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bf740959 1.\" -*- nroff -*-
2.\"
bf740959 3.\" Author: Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>
bf740959 4.\" Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>, Espoo, Finland
5.\" All rights reserved
6.\"
bcbf86ec 7.\" As far as I am concerned, the code I have written for this software
8.\" can be used freely for any purpose. Any derived versions of this
9.\" software must be clearly marked as such, and if the derived work is
10.\" incompatible with the protocol description in the RFC file, it must be
11.\" called by a name other than "ssh" or "Secure Shell".
12.\"
f3c7c613 13.\" Copyright (c) 1999,2000 Markus Friedl. All rights reserved.
14.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Aaron Campbell. All rights reserved.
15.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Theo de Raadt. All rights reserved.
bcbf86ec 16.\"
17.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
18.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
19.\" are met:
20.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
21.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
22.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
23.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
24.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
bf740959 25.\"
bcbf86ec 26.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
27.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
28.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
29.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
30.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
31.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
32.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
33.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
34.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
35.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
bf740959 36.\"
4e30de66 37.\" $OpenBSD: ssh.1,v 1.148 2002/02/18 17:55:20 markus Exp $
bf740959 38.Dd September 25, 1999
39.Dt SSH 1
40.Os
41.Sh NAME
42.Nm ssh
2c86906e 43.Nd OpenSSH SSH client (remote login program)
bf740959 44.Sh SYNOPSIS
45.Nm ssh
46.Op Fl l Ar login_name
c78e5800 47.Ar hostname | user@hostname
bf740959 48.Op Ar command
49.Pp
50.Nm ssh
9afadca8 51.Op Fl afgknqstvxACNPTX1246
3435f5a6 52.Op Fl b Ar bind_address
d0c832f3 53.Op Fl c Ar cipher_spec
bf740959 54.Op Fl e Ar escape_char
55.Op Fl i Ar identity_file
56.Op Fl l Ar login_name
b2552997 57.Op Fl m Ar mac_spec
bf740959 58.Op Fl o Ar option
59.Op Fl p Ar port
e591b98a 60.Op Fl F Ar configfile
bf740959 61.Oo Fl L Xo
62.Sm off
bf740959 63.Ar port :
7b2ea3a1 64.Ar host :
bf740959 65.Ar hostport
66.Sm on
67.Xc
68.Oc
69.Oo Fl R Xo
70.Sm off
bf740959 71.Ar port :
7b2ea3a1 72.Ar host :
bf740959 73.Ar hostport
74.Sm on
75.Xc
76.Oc
ad3e169f 77.Op Fl D Ar port
c78e5800 78.Ar hostname | user@hostname
bf740959 79.Op Ar command
f54651ce 80.Sh DESCRIPTION
bf740959 81.Nm
2c86906e 82(SSH client) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for
610cd5c6 83executing commands on a remote machine.
84It is intended to replace
bf740959 85rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between
610cd5c6 86two untrusted hosts over an insecure network.
87X11 connections and
bf740959 88arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel.
89.Pp
90.Nm
f54651ce 91connects and logs into the specified
bf740959 92.Ar hostname .
93The user must prove
1d1ffb87 94his/her identity to the remote machine using one of several methods
95depending on the protocol version used:
96.Pp
97.Ss SSH protocol version 1
bf740959 98.Pp
99First, if the machine the user logs in from is listed in
100.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv
101or
5f4fdfae 102.Pa /etc/shosts.equiv
bf740959 103on the remote machine, and the user names are
104the same on both sides, the user is immediately permitted to log in.
f54651ce 105Second, if
bf740959 106.Pa \&.rhosts
107or
108.Pa \&.shosts
109exists in the user's home directory on the
110remote machine and contains a line containing the name of the client
111machine and the name of the user on that machine, the user is
610cd5c6 112permitted to log in.
113This form of authentication alone is normally not
bf740959 114allowed by the server because it is not secure.
115.Pp
da89cf4d 116The second authentication method is the
bf740959 117.Pa rhosts
118or
119.Pa hosts.equiv
610cd5c6 120method combined with RSA-based host authentication.
121It means that if the login would be permitted by
1d1ffb87 122.Pa $HOME/.rhosts ,
123.Pa $HOME/.shosts ,
bf740959 124.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv ,
125or
5f4fdfae 126.Pa /etc/shosts.equiv ,
bf740959 127and if additionally the server can verify the client's
f54651ce 128host key (see
2a8a6488 129.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
5bbb5681 130and
131.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
bf740959 132in the
133.Sx FILES
610cd5c6 134section), only then login is permitted.
135This authentication method closes security holes due to IP
136spoofing, DNS spoofing and routing spoofing.
137[Note to the administrator:
bf740959 138.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv ,
1d1ffb87 139.Pa $HOME/.rhosts ,
bf740959 140and the rlogin/rsh protocol in general, are inherently insecure and should be
141disabled if security is desired.]
142.Pp
f54651ce 143As a third authentication method,
bf740959 144.Nm
145supports RSA based authentication.
146The scheme is based on public-key cryptography: there are cryptosystems
147where encryption and decryption are done using separate keys, and it
148is not possible to derive the decryption key from the encryption key.
610cd5c6 149RSA is one such system.
f54651ce 150The idea is that each user creates a public/private
610cd5c6 151key pair for authentication purposes.
152The server knows the public key, and only the user knows the private key.
f54651ce 153The file
bf740959 154.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
155lists the public keys that are permitted for logging
610cd5c6 156in.
157When the user logs in, the
bf740959 158.Nm
159program tells the server which key pair it would like to use for
610cd5c6 160authentication.
161The server checks if this key is permitted, and if
bf740959 162so, sends the user (actually the
163.Nm
164program running on behalf of the user) a challenge, a random number,
610cd5c6 165encrypted by the user's public key.
166The challenge can only be
167decrypted using the proper private key.
168The user's client then decrypts the
bf740959 169challenge using the private key, proving that he/she knows the private
170key but without disclosing it to the server.
171.Pp
172.Nm
610cd5c6 173implements the RSA authentication protocol automatically.
