window, check the Manual proxy configuration option and enter localhost in the SOCKS host text field, and the port number in the Port text field (4711 in the example above) next to it.
Firefox does not automatically make DNS requests through the socks tunnel. This potential privacy concern can be mitigated by scrolling further down, checking in the Proxy DNS when using SOCKS v5. Obviously, this will only work if you chooses SOCKS v5 rather than v4.
Restart Firefox to activate these settings.
  • For Chromium: You can set the SOCKS settings as environment variables or as command line options. For example, to add one of the following functions to your .bashrc:
function secure_chromium {
    port=4711
    export SOCKS_SERVER=localhost:$port
    export SOCKS_VERSION=5
    chromium &
    exit
}

OR

function secure_chromium {
    port=4711
    chromium --proxy-server="socks://localhost:$port" &
    exit
}

Now open a terminal and just do:

$ secure_chromium

Enjoy your secure tunnel!

Step 2 (Variant B): set up a local TUN interface

This variant is slightly more involved upfront but results in you not having to manually configure every single application one by one to use the SOCKS proxy. It involves setting up a local TUN interface and routing traffic through it.

See VPN over SSH#Set up badvpn and tunnel interface.

X11 forwarding

X11 forwarding is a mechanism that allows graphical interfaces of X11 programs running on a remote system to be displayed on a local client machine. For X11 forwarding the remote host does not need to have a full X11 system installed; however, it needs at least to have xauth installed. xauth is a utility that maintains Xauthority configurations used by server and client for authentication of X11 session (source).

Warning: X11 forwarding has important security implications which should be at least acknowledged by reading relevant sections of ssh(1), sshd_config(5), and ssh_config(5) manual pages. See also this StackExchange question.

Setup

Remote
  • install the xorg-xauth packages
  • in /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
    • set X11Forwarding to yes
    • verify that AllowTcpForwarding and X11UseLocalhost options are set to yes, and that X11DisplayOffset is set to 10 (those are the default values if nothing has been changed, see sshd_config(5))
  • then restart the sshd daemon.
Client
  • install the xorg-xauth package
  • enable the ForwardX11 option by either specifying the -X switch on the command line for opportunistic connections, or by setting ForwardX11 to yes in the client's configuration.
Tip: You can enable the ForwardX11Trusted option (-Y switch on the command line) if GUI is drawing badly or you receive errors; this will prevent X11 forwardings from being subjected to the X11 SECURITY extension controls. Be sure you have read the warning at the beginning of this section if you do so.

Usage

Log on to the remote machine normally, specifying the -X switch if ForwardX11 was not enabled in the client's configuration file:

$ ssh -X user@host

If you receive errors trying to run graphical applications, try ForwardX11Trusted instead:

$ ssh -Y user@host

Given the output X11 forwarding request failed, redo the setup for your remote machine. Once the X11 forwarding request succeeds, you can start any X program on the remote server, and it will be forwarded to your local session:

$ xclock

Error output containing Can't open display indicates that DISPLAY is improperly set.

Be careful with some applications as they check for a running instance on the local machine. Firefox is an example: either close the running Firefox instance or use the following start parameter to start a remote instance on the local machine:

$ firefox --no-remote

If you get "X11 forwarding request failed on channel 0" when you connect (and the server /var/log/errors.log shows "Failed to allocate internet-domain X11 display socket"), make sure package xorg-xauth is installed. If its installation is not working, try to either:

  • enable the AddressFamily any option in sshd_config on the server, or
  • set the AddressFamily option in sshd_config on the server to inet.

Setting it to inet may fix problems with Ubuntu clients on IPv4.

For running X applications as another user on the SSH server, you need to xauth add the authentication line taken from xauth list of the SSH logged in user.

Tip: Here are some useful links for troubleshooting X11 Forwarding issues.

Forwarding other ports

In addition to SSH's built-in support for X11, it can also be used to securely tunnel any TCP connection, by use of local forwarding or remote forwarding.