174The user creates his/her RSA key pair by running
bf740959 175.Xr ssh-keygen 1 .
f54651ce 176This stores the private key in
1d1ffb87 177.Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity
bf740959 178and the public key in
1d1ffb87 179.Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity.pub
610cd5c6 180in the user's home directory.
181The user should then copy the
bf740959 182.Pa identity.pub
f54651ce 183to
1d1ffb87 184.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
f54651ce 185in his/her home directory on the remote machine (the
bf740959 186.Pa authorized_keys
f54651ce 187file corresponds to the conventional
1d1ffb87 188.Pa $HOME/.rhosts
bf740959 189file, and has one key
610cd5c6 190per line, though the lines can be very long).
191After this, the user can log in without giving the password.
192RSA authentication is much
bf740959 193more secure than rhosts authentication.
194.Pp
195The most convenient way to use RSA authentication may be with an
610cd5c6 196authentication agent.
197See
bf740959 198.Xr ssh-agent 1
199for more information.
200.Pp
f54651ce 201If other authentication methods fail,
bf740959 202.Nm
610cd5c6 203prompts the user for a password.
204The password is sent to the remote
bf740959 205host for checking; however, since all communications are encrypted,
206the password cannot be seen by someone listening on the network.
207.Pp
1d1ffb87 208.Ss SSH protocol version 2
209.Pp
16210ef7 210When a user connects using protocol version 2
211similar authentication methods are available.
da89cf4d 212Using the default values for
213.Cm PreferredAuthentications ,
29c440a0 214the client will try to authenticate first using the hostbased method;
215if this method fails public key authentication is attempted,
216and finally if this method fails keyboard-interactive and
217password authentication are tried.
1d1ffb87 218.Pp
219The public key method is similar to RSA authentication described
da89cf4d 220in the previous section and allows the RSA or DSA algorithm to be used:
c0ecc314 221The client uses his private key,
1d1ffb87 222.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa
c0ecc314 223or
224.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa ,
1d1ffb87 225to sign the session identifier and sends the result to the server.
226The server checks whether the matching public key is listed in
96a7b0cc 227.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
1d1ffb87 228and grants access if both the key is found and the signature is correct.
229The session identifier is derived from a shared Diffie-Hellman value
230and is only known to the client and the server.
231.Pp
232If public key authentication fails or is not available a password
233can be sent encrypted to the remote host for proving the user's identity.
da89cf4d 234.Pp
235Additionally,
236.Nm
237supports hostbased or challenge response authentication.
1d1ffb87 238.Pp
239Protocol 2 provides additional mechanisms for confidentiality
d0c832f3 240(the traffic is encrypted using 3DES, Blowfish, CAST128 or Arcfour)
f2ba0775 241and integrity (hmac-md5, hmac-sha1).
1d1ffb87 242Note that protocol 1 lacks a strong mechanism for ensuring the
243integrity of the connection.
244.Pp
245.Ss Login session and remote execution
246.Pp
bf740959 247When the user's identity has been accepted by the server, the server
248either executes the given command, or logs into the machine and gives
610cd5c6 249the user a normal shell on the remote machine.
250All communication with
bf740959 251the remote command or shell will be automatically encrypted.
252.Pp
253If a pseudo-terminal has been allocated (normal login session), the
df841692 254user may use the escape characters noted below.
bf740959 255.Pp
256If no pseudo tty has been allocated, the
257session is transparent and can be used to reliably transfer binary
610cd5c6 258data.
259On most systems, setting the escape character to
bf740959 260.Dq none
261will also make the session transparent even if a tty is used.
262.Pp
ce9c0b75 263The session terminates when the command or shell on the remote
e91c60f2 264machine exits and all X11 and TCP/IP connections have been closed.
bf740959 265The exit status of the remote program is returned as the exit status
266of
267.Nm ssh .
268.Pp
df841692 269.Ss Escape Characters
270.Pp
271When a pseudo terminal has been requested, ssh supports a number of functions
3730bb22 272through the use of an escape character.
df841692 273.Pp
274A single tilde character can be sent as
275.Ic ~~
5bef3c35 276or by following the tilde by a character other than those described below.
df841692 277The escape character must always follow a newline to be interpreted as
278special.
279The escape character can be changed in configuration files using the
280.Cm EscapeChar
3730bb22 281configuration directive or on the command line by the
df841692 282.Fl e
283option.
284.Pp
285The supported escapes (assuming the default
286.Ql ~ )
287are:
288.Bl -tag -width Ds
289.It Cm ~.
290Disconnect
291.It Cm ~^Z
292Background ssh
293.It Cm ~#
294List forwarded connections
295.It Cm ~&
296Background ssh at logout when waiting for forwarded connection / X11 sessions
03cf595c 297to terminate
df841692 298.It Cm ~?
299Display a list of escape characters
300.It Cm ~R
67b964a1 301Request rekeying of the connection (only useful for SSH protocol version 2
302and if the peer supports it)
df841692 303.El
304.Pp
1d1ffb87 305.Ss X11 and TCP forwarding
306.Pp
6efa3d14 307If the
308.Cm ForwardX11
309variable is set to
310.Dq yes
311(or, see the description of the
312.Fl X
313and
314.Fl x
315options described later)
316and the user is using X11 (the
bf740959 317.Ev DISPLAY
318environment variable is set), the connection to the X11 display is
319automatically forwarded to the remote side in such a way that any X11
320programs started from the shell (or command) will go through the
321encrypted channel, and the connection to the real X server will be made
610cd5c6 322from the local machine.
323The user should not manually set
bf740959 324.Ev DISPLAY .
325Forwarding of X11 connections can be
326configured on the command line or in configuration files.
327.Pp
328The
f54651ce 329.Ev DISPLAY
bf740959 330value set by
331.Nm
332will point to the server machine, but with a display number greater
610cd5c6 333than zero.
334This is normal, and happens because
bf740959 335.Nm
336creates a
337.Dq proxy
338X server on the server machine for forwarding the
339connections over the encrypted channel.
340.Pp
341.Nm
342will also automatically set up Xauthority data on the server machine.
343For this purpose, it will generate a random authorization cookie,
344store it in Xauthority on the server, and verify that any forwarded
345connections carry this cookie and replace it by the real cookie when
610cd5c6 346the connection is opened.