Local forwarding opens a port on the local machine, connections to which will be forwarded to the remote host and from there on to a given destination. Very often, the forwarding destination will be the same as the remote host, thus providing a secure shell and, e.g. a secure VNC connection, to the same machine. Local forwarding is accomplished by means of the -L switch and it is accompanying forwarding specification in the form of <tunnel port>:<destination address>:<destination port>.

Thus:

$ ssh -L 1000:mail.google.com:25 192.168.0.100

will use SSH to login to and open a shell on 192.168.0.100, and will also create a tunnel from the local machine's TCP port 1000 to mail.google.com on port 25. Once established, connections to localhost:1000 will connect to the Gmail SMTP port. To Google, it will appear that any such connection (though not necessarily the data conveyed over the connection) originated from 192.168.0.100, and such data will be secure between the local machine and 192.168.0.100, but not between 192.168.0.100 and Google, unless other measures are taken.

Similarly:

$ ssh -L 2000:192.168.0.100:6001 192.168.0.100

will allow connections to localhost:2000 which will be transparently sent to the remote host on port 6001. The preceding example is useful for VNC connections using the vncserver utility--part of the tightvnc package--which, though very useful, is explicit about its lack of security.

Remote forwarding allows the remote host to connect to an arbitrary host via the SSH tunnel and the local machine, providing a functional reversal of local forwarding, and is useful for situations where, e.g., the remote host has limited connectivity due to firewalling. It is enabled with the -R switch and a forwarding specification in the form of <tunnel port>:<destination address>:<destination port>.

Thus:

$ ssh -R 3000:irc.libera.chat:6667 192.168.0.200

will bring up a shell on 192.168.0.200, and connections from 192.168.0.200 to itself on port 3000 (the remote host's localhost:3000) will be sent over the tunnel to the local machine and then on to irc.libera.chat on port 6667, thus, in this example, allowing the use of IRC programs on the remote host to be used, even if port 6667 would normally be blocked to it.

Both local and remote forwarding can be used to provide a secure "gateway", allowing other computers to take advantage of an SSH tunnel, without actually running SSH or the SSH daemon by providing a bind-address for the start of the tunnel as part of the forwarding specification, e.g. <tunnel address>:<tunnel port>:<destination address>:<destination port>. The <tunnel address> can be any address on the machine at the start of the tunnel. The address localhost allows connections via the localhost or loopback interface, and an empty address or * allow connections via any interface. By default, forwarding is limited to connections from the machine at the "beginning" of the tunnel, i.e. the <tunnel address> is set to localhost. Local forwarding requires no additional configuration; however, remote forwarding is limited by the remote server's SSH daemon configuration. See the GatewayPorts option in sshd_config(5) and -L address option in ssh(1) for more information about remote forwarding and local forwarding, respectively.

Jump hosts

In certain scenarios, there might not be a direct connection to your target SSH daemon, and the use of a jump server (or bastion server) is required. Thus, we attempt to connect together two or more SSH tunnels, and assuming your local keys are authorized against each server in the chain. This is possible using SSH agent forwarding (-A) and pseudo-terminal allocation (-t) which forwards your local key with the following syntax:

$ ssh -A -t -l user1 bastion1 \
  ssh -A -t -l user2 intermediate2 \
  ssh -A -t -l user3 target

This can be automated with the ProxyCommand option:

$ ssh -o ProxyCommand="ssh -W %h:%p bastion.example.org" targetserver.example.org

An easier and more secure way to do this is using the ProxyJump option with the -J flag:

$ ssh -J user1@bastion1,user2@intermediate2 user3@target

Multiple hosts in the -J directive can be separated with a comma; they will be connected to in the order listed. The user...@ part is not required, but can be used. The host specifications for -J use the ssh configuration file, so specific per-host options can be set there, if needed.

The main difference between the ProxyCommand and ProxyJump options is that the later does not require a shell on the jumphost. Consequently, this also means that the jumpserver does not require access to the users login credentials or SSH agent forwarding. With the ProxyJump option, the ssh client connects through the jumpserver directly to the target server, establishing an end-to-end encrypted channel between client and target server.

An equivalent of the -J flag in the configuration file is the ProxyJump option; see ssh_config(5) for details.

Reverse SSH through a relay

This article or section needs language, wiki syntax or style improvements. See Help:Style for reference.

Reason: The idea of SSH tunneling is classic, so some references for detailed explanation would be nice. E.g. [1] which includes other scenarios. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

The idea is that the client connects to the server via another relay while the server is connected to the same relay using a reverse SSH tunnel. This is useful when the server is behind a NAT, and the relay is a publicly accessible SSH server used as a proxy to which the user has access. Therefore, the prerequisite is that the client's keys are authorized against both the relay and the server, and the server needs to be authorized against the relay as well for the reverse SSH connection.

The following configuration example assumes that user1 is the user account used on client, user2 on relay and user3 on server. First, assuming we will use port 2222, the server needs to establish the reverse tunnel with:

ssh -R 2222:localhost:22 -N user2@relay

Which can also be automated with a startup script, systemd service, autossh or sidedoorAUR.

At the client side, the connection is established with:

ssh -t user2@relay ssh user3@localhost -p 2222
Note: ssh user3@relay -p 2222 would require you to open this port in the firewall of your relay server, as well as to allow connections to this port from other addresses.

The remote command to establish the connection to reverse tunnel can also be defined in relay's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys by including the command field as follows:

command="ssh user3@localhost -p 2222" ssh-rsa KEY2 user1@client

In this case the connection is established with:

ssh user2@relay

Alternatively, you can add an entry to your ssh configuration that specifies both RemoteCommand and RequestTTY:

~/.ssh/config
Host jump-destination
    Hostname relay
    User user2
    RemoteCommand ssh user3@localhost -p 2222
    RequestTTY yes

Which will reduce connecting to:

ssh jump-destination
Note: SCP's autocomplete function in client's terminal will not work and even the SCP transfers themselves are not working under some configurations.

Multiplexing

The SSH daemon usually listens on port 22. However, it is common practice for many public internet hotspots to block all traffic that is not on the regular HTTP/S ports (80 and 443, respectively), thus effectively blocking SSH connections. The immediate solution for this is to have sshd listen additionally on one of the whitelisted ports:

/etc/ssh/sshd_config
Port 22
Port 443

However, it is likely that port 443 is already in use by a web server serving HTTPS content, in which case it is possible to use a multiplexer, such as sslh, which listens on the multiplexed port and can intelligently forward packets to many services.

Speeding up SSH

There are several client configuration options which can speed up connections either globally or for specific hosts. See ssh_config(5) for full descriptions of these options.

  • Use a faster cipher: on modern CPUs with AESNI instructions, aes128-gcm@openssh.com and aes256-gcm@openssh.com should offer significantly better performance over openssh's default preferred cipher, usually chacha20-poly1305@openssh.com. Cipher can be selected with the -c flag. For a permanent effect, put Ciphers option in your ~/.ssh/config with ciphers in new preferred order, e.g.:
    Ciphers aes128-gcm@openssh.com,aes256-gcm@openssh.com,chacha20-poly1305@openssh.com,aes256-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes128-ctr
  • Enable or disable compression: compression can increase speed on slow connections; it is enabled with the Compression yes option or the -C flag. However, the compression algorithm used is the relatively slow gzip(1) which becomes the bottleneck on fast networks. In order to speed up the connection, one should use the Compression no option on local or fast networks.
  • Connection sharing: you can make all sessions to the same host share a single connection using these options:
    ControlMaster auto
    ControlPersist yes
    ControlPath ~/.ssh/sockets/socket-%r@%h:%p
    
where ~/.ssh/sockets can be any directory not writable by other users.
  • ControlPersist specifies how long the master should wait in the background for new clients after the initial client connection has been closed. Possible values are either:
    • no to close the connection immediately after the last client disconnects,
    • a time in seconds,
    • yes to wait forever, the connection will never be closed automatically.
  • Login time can be shortened by bypassing IPv6 lookup using the AddressFamily inet option or -4 flag.
  • Last, if you intend to use SSH for SFTP or SCP, High Performance SSH/SCP can significantly increase throughput by dynamically raising the SSH buffer sizes. Install the package openssh-hpn-gitAUR[broken link: package not found] to use a patched version of OpenSSH with this enhancement.