347The real authentication cookie is never
bf740959 348sent to the server machine (and no cookies are sent in the plain).
349.Pp
350If the user is using an authentication agent, the connection to the agent
351is automatically forwarded to the remote side unless disabled on
491f5f7b 352the command line or in a configuration file.
bf740959 353.Pp
354Forwarding of arbitrary TCP/IP connections over the secure channel can
491f5f7b 355be specified either on the command line or in a configuration file.
610cd5c6 356One possible application of TCP/IP forwarding is a secure connection to an
e91c60f2 357electronic purse; another is going through firewalls.
bf740959 358.Pp
1d1ffb87 359.Ss Server authentication
360.Pp
bf740959 361.Nm
1d1ffb87 362automatically maintains and checks a database containing
610cd5c6 363identifications for all hosts it has ever been used with.
f49bc4f7 364Host keys are stored in
1d1ffb87 365.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
610cd5c6 366in the user's home directory.
f49bc4f7 367Additionally, the file
2a8a6488 368.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
f49bc4f7 369is automatically checked for known hosts.
610cd5c6 370Any new hosts are automatically added to the user's file.
371If a host's identification
bf740959 372ever changes,
373.Nm
374warns about this and disables password authentication to prevent a
610cd5c6 375trojan horse from getting the user's password.
376Another purpose of
bf740959 377this mechanism is to prevent man-in-the-middle attacks which could
610cd5c6 378otherwise be used to circumvent the encryption.
379The
bf740959 380.Cm StrictHostKeyChecking
381option (see below) can be used to prevent logins to machines whose
382host key is not known or has changed.
fa08c86b 383.Pp
384The options are as follows:
bf740959 385.Bl -tag -width Ds
386.It Fl a
4fe2af09 387Disables forwarding of the authentication agent connection.
71276795 388.It Fl A
389Enables forwarding of the authentication agent connection.
390This can also be specified on a per-host basis in a configuration file.
3435f5a6 391.It Fl b Ar bind_address
392Specify the interface to transmit from on machines with multiple
393interfaces or aliased addresses.
29999e54 394.It Fl c Ar blowfish|3des|des
f54651ce 395Selects the cipher to use for encrypting the session.
bf740959 396.Ar 3des
610cd5c6 397is used by default.
f54651ce 398It is believed to be secure.
bf740959 399.Ar 3des
400(triple-des) is an encrypt-decrypt-encrypt triple with three different keys.
bf740959 401.Ar blowfish
402is a fast block cipher, it appears very secure and is much faster than
610cd5c6 403.Ar 3des .
29999e54 404.Ar des
405is only supported in the
406.Nm
407client for interoperability with legacy protocol 1 implementations
408that do not support the
409.Ar 3des
410cipher. Its use is strongly discouraged due to cryptographic
411weaknesses.
9afadca8 412.It Fl c Ar cipher_spec
d0c832f3 413Additionally, for protocol version 2 a comma-separated list of ciphers can
94ec8c6b 414be specified in order of preference.
9afadca8 415See
416.Cm Ciphers
417for more information.
bf740959 418.It Fl e Ar ch|^ch|none
419Sets the escape character for sessions with a pty (default:
420.Ql ~ ) .
610cd5c6 421The escape character is only recognized at the beginning of a line.
422The escape character followed by a dot
bf740959 423.Pq Ql \&.
424closes the connection, followed
425by control-Z suspends the connection, and followed by itself sends the
610cd5c6 426escape character once.
427Setting the character to
bf740959 428.Dq none
429disables any escapes and makes the session fully transparent.
430.It Fl f
431Requests
432.Nm
610cd5c6 433to go to background just before command execution.
434This is useful if
bf740959 435.Nm
436is going to ask for passwords or passphrases, but the user
610cd5c6 437wants it in the background.
f54651ce 438This implies
bf740959 439.Fl n .
440The recommended way to start X11 programs at a remote site is with
441something like
442.Ic ssh -f host xterm .
7b2ea3a1 443.It Fl g
444Allows remote hosts to connect to local forwarded ports.
bf740959 445.It Fl i Ar identity_file
cf5a07a8 446Selects a file from which the identity (private key) for
fa08c86b 447RSA or DSA authentication is read.
cf5a07a8 448The default is
1d1ffb87 449.Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity
cf5a07a8 450for protocol version 1, and
451.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa
452and
453.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa
454for protocol version 2.
610cd5c6 455Identity files may also be specified on
456a per-host basis in the configuration file.
457It is possible to have multiple
bf740959 458.Fl i
459options (and multiple identities specified in
460configuration files).
eea098a3 461.It Fl I Ar smartcard_device
462Specifies which smartcard device to use. The argument is
463the device
464.Nm
465should use to communicate with a smartcard used for storing the user's
466private RSA key.
bf740959 467.It Fl k
4fe2af09 468Disables forwarding of Kerberos tickets and AFS tokens.
469This may also be specified on a per-host basis in the configuration file.
bf740959 470.It Fl l Ar login_name
610cd5c6 471Specifies the user to log in as on the remote machine.
472This also may be specified on a per-host basis in the configuration file.
b2552997 473.It Fl m Ar mac_spec
474Additionally, for protocol version 2 a comma-separated list of MAC
475(message authentication code) algorithms can
476be specified in order of preference.
477See the
478.Cm MACs
479keyword for more information.
bf740959 480.It Fl n
481Redirects stdin from
482.Pa /dev/null
483(actually, prevents reading from stdin).
484This must be used when
485.Nm
610cd5c6 486is run in the background.
487A common trick is to use this to run X11 programs on a remote machine.
488For example,
bf740959 489.Ic ssh -n shadows.cs.hut.fi emacs &
490will start an emacs on shadows.cs.hut.fi, and the X11
491connection will be automatically forwarded over an encrypted channel.
492The
493.Nm
494program will be put in the background.
495(This does not work if
496.Nm
497needs to ask for a password or passphrase; see also the
498.Fl f
499option.)
0e73cc53 500.It Fl N
501Do not execute a remote command.