Mounting a remote filesystem with SSHFS

Please refer to the SSHFS article to mount a SSH-accessible remote system to a local directory, so you will be able to do any operation on the mounted files with any tool (copy, rename, edit with vim, etc.). sshfs is generally preferred over shfs, the latter has not been updated since 2004.

Keep alive

By default, the SSH session automatically logs out if it has been idle for a certain time. To keep the session up, the client can send a keep-alive signal to the server if no data has been received for some time, or symmetrically the server can send messages at regular intervals if it has not heard from the client.

  • On the server side, ClientAliveInterval sets the timeout in seconds after which if no data has been received from the client, sshd will send a request for response. The default is 0, no message is sent. For example to request a response every 60 seconds from the client, set the ClientAliveInterval 60 option in your server configuration. See also the ClientAliveCountMax and TCPKeepAlive options.
  • On the client side, ServerAliveInterval controls the interval between the requests for response sent from the client to the server. For example to request a response every 120 seconds from the server, add the ServerAliveInterval 120 option to your client configuration. See also the ServerAliveCountMax and TCPKeepAlive options.
Note: To ensure a session is kept alive, only one of either the client or the server needs to send keep alive requests. If ones control both the servers and the clients, a reasonable choice is to only configure the clients that require a persistent session with a positive ServerAliveInterval and leave other clients and servers in their default configuration.

Automatically restart SSH tunnels with systemd

systemd can automatically start SSH connections on boot/login and restart them when they fail. This makes it a useful tool for maintaining SSH tunnels.

The following service can start an SSH tunnel on login using the connection settings in your ssh configuration. If the connection closes for any reason, it waits 10 seconds before restarting it:

~/.config/systemd/user/tunnel.service
[Unit]
Description=SSH tunnel to myserver

[Service]
Type=simple
Restart=always
RestartSec=10
ExecStart=/usr/bin/ssh -F %h/.ssh/config -N myserver

Then enable and start the Systemd/User service. See #Keep alive for how to prevent the tunnel from timing out. If you wish to start the tunnel on boot, you might want to rewrite the unit as a system service.

Autossh - automatically restarts SSH sessions and tunnels

When a session or tunnel cannot be kept alive, for example due to bad network conditions causing client disconnections, you can use autossh to automatically restart them.

Usage examples:

$ autossh -M 0 -o "ServerAliveInterval 45" -o "ServerAliveCountMax 2" username@example.com

Combined with SSHFS:

$ sshfs -o reconnect,compression=yes,transform_symlinks,ServerAliveInterval=45,ServerAliveCountMax=2,ssh_command='autossh -M 0' username@example.com: /mnt/example 

Connecting through a SOCKS-proxy set by Proxy settings:

$ autossh -M 0 -o "ServerAliveInterval 45" -o "ServerAliveCountMax 2" -NCD 8080 username@example.com 

With the -f option autossh can be made to run as a background process. Running it this way however means the passphrase cannot be entered interactively.

The session will end once you type exit in the session, or the autossh process receives a SIGTERM, SIGINT of SIGKILL signal.

Run autossh automatically at boot via systemd

If you want to automatically start autossh, you can create a systemd unit file:

/etc/systemd/system/autossh.service
[Unit]
Description=AutoSSH service for port 2222
After=network.target

[Service]
Environment="AUTOSSH_GATETIME=0"
ExecStart=/usr/bin/autossh -M 0 -NL 2222:localhost:2222 -o TCPKeepAlive=yes foo@bar.com

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Here AUTOSSH_GATETIME=0 is an environment variable specifying how long ssh must be up before autossh considers it a successful connection, setting it to 0 autossh also ignores the first run failure of ssh. This may be useful when running autossh at boot. Other environment variables are available at autossh(1). Of course, you can make this unit more complex if necessary (see the systemd documentation for details), and obviously you can use your own options for autossh, but note that the -f implying AUTOSSH_GATETIME=0 does not work with systemd.

Remember to start and/or enable the service afterwards.

You may also need to disable ControlMaster e.g.