91789042 502This is useful for just forwarding ports
0e73cc53 503(protocol version 2 only).
bf740959 504.It Fl o Ar option
38539909 505Can be used to give options in the format used in the configuration file.
bf740959 506This is useful for specifying options for which there is no separate
610cd5c6 507command-line flag.
bf740959 508.It Fl p Ar port
610cd5c6 509Port to connect to on the remote host.
510This can be specified on a
bf740959 511per-host basis in the configuration file.
512.It Fl P
513Use a non-privileged port for outgoing connections.
91789042 514This can be used if a firewall does
bf740959 515not permit connections from privileged ports.
95f1eccc 516Note that this option turns off
bf740959 517.Cm RhostsAuthentication
518and
6ffc9c88 519.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication
520for older servers.
bf740959 521.It Fl q
610cd5c6 522Quiet mode.
523Causes all warning and diagnostic messages to be suppressed.
ae810de7 524.It Fl s
3730bb22 525May be used to request invocation of a subsystem on the remote system. Subsystems are a feature of the SSH2 protocol which facilitate the use
526of SSH as a secure transport for other applications (eg. sftp). The
ae810de7 527subsystem is specified as the remote command.
bf740959 528.It Fl t
610cd5c6 529Force pseudo-tty allocation.
4fe2af09 530This can be used to execute arbitrary
610cd5c6 531screen-based programs on a remote machine, which can be very useful,
532e.g., when implementing menu services.
8abcdba4 533Multiple
534.Fl t
535options force tty allocation, even if
536.Nm
537has no local tty.
0e73cc53 538.It Fl T
0b6fbf03 539Disable pseudo-tty allocation.
bf740959 540.It Fl v
610cd5c6 541Verbose mode.
542Causes
bf740959 543.Nm
610cd5c6 544to print debugging messages about its progress.
545This is helpful in
bf740959 546debugging connection, authentication, and configuration problems.
8abcdba4 547Multiple
548.Fl v
549options increases the verbosity.
94ec8c6b 550Maximum is 3.
bf740959 551.It Fl x
610cd5c6 552Disables X11 forwarding.
bf740959 553.It Fl X
554Enables X11 forwarding.
71276795 555This can also be specified on a per-host basis in a configuration file.
bf740959 556.It Fl C
557Requests compression of all data (including stdin, stdout, stderr, and
610cd5c6 558data for forwarded X11 and TCP/IP connections).
559The compression algorithm is the same used by
7b2ea3a1 560.Xr gzip 1 ,
561and the
bf740959 562.Dq level
563can be controlled by the
564.Cm CompressionLevel
610cd5c6 565option (see below).
566Compression is desirable on modem lines and other
bf740959 567slow connections, but will only slow down things on fast networks.
568The default value can be set on a host-by-host basis in the
569configuration files; see the
0aea6c59 570.Cm Compression
bf740959 571option below.
e591b98a 572.It Fl F Ar configfile
573Specifies an alternative per-user configuration file.
574If a configuration file is given on the command line,
575the system-wide configuration file
2a8a6488 576.Pq Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_config
e591b98a 577will be ignored.
578The default for the per-user configuration file is
579.Pa $HOME/.ssh/config .
bf740959 580.It Fl L Ar port:host:hostport
581Specifies that the given port on the local (client) host is to be
610cd5c6 582forwarded to the given host and port on the remote side.
583This works by allocating a socket to listen to
bf740959 584.Ar port
585on the local side, and whenever a connection is made to this port, the
586connection is forwarded over the secure channel, and a connection is
587made to
48e671d5 588.Ar host
589port
590.Ar hostport
610cd5c6 591from the remote machine.
592Port forwardings can also be specified in the configuration file.
593Only root can forward privileged ports.
48e671d5 594IPv6 addresses can be specified with an alternative syntax:
595.Ar port/host/hostport
bf740959 596.It Fl R Ar port:host:hostport
597Specifies that the given port on the remote (server) host is to be
610cd5c6 598forwarded to the given host and port on the local side.
599This works by allocating a socket to listen to
bf740959 600.Ar port
601on the remote side, and whenever a connection is made to this port, the
602connection is forwarded over the secure channel, and a connection is
603made to
48e671d5 604.Ar host
605port
606.Ar hostport
610cd5c6 607from the local machine.
608Port forwardings can also be specified in the configuration file.
609Privileged ports can be forwarded only when
bf740959 610logging in as root on the remote machine.
da89cf4d 611IPv6 addresses can be specified with an alternative syntax:
612.Ar port/host/hostport
4c780c2a 613.It Fl D Ar port
614Specifies a local
615.Dq dynamic
616application-level port forwarding.
617This works by allocating a socket to listen to
618.Ar port
619on the local side, and whenever a connection is made to this port, the
620connection is forwarded over the secure channel, and the application
621protocol is then used to determine where to connect to from the
622remote machine. Currently the SOCKS4 protocol is supported, and
623.Nm
624will act as a SOCKS4 server.
625Only root can forward privileged ports.
626Dynamic port forwardings can also be specified in the configuration file.
9afadca8 627.It Fl 1
628Forces
629.Nm
630to try protocol version 1 only.
6ae2364d 631.It Fl 2
632Forces
633.Nm
1d1ffb87 634to try protocol version 2 only.
48e671d5 635.It Fl 4
636Forces
637.Nm
638to use IPv4 addresses only.
639.It Fl 6
640Forces
641.Nm
642to use IPv6 addresses only.
bf740959 643.El
644.Sh CONFIGURATION FILES
645.Nm
38539909 646obtains configuration data from the following sources in
647the following order:
bf740959 648command line options, user's configuration file
649.Pq Pa $HOME/.ssh/config ,
650and system-wide configuration file
2a8a6488 651.Pq Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_config .
bf740959 652For each parameter, the first obtained value
610cd5c6 653will be used.
654The configuration files contain sections bracketed by
655.Dq Host
656specifications, and that section is only applied for hosts that
657match one of the patterns given in the specification.
658The matched host name is the one given on the command line.
bf740959 659.Pp
660Since the first obtained value for each parameter is used, more
661host-specific declarations should be given near the beginning of the
662file, and general defaults at the end.
663.Pp
664The configuration file has the following format:
665.Pp
666Empty lines and lines starting with
667.Ql #
668are comments.
669.Pp
670Otherwise a line is of the format
671.Dq keyword arguments .
38539909 672Configuration options may be separated by whitespace or
673optional whitespace and exactly one
674.Ql = ;
675the latter format is useful to avoid the need to quote whitespace
676when specifying configuration options using the
677.Nm ssh ,
678.Nm scp
679and
680.Nm sftp
681.Fl o
682option.
683.Pp
bf740959 684The possible
54bf768d 685keywords and their meanings are as follows (note that
686keywords are case-insensitive and arguments are case-sensitive):
bf740959 687.Bl -tag -width Ds
688.It Cm Host
689Restricts the following declarations (up to the next
690.Cm Host
691keyword) to be only for those hosts that match one of the patterns
692given after the keyword.
693.Ql \&*
694and
695.Ql ?
696can be used as wildcards in the
610cd5c6 697patterns.
698A single
bf740959 699.Ql \&*
700as a pattern can be used to provide global
610cd5c6 701defaults for all hosts.
702The host is the
bf740959 703.Ar hostname
704argument given on the command line (i.e., the name is not converted to
705a canonicalized host name before matching).
706.It Cm AFSTokenPassing
4fe2af09 707Specifies whether to pass AFS tokens to remote host.
708The argument to this keyword must be
bf740959 709.Dq yes
710or
711.Dq no .
da89cf4d 712This option applies to protocol version 1 only.
bf740959 713.It Cm BatchMode
714If set to
715.Dq yes ,
610cd5c6 716passphrase/password querying will be disabled.
91789042 717This option is useful in scripts and other batch jobs where no user
718is present to supply the password.
610cd5c6 719The argument must be
bf740959 720.Dq yes
721or
722.Dq no .
01ce749f 723The default is
724.Dq no .
3435f5a6 725.It Cm BindAddress
726Specify the interface to transmit from on machines with multiple
727interfaces or aliased addresses.
728Note that this option does not work if
729.Cm UsePrivilegedPort
730is set to
731.Dq yes .
7b2ea3a1 732.It Cm CheckHostIP
733If this flag is set to
734.Dq yes ,
01ce749f 735ssh will additionally check the host IP address in the
7b2ea3a1 736.Pa known_hosts
4fe2af09 737file.
738This allows ssh to detect if a host key changed due to DNS spoofing.
7b2ea3a1 739If the option is set to
740.Dq no ,
741the check will not be executed.
01ce749f 742The default is
743.Dq yes .
bf740959 744.It Cm Cipher
33de75a3 745Specifies the cipher to use for encrypting the session
a22aff1f 746in protocol version 1.
610cd5c6 747Currently,
29999e54 748.Dq blowfish ,
749.Dq 3des ,
bf740959 750and
29999e54 751.Dq des
610cd5c6 752are supported.
29999e54 753.Ar des
754is only supported in the
755.Nm
756client for interoperability with legacy protocol 1 implementations
757that do not support the
758.Ar 3des
759cipher. Its use is strongly discouraged due to cryptographic
760weaknesses.
610cd5c6 761The default is
bf740959 762.Dq 3des .
f54651ce 763.It Cm Ciphers
764Specifies the ciphers allowed for protocol version 2
765in order of preference.
766Multiple ciphers must be comma-separated.
767The default is
9afadca8 768.Pp
769.Bd -literal
f2ba0775 770 ``aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour,
da89cf4d 771 aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc''
9afadca8 772.Ed
e1c5bfaf 773.It Cm ClearAllForwardings
774Specifies that all local, remote and dynamic port forwardings
775specified in the configuration files or on the command line be
776cleared. This option is primarily useful when used from the
777.Nm
778command line to clear port forwardings set in
779configuration files, and is automatically set by
780.Xr scp 1
781and
782.Xr sftp 1 .
783The argument must be
784.Dq yes
785or
786.Dq no .
787The default is
788.Dq no .
bf740959 789.It Cm Compression
610cd5c6 790Specifies whether to use compression.
791The argument must be
bf740959 792.Dq yes
793or
794.Dq no .
01ce749f 795The default is
796.Dq no .
bf740959 797.It Cm CompressionLevel
01ce749f 798Specifies the compression level to use if compression is enabled.
610cd5c6 799The argument must be an integer from 1 (fast) to 9 (slow, best).
800The default level is 6, which is good for most applications.
801The meaning of the values is the same as in
7b2ea3a1 802.Xr gzip 1 .
da89cf4d 803Note that this option applies to protocol version 1 only.
bf740959 804.It Cm ConnectionAttempts
805Specifies the number of tries (one per second) to make before falling
610cd5c6 806back to rsh or exiting.
807The argument must be an integer.
808This may be useful in scripts if the connection sometimes fails.
ce773142 809The default is 1.
4c780c2a 810.It Cm DynamicForward
811Specifies that a TCP/IP port on the local machine be forwarded
812over the secure channel, and the application
813protocol is then used to determine where to connect to from the
814remote machine. The argument must be a port number.
815Currently the SOCKS4 protocol is supported, and
816.Nm
817will act as a SOCKS4 server.
818Multiple forwardings may be specified, and
819additional forwardings can be given on the command line. Only
820the superuser can forward privileged ports.
bf740959 821.It Cm EscapeChar
822Sets the escape character (default:
823.Ql ~ ) .
824The escape character can also
610cd5c6 825be set on the command line.
826The argument should be a single character,
bf740959 827.Ql ^
828followed by a letter, or
829.Dq none
830to disable the escape
831character entirely (making the connection transparent for binary
832data).
f54651ce 833.It Cm FallBackToRsh
bf740959 834Specifies that if connecting via
835.Nm
836fails due to a connection refused error (there is no
837.Xr sshd 8
f54651ce 838listening on the remote host),
bf740959 839.Xr rsh 1
840should automatically be used instead (after a suitable warning about
610cd5c6 841the session being unencrypted).
842The argument must be
bf740959 843.Dq yes
844or
845.Dq no .
01ce749f 846The default is
847.Dq no .
bf740959 848.It Cm ForwardAgent
849Specifies whether the connection to the authentication agent (if any)
610cd5c6 850will be forwarded to the remote machine.
851The argument must be
bf740959 852.Dq yes
853or
854.Dq no .