ExecStart=/usr/bin/autossh -M 0 -o ControlMaster=no -NL 2222:localhost:2222 -o TCPKeepAlive=yes foo@bar.com
Tip: It is also easy to maintain several autossh processes, to keep several tunnels alive. Just create multiple service files with different names.

Alternative service should SSH daemon fail

For remote or headless servers which rely exclusively on SSH, a failure to start the SSH daemon (e.g., after a system upgrade) may prevent administration access. systemd offers a simple solution via OnFailure option.

Let us suppose the server runs sshd and telnet is the fail-safe alternative of choice. Create a file as follows. Do not enable telnet.socket!

/etc/systemd/system/sshd.service.d/override.conf
[Unit]
OnFailure=telnet.socket

That's it. Telnet is not available when sshd is running. Should sshd fail to start, a telnet session can be opened for recovery.

Terminal background color based on host

To better distinguish when you are on different hosts, you can set a different background color based on the kind of host.

This solution works, but is not universal (ZSH only).

Network specific configuration

You can use host configuration specific to the network you are connected to using a Match exec.

For example, when using nmcli(1), and the connection is configured (manually or through DHCP) to use a search-domain:

Match exec "nmcli | grep domains: | grep example.com"
  CanonicalDomains example.com
  # Should you use a different username on this network
  #User username
  # Use a different known_hosts file (for private network or synchronisation)
  #UserKnownHostsFile <network>_known_hosts

Another example for Match host ... exec "...": Consider that connecting to internal.example.com requires a bastion/proxy (via ProxyJump) unless you are already connected via VPN. The fragment !exec "host internal.example.com" applies only when internal.example.com cannot be looked up via DNS. Various alternatives are discussed at [2].

Match host internal.example.com !exec "host internal.example.com"
  ProxyJump bastion.example.com
Host internal.example.com
  User foobar

Private networks hostkeys verification

Because different servers on different networks are likely to share a common private IP address, you might want to handle them differently.

The factual accuracy of this article or section is disputed.

Reason: The best solution would not need a warning to use something else in practice. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

The best solution is to use the #Network specific configuration to use a different UserKnownHostsFile depending on the network you are on. The second solution, best used as default when you are working on new/prototype networks, would be to simply ignore hostkeys for private networks:

Host 10.* 192.168.*.* 172.31.* 172.30.* 172.2?.* 172.1?.*
    # Disable HostKey verification
    # Trust HostKey automatically
    StrictHostKeyChecking no
    # Do not save the HostKey
    UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null
    # Do not display: "Warning: Permanently Added ..."
    LogLevel Error

The factual accuracy of this article or section is disputed.

Reason: The known_hosts file records an IP address even when you use hostname to access the server. (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)
Warning: In a production environment, make sure to either use the hostname to access the host and/or to use network specific known_hosts files.

Run command at login

If you are using an interactive session, there are multiple ways to execute a command on login:

  • use the authorized_keys file on the remote host (see sshd(8) § AUTHORIZED_KEYS FILE FORMAT)
  • use ~/.ssh/rc on the remote host if the server has enabled the PermitUserRC option
  • use your shell configuration file on the remote host, e.g. .bashrc

Agent forwarding

SSH agent forwarding allows you to use your local keys when connected to a server. It is recommended to only enable agent forwarding for selected hosts.

~/.ssh/config
Host myserver.com
    ForwardAgent yes

Next, configure an SSH agent and add your local key with ssh-add.

If you now connect to a remote server you will be able to connect to other services using your local keys.

Generating new keys

New server private keys can be generated by:

  1. Deleting all the keys, e.g.:
    # rm /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*_key*
  2. Restarting sshdgenkeys.service or running ssh-keygen -A as root.

Run sshd as non-privileged user

You may want to run sshd as non-privileged user in containers, or for testing, etc.