71276795 855The default is
856.Dq no .
bf740959 857.It Cm ForwardX11
858Specifies whether X11 connections will be automatically redirected
f54651ce 859over the secure channel and
bf740959 860.Ev DISPLAY
610cd5c6 861set.
f54651ce 862The argument must be
bf740959 863.Dq yes
864or
865.Dq no .
c8d54615 866The default is
867.Dq no .
bf740959 868.It Cm GatewayPorts
869Specifies whether remote hosts are allowed to connect to local
870forwarded ports.
70068acc 871By default,
872.Nm
873binds local port forwardings to the loopback addresss. This
874prevents other remote hosts from connecting to forwarded ports.
875.Cm GatewayPorts
876can be used to specify that
877.Nm
878should bind local port forwardings to the wildcard address,
879thus allowing remote hosts to connect to forwarded ports.
bf740959 880The argument must be
881.Dq yes
882or
883.Dq no .
884The default is
885.Dq no .
886.It Cm GlobalKnownHostsFile
f49bc4f7 887Specifies a file to use for the global
a5df12e9 888host key database instead of
2a8a6488 889.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts .
da89cf4d 890.It Cm HostbasedAuthentication
891Specifies whether to try rhosts based authentication with public key
892authentication.
893The argument must be
894.Dq yes
895or
896.Dq no .
897The default is
3398dda9 898.Dq no .
da89cf4d 899This option applies to protocol version 2 only and
900is similar to
901.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication .
e961a8f9 902.It Cm HostKeyAlgorithms
98143cfc 903Specifies the protocol version 2 host key algorithms
e961a8f9 904that the client wants to use in order of preference.
905The default for this option is:
cb362b5e 906.Dq ssh-rsa,ssh-dss .
da89cf4d 907.It Cm HostKeyAlias
908Specifies an alias that should be used instead of the
909real host name when looking up or saving the host key
910in the host key database files.
911This option is useful for tunneling ssh connections
91789042 912or for multiple servers running on a single host.
bf740959 913.It Cm HostName
610cd5c6 914Specifies the real host name to log into.
915This can be used to specify nicknames or abbreviations for hosts.
916Default is the name given on the command line.
917Numeric IP addresses are also permitted (both on the command line and in
bf740959 918.Cm HostName
919specifications).
920.It Cm IdentityFile
cf5a07a8 921Specifies a file from which the user's RSA or DSA authentication identity
922is read. The default is
1d1ffb87 923.Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity
cf5a07a8 924for protocol version 1, and
925.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa
926and
927.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa
928for protocol version 2.
bf740959 929Additionally, any identities represented by the authentication agent
610cd5c6 930will be used for authentication.
931The file name may use the tilde
932syntax to refer to a user's home directory.
933It is possible to have
bf740959 934multiple identity files specified in configuration files; all these
935identities will be tried in sequence.
936.It Cm KeepAlive
3b5a1b05 937Specifies whether the system should send TCP keepalive messages to the
610cd5c6 938other side.
939If they are sent, death of the connection or crash of one
940of the machines will be properly noticed.
941However, this means that
bf740959 942connections will die if the route is down temporarily, and some people
4fe2af09 943find it annoying.
bf740959 944.Pp
945The default is
946.Dq yes
947(to send keepalives), and the client will notice
610cd5c6 948if the network goes down or the remote host dies.
949This is important in scripts, and many users want it too.
bf740959 950.Pp
951To disable keepalives, the value should be set to
3b5a1b05 952.Dq no .
bf740959 953.It Cm KerberosAuthentication
4fe2af09 954Specifies whether Kerberos authentication will be used.
955The argument to this keyword must be
bf740959 956.Dq yes
957or
958.Dq no .
959.It Cm KerberosTgtPassing
4fe2af09 960Specifies whether a Kerberos TGT will be forwarded to the server.
961This will only work if the Kerberos server is actually an AFS kaserver.
962The argument to this keyword must be
bf740959 963.Dq yes
964or
965.Dq no .
966.It Cm LocalForward
967Specifies that a TCP/IP port on the local machine be forwarded over
3a8aabf0 968the secure channel to the specified host and port from the remote machine.
610cd5c6 969The first argument must be a port number, and the second must be
3a8aabf0 970.Ar host:port .
971IPv6 addresses can be specified with an alternative syntax:
972.Ar host/port .
610cd5c6 973Multiple forwardings may be specified, and additional
974forwardings can be given on the command line.
975Only the superuser can forward privileged ports.
6a17f9c2 976.It Cm LogLevel
977Gives the verbosity level that is used when logging messages from
978.Nm ssh .
979The possible values are:
60015649 980QUIET, FATAL, ERROR, INFO, VERBOSE, DEBUG, DEBUG1, DEBUG2 and DEBUG3.
981The default is INFO. DEBUG and DEBUG1 are equivalent. DEBUG2
982and DEBUG3 each specify higher levels of verbose output.
b2552997 983.It Cm MACs
3730bb22 984Specifies the MAC (message authentication code) algorithms
b2552997 985in order of preference.
986The MAC algorithm is used in protocol version 2
987for data integrity protection.
988Multiple algorithms must be comma-separated.
989The default is
47bf6266 990.Dq hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 .
8bbc048a 991.It Cm NoHostAuthenticationForLocalhost
992This option can be used if the home directory is shared across machines.
993In this case localhost will refer to a different machine on each of
994the machines and the user will get many warnings about changed host keys.
995However, this option disables host authentication for localhost.
996The argument to this keyword must be
997.Dq yes
998or
999.Dq no .
1000The default is to check the host key for localhost.
bf740959 1001.It Cm NumberOfPasswordPrompts
4fe2af09 1002Specifies the number of password prompts before giving up.
1003The argument to this keyword must be an integer.
1004Default is 3.
7b2ea3a1 1005.It Cm PasswordAuthentication
610cd5c6 1006Specifies whether to use password authentication.
1007The argument to this keyword must be
7b2ea3a1 1008.Dq yes
1009or
1010.Dq no .
01ce749f 1011The default is
1012.Dq yes .
bf740959 1013.It Cm Port
610cd5c6 1014Specifies the port number to connect on the remote host.