Since non-privileged user cannot read host keys in /etc/ssh, new host keys must be generated:

$ ssh-keygen -q -N "" -t rsa -b 4096 -f /path/to/host/keys/ssh_host_rsa_key
$ ssh-keygen -q -N "" -t ecdsa -f /path/to/host/keys/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
$ ssh-keygen -q -N "" -t ed25519 -f /path/to/host/keys/ssh_host_ed25519_key

Create an sshd_config file. The example below uses a port higher than 1024, provides a new path to the host keys and disables PAM:

/path/to/sshd_config
Port 2022
HostKey /path/to/host/keys/ssh_host_rsa_key
HostKey /path/to/host/keys/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
HostKey /path/to/host/keys/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key
UsePAM no

Run sshd with the created config. The -D flag disables daemon mode and -e redirects output to stderr to allow easy monitoring.

$ sshd -f /path/to/sshd_config -D -e

Troubleshooting

Checklist

Check these simple issues before you look any further.

  1. The configuration directory ~/.ssh, its contents should be accessible only by the user (check this on both the client and the server), and the user's home directory should only be writable by the user:
    $ chmod go-w ~
    $ chmod 700 ~/.ssh
    $ chmod 600 ~/.ssh/*
    $ chown -R $USER ~/.ssh
    
  2. Check that the client's public key (e.g. id_rsa.pub) is in ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the server.
  3. Check that you did not limit SSH access with AllowUsers or AllowGroups in the server config.
  4. Check if the user has set a password. Sometimes new users who have not yet logged in to the server do not have a password.
  5. Append LogLevel DEBUG to /etc/ssh/sshd_config.
  6. Run journalctl -xe as root for possible (error) messages.
  7. Restart sshd and logout/login on both client and server.

Connection refused or timeout problem

Port forwarding

If you are behind a NAT mode/router (which is likely unless you are on a VPS or publicly addressed host), make sure that your router is forwarding incoming ssh connections to your machine. Find the server's internal IP address with $ ip addr and set up your router to forward TCP on your SSH port to that IP. portforward.com can help with that.

Is SSH running and listening?

The ss utility shows all the processes listening to a TCP port with the following command line:

$ ss --tcp --listening

If the above command do not show the system is listening to the port ssh, then SSH is not running: check the journal for errors etc.

Are there firewall rules blocking the connection?

Iptables may be blocking connections on port 22. Check this with:

# iptables -nvL

and look for rules that might be dropping packets on the INPUT chain. Then, if necessary, unblock the port with a command like:

# iptables -I INPUT 1 -p tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT

For more help configuring firewalls, see firewalls.

Is the traffic even getting to your computer?

Start a traffic dump on the computer you are having problems with:

# tcpdump -lnn -i any port ssh and tcp-syn

This should show some basic information, then wait for any matching traffic to happen before displaying it. Try your connection now. If you do not see any output when you attempt to connect, then something outside of your computer is blocking the traffic (e. g., hardware firewall, NAT router etc.).

Your ISP or a third party blocking default port?

Note: Try this step if you know you are not running any firewalls and you know you have configured the router for DMZ or have forwarded the port to your computer and it still does not work. Here you will find diagnostic steps and a possible solution.

In some cases, your ISP might block the default port (SSH port 22) so whatever you try (opening ports, hardening the stack, defending against flood attacks, et al) ends up useless. To confirm this, create a server on all interfaces (0.0.0.0) and connect remotely.

If you get an error message comparable to this:

ssh: connect to host www.inet.hr port 22: Connection refused

That means the port is not being blocked by the ISP, but the server does not run SSH on that port (See security through obscurity).

However, if you get an error message comparable to this:

ssh: connect to host 111.222.333.444 port 22: Operation timed out 

That means that something is rejecting your TCP traffic on port 22. Basically that port is stealth, either by your firewall or 3rd party intervention (like an ISP blocking and/or rejecting incoming traffic on port 22). If you know you are not running any firewall on your computer, and you know that Gremlins are not growing in your routers and switches, then your ISP is blocking the traffic.

To double check, you can run Wireshark on your server and listen to traffic on port 22. Since Wireshark is a Layer 2 Packet Sniffing utility, and TCP/UDP are Layer 3 and above (see IP Network stack), if you do not receive anything while connecting remotely, a third party is most likely to be blocking the traffic on that port to your server.

Diagnosis

Install either tcpdump or Wireshark with the wireshark-cli package.