1015Default is 22.
babd91d4 1016.It Cm PreferredAuthentications
3730bb22 1017Specifies the order in which the client should try protocol 2
1018authentication methods. This allows a client to prefer one method (e.g.
babd91d4 1019.Cm keyboard-interactive )
1020over another method (e.g.
1021.Cm password )
1022The default for this option is:
cb362b5e 1023.Dq hostbased,publickey,keyboard-interactive,password .
f54651ce 1024.It Cm Protocol
1025Specifies the protocol versions
1026.Nm
1027should support in order of preference.
1028The possible values are
1029.Dq 1
1030and
1031.Dq 2 .
1032Multiple versions must be comma-separated.
1033The default is
b4a19d21 1034.Dq 2,1 .
1d1ffb87 1035This means that
1036.Nm
b4a19d21 1037tries version 2 and falls back to version 1
1038if version 2 is not available.
bf740959 1039.It Cm ProxyCommand
610cd5c6 1040Specifies the command to use to connect to the server.
1041The command
1042string extends to the end of the line, and is executed with
1043.Pa /bin/sh .
1044In the command string,
1045.Ql %h
1046will be substituted by the host name to
1047connect and
1048.Ql %p
1049by the port.
1050The command can be basically anything,
1051and should read from its standard input and write to its standard output.
1052It should eventually connect an
bf740959 1053.Xr sshd 8
1054server running on some machine, or execute
1055.Ic sshd -i
610cd5c6 1056somewhere.
1057Host key management will be done using the
bf740959 1058HostName of the host being connected (defaulting to the name typed by
1059the user).
57112b5a 1060Note that
1061.Cm CheckHostIP
1062is not available for connects with a proxy command.
bf740959 1063.Pp
da89cf4d 1064.It Cm PubkeyAuthentication
1065Specifies whether to try public key authentication.
1066The argument to this keyword must be
1067.Dq yes
1068or
1069.Dq no .
1070The default is
1071.Dq yes .
1072This option applies to protocol version 2 only.
bf740959 1073.It Cm RemoteForward
1074Specifies that a TCP/IP port on the remote machine be forwarded over
3a8aabf0 1075the secure channel to the specified host and port from the local machine.
610cd5c6 1076The first argument must be a port number, and the second must be
3a8aabf0 1077.Ar host:port .
1078IPv6 addresses can be specified with an alternative syntax:
1079.Ar host/port .
610cd5c6 1080Multiple forwardings may be specified, and additional
1081forwardings can be given on the command line.
1082Only the superuser can forward privileged ports.
bf740959 1083.It Cm RhostsAuthentication
610cd5c6 1084Specifies whether to try rhosts based authentication.
1085Note that this
bf740959 1086declaration only affects the client side and has no effect whatsoever
610cd5c6 1087on security.
1088Disabling rhosts authentication may reduce
bf740959 1089authentication time on slow connections when rhosts authentication is
610cd5c6 1090not used.
1091Most servers do not permit RhostsAuthentication because it
3730bb22 1092is not secure (see
a5a2da3b 1093.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication ) .
610cd5c6 1094The argument to this keyword must be
bf740959 1095.Dq yes
1096or
1097.Dq no .
01ce749f 1098The default is
1099.Dq yes .
da89cf4d 1100This option applies to protocol version 1 only.
bf740959 1101.It Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication
1102Specifies whether to try rhosts based authentication with RSA host
610cd5c6 1103authentication.
610cd5c6 1104The argument must be
bf740959 1105.Dq yes
1106or
1107.Dq no .
01ce749f 1108The default is
1109.Dq yes .
da89cf4d 1110This option applies to protocol version 1 only.
bf740959 1111.It Cm RSAAuthentication
610cd5c6 1112Specifies whether to try RSA authentication.
1113The argument to this keyword must be
bf740959 1114.Dq yes
1115or
1116.Dq no .
1117RSA authentication will only be
1118attempted if the identity file exists, or an authentication agent is
1119running.
01ce749f 1120The default is
1121.Dq yes .
1d1ffb87 1122Note that this option applies to protocol version 1 only.
61e96248 1123.It Cm ChallengeResponseAuthentication
1124Specifies whether to use challenge response authentication.
610cd5c6 1125The argument to this keyword must be
5260325f 1126.Dq yes
1127or
1128.Dq no .
1129The default is
10a2cbef 1130.Dq yes .
eea098a3 1131.It Cm SmartcardDevice
1132Specifies which smartcard device to use. The argument to this keyword is
1133the device
1134.Nm
1135should use to communicate with a smartcard used for storing the user's
1136private RSA key. By default, no device is specified and smartcard support
1137is not activated.
bf740959 1138.It Cm StrictHostKeyChecking
1139If this flag is set to
f54651ce 1140.Dq yes ,
bf740959 1141.Nm
a877488a 1142will never automatically add host keys to the
bf740959 1143.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
f49bc4f7 1144file, and refuses to connect to hosts whose host key has changed.
91789042 1145This provides maximum protection against trojan horse attacks,
1146however, can be annoying when the
2a8a6488 1147.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
91789042 1148file is poorly maintained, or connections to new hosts are
1149frequently made.
a877488a 1150This option forces the user to manually
1151add all new hosts.
1152If this flag is set to
1153.Dq no ,
1154.Nm
1155will automatically add new host keys to the
1156user known hosts files.
1157If this flag is set to
1158.Dq ask ,
1159new host keys
1160will be added to the user known host files only after the user
1161has confirmed that is what they really want to do, and
1162.Nm
1163will refuse to connect to hosts whose host key has changed.
610cd5c6 1164The host keys of
a877488a 1165known hosts will be verified automatically in all cases.
610cd5c6 1166The argument must be
a877488a 1167.Dq yes ,
1168.Dq no
bf740959 1169or
a877488a 1170.Dq ask .
1171The default is
1172.Dq ask .
bf740959 1173.It Cm UsePrivilegedPort
1174Specifies whether to use a privileged port for outgoing connections.
1175The argument must be
1176.Dq yes
1177or
1178.Dq no .
1179The default is
d5ebca2b 1180.Dq no .