For tcpdump:

# tcpdump -ni interface "port 22"

For Wireshark:

$ tshark -f "tcp port 22" -i interface

where interface is the network interface for a WAN connection (see ip a to check). If you are not receiving any packets while trying to connect remotely, you can be very sure that your ISP is blocking the incoming traffic on port 22.

Possible solution

The solution is just to use some other port that the ISP is not blocking. Open the /etc/ssh/sshd_config and configure the file to use different ports. For example, add:

Port 22
Port 1234

Also make sure that other "Port" configuration lines in the file are commented out. Just commenting "Port 22" and putting "Port 1234" will not solve the issue because then sshd will only listen on port 1234. Use both lines to run the SSH server on both ports.

Restart the server sshd.service and you are almost done. You still have to configure your client(s) to use the other port instead of the default port. There are numerous solutions to that problem, but let us cover two of them here.

Read from socket failed: connection reset by peer

Recent versions of OpenSSH sometimes fail with the above error message when connecting to older ssh servers. This can be worked around by setting various client options for that host. See ssh_config(5) for more information about the following options.

The problem could be the ecdsa-sha2-nistp*-cert-v01@openssh elliptical host key algorithms. These can be disabled by setting HostKeyAlgorithms to a list excluding those algorithms. On the client side, the HostKeyAlgorithms that the client wants to use can also be set by preceding the HostKeyAlgorithms list with a - to remove the specified algorithms (including wildcards) from the default set (see ssh_config(5) man page). You can check the actually used host key algorithm with ssh -v server_to_connect_to in the line that contains kex: host key algorithm:.

If that does not work, it could be that the list of ciphers is too long. Set the Ciphers option to a shorter list (fewer than 80 characters should be enough). Similarly, you can also try shortening the list of MACs.

See also the discussion on the OpenSSH bug forum.

"[your shell]: No such file or directory" / ssh_exchange_identification problem

One possible cause for this is the need of certain SSH clients to find an absolute path (one returned by whereis -b [your shell], for instance) in $SHELL, even if the shell's binary is located in one of the $PATH entries.

"Terminal unknown" or "Error opening terminal" error message

If you receive the above errors upon logging in, this means the server does not recognize your terminal. Ncurses applications like nano may fail with the message "Error opening terminal".

The correct solution is to install the client terminal's terminfo file on the server. This tells console programs on the server how to correctly interact with your terminal. You can get info about current terminfo using $ infocmp and then find out which package owns it.

If you cannot install it normally, you can copy your terminfo to your home directory on the server:

$ ssh myserver mkdir -p  ~/.terminfo/${TERM:0:1}
$ scp /usr/share/terminfo/${TERM:0:1}/$TERM myserver:~/.terminfo/${TERM:0:1}/

After logging in and out from the server the problem should be fixed.

TERM hack

Note: This should only be used as a last resort.

Alternatively, you can simply set TERM=xterm in your environment on the server (e.g. in .bash_profile). This will silence the error and allow ncurses applications to run again, but you may experience strange behavior and graphical glitches unless your terminal's control sequences exactly match xterm's.

Connection closed by x.x.x.x [preauth]

If you are seeing this error in your sshd logs, make sure you have set a valid HostKey

HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key

subsystem request failed

Since OpenSSH 8.8, scp uses SFTP as the default protocol for data transfers by requesting the subsystem named sftp. If you run scp in verbose mode, scp -v, you can determine which subsystem your client is using (e.g. Sending subsystem: <subsystem-name>). Errors such as subsystem request failed on channel 0 may be fixed by configuring the server's Subsystem settings: sshd_config(5) § Subsystem. The server configuration should resemble the example below.

/etc/ssh/sshd_config
...
Subsystem subsystem-name /path/to/subsystem-executable
...

id_dsa refused by OpenSSH 7.0

OpenSSH 7.0 deprecated DSA public keys for security reasons. If you absolutely must enable them, set the configuration option PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes +ssh-dss (https://www.openssh.com/legacy.html does not mention this).

No matching key exchange method found by OpenSSH 7.0

OpenSSH 7.0 deprecated the diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 key algorithm because it is weak and within theoretical range of the so-called Logjam attack (see https://www.openssh.com/legacy.html). If the key algorithm is needed for a particular host, ssh will produce an error message like this:

Unable to negotiate with 127.0.0.1: no matching key exchange method found.
Their offer: diffie-hellman-group1-sha1

The best resolution for these failures is to upgrade/configure the server to not use deprecated algorithms. If that is not possible, you can force the client to reenable the algorithm with the client option KexAlgorithms +diffie-hellman-group1-sha1.

tmux/screen session killed when disconnecting from SSH

If your processes get killed at the end of the session, it is possible that you are using socket activation and it gets killed by systemd when it notices that the SSH session process exited. In that case there are two solutions. One is to avoid using socket activation by using ssh.service instead of ssh.socket. The other is to set KillMode=process in the Service section of ssh@.service.

The KillMode=process setting may also be useful with the classic ssh.service, as it avoids killing the SSH session process or the screen or tmux processes when the server gets stopped or restarted.

SSH session stops responding

SSH responds to flow control commands XON and XOFF. It will freeze/hang/stop responding when you hit Ctrl+s. Use Ctrl+q to resume your session.

Broken pipe

If you attempt to create a connection which results in a Broken pipe response for packet_write_wait, you should reattempt the connection in debug mode and see if the output ends in error:

debug3: send packet: type 1
packet_write_wait: Connection to A.B.C.D port 22: Broken pipe

The send packet line above indicates that the reply packet was never received. So, it follows that this is a QoS issue. To decrease the likely-hood of a packet being dropped, set IPQoS:

/etc/ssh/ssh_config
Host *
    IPQoS reliability

The reliability (0x04) type-of-service should resolve the issue, as well as 0x00 and throughput (0x08).

Slow daemon startup after reboot

This article or section is out of date.

Reason: No longer true since kernel 5.6 (Discuss in Talk:OpenSSH)

If you are experiencing excessively long daemon startup times after reboots (e.g. several minutes before the daemon starts accepting connections), especially on headless or virtualized servers, it may be due to a lack of entropy.[3] This can be remedied by installing either Rng-tools or Haveged, as appropriate for your system. However, take note of the associated security implications discussed in each package's respective wiki page.

Terminate unresponsive SSH connection

If a client session is no longer responding and cannot be terminated by instructing the running program (e.g. shell), you can still terminate the session by pressing Enter, ~ and . one after another in that order.

The ~ is a pseudo-terminal escape character (see ssh(1) § ESCAPE CHARACTERS), which can be added multiple times depending on the client session to terminate. For example, if you connected from A to B and then from B to C and the session from B to C freezes, you can terminate it by pressing Enter and typing ~~., which will leave you in a working session on B.

WARNING: REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED!

If the client warns that the key of an ssh server has changed, you should verify that the newly offered key really belongs to the server operator via an authenticated (not necessarily encrypted) channel. Then remove the old key from the known_hosts file with ssh-keygen -R $SSH_HOST and accept the new key as if it was a new server.

Connecting to a remote without the appropriate terminfo entry

When connecting to hosts that do not have a terminfo entry for your terminal, for example, when using a terminal emulator whose terminfo entry is not shipped with ncurses (e.g. kitty and rxvt-unicode), or when connecting to hosts with a limited terminfo database (e.g. systems running OpenWrt), various issues will occur with software that relies on terminfo(5).

A proper solution is to place the appropriate terminfo entry on the host. If that is not feasible, an alternative is to set TERM to a value that is both supported by the remote host and compatible with the terminal.

Since OpenSSH 8.7, a custom TERM environment variable can be passed to remote hosts with a simple configuration snippet:

~/.ssh/config
Host example.com
  SetEnv TERM=xterm-256color

Connection through jump host fails with "bash: No such file or directory"

If you do not have the SHELL environment variable set to a full valid path (on the jump server), connection will fail with an error message simmilar to this one:

bash: No such file or directory
kex_exchange_identification: Connection closed by remote host
Connection closed by UNKNOWN port 65535

You can simply solve this by setting your SHELL to a full path name of a shell that will also be valid on the jump server or by setting a specific SHELL variable for each server in your ~/.ssh/config file.

See also