91789042 1181Note that this option must be set to
da89cf4d 1182.Dq yes
91789042 1183if
bf740959 1184.Cm RhostsAuthentication
1185and
6ffc9c88 1186.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication
91789042 1187authentications are needed with older servers.
7b2ea3a1 1188.It Cm User
610cd5c6 1189Specifies the user to log in as.
91789042 1190This can be useful when a different user name is used on different machines.
610cd5c6 1191This saves the trouble of
7b2ea3a1 1192having to remember to give the user name on the command line.
1193.It Cm UserKnownHostsFile
f49bc4f7 1194Specifies a file to use for the user
a5df12e9 1195host key database instead of
7b2ea3a1 1196.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts .
bf740959 1197.It Cm UseRsh
610cd5c6 1198Specifies that rlogin/rsh should be used for this host.
1199It is possible that the host does not at all support the
bf740959 1200.Nm
610cd5c6 1201protocol.
1202This causes
bf740959 1203.Nm
610cd5c6 1204to immediately execute
bf740959 1205.Xr rsh 1 .
1206All other options (except
1207.Cm HostName )
610cd5c6 1208are ignored if this has been specified.
1209The argument must be
bf740959 1210.Dq yes
1211or
1212.Dq no .
fa649821 1213.It Cm XAuthLocation
1214Specifies the location of the
1215.Xr xauth 1
1216program.
1217The default is
1218.Pa /usr/X11R6/bin/xauth .
b5e300c2 1219.El
bf740959 1220.Sh ENVIRONMENT
1221.Nm
1222will normally set the following environment variables:
1223.Bl -tag -width Ds
1224.It Ev DISPLAY
1225The
1226.Ev DISPLAY
610cd5c6 1227variable indicates the location of the X11 server.
f54651ce 1228It is automatically set by
bf740959 1229.Nm
1230to point to a value of the form
1231.Dq hostname:n
1232where hostname indicates
610cd5c6 1233the host where the shell runs, and n is an integer >= 1.
1234.Nm
1235uses this special value to forward X11 connections over the secure
1236channel.
da89cf4d 1237The user should normally not set
1238.Ev DISPLAY
1239explicitly, as that
bf740959 1240will render the X11 connection insecure (and will require the user to
1241manually copy any required authorization cookies).
1242.It Ev HOME
1243Set to the path of the user's home directory.
1244.It Ev LOGNAME
1245Synonym for
1246.Ev USER ;
1247set for compatibility with systems that use this variable.
1248.It Ev MAIL
ae897d7c 1249Set to the path of the user's mailbox.
610cd5c6 1250.It Ev PATH
bf740959 1251Set to the default
1252.Ev PATH ,
1253as specified when compiling
1254.Nm ssh .
3474b2b4 1255.It Ev SSH_ASKPASS
1256If
1257.Nm
1258needs a passphrase, it will read the passphrase from the current
1259terminal if it was run from a terminal.
1260If
1261.Nm
1262does not have a terminal associated with it but
1263.Ev DISPLAY
1264and
1265.Ev SSH_ASKPASS
1266are set, it will execute the program specified by
1267.Ev SSH_ASKPASS
1268and open an X11 window to read the passphrase.
1269This is particularly useful when calling
1270.Nm
1271from a
1272.Pa .Xsession
1273or related script.
1274(Note that on some machines it
1275may be necessary to redirect the input from
1276.Pa /dev/null
1277to make this work.)
bf740959 1278.It Ev SSH_AUTH_SOCK
ae897d7c 1279Identifies the path of a unix-domain socket used to communicate with the
bf740959 1280agent.
1281.It Ev SSH_CLIENT
610cd5c6 1282Identifies the client end of the connection.
1283The variable contains
bf740959 1284three space-separated values: client ip-address, client port number,
1285and server port number.
8abcdba4 1286.It Ev SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND
1287The variable contains the original command line if a forced command
1288is executed.
1289It can be used to extract the original arguments.
bf740959 1290.It Ev SSH_TTY
1291This is set to the name of the tty (path to the device) associated
610cd5c6 1292with the current shell or command.
1293If the current session has no tty,
bf740959 1294this variable is not set.
1295.It Ev TZ
1296The timezone variable is set to indicate the present timezone if it
c345cf9d 1297was set when the daemon was started (i.e., the daemon passes the value
bf740959 1298on to new connections).
1299.It Ev USER
1300Set to the name of the user logging in.
1301.El
1302.Pp
f54651ce 1303Additionally,
bf740959 1304.Nm
f54651ce 1305reads
1306.Pa $HOME/.ssh/environment ,
bf740959 1307and adds lines of the format
1308.Dq VARNAME=value
1309to the environment.
1310.Sh FILES
c8d54615 1311.Bl -tag -width Ds
f49bc4f7 1312.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts
ae897d7c 1313Records host keys for all hosts the user has logged into that are not
bf740959 1314in
2a8a6488 1315.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts .
bf740959 1316See
1317.Xr sshd 8 .
c0ecc314 1318.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity, $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa, $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa
1319Contains the authentication identity of the user.
1320They are for protocol 1 RSA, protocol 2 DSA, and protocol 2 RSA, respectively.
1d1ffb87 1321These files
1322contain sensitive data and should be readable by the user but not
bf740959 1323accessible by others (read/write/execute).
1324Note that
1325.Nm
1d1ffb87 1326ignores a private key file if it is accessible by others.
bf740959 1327It is possible to specify a passphrase when
1328generating the key; the passphrase will be used to encrypt the
1329sensitive part of this file using 3DES.
c0ecc314 1330.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity.pub, $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub, $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
bf740959 1331Contains the public key for authentication (public part of the
610cd5c6 1332identity file in human-readable form).
1d1ffb87 1333The contents of the
1334.Pa $HOME/.ssh/identity.pub
1335file should be added to
bf740959 1336.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
1337on all machines
91789042 1338where the user wishes to log in using protocol version 1 RSA authentication.
1d1ffb87 1339The contents of the
1340.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub
c0ecc314 1341and
1342.Pa $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
1d1ffb87 1343file should be added to
96a7b0cc 1344.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
1d1ffb87 1345on all machines
91789042 1346where the user wishes to log in using protocol version 2 DSA/RSA authentication.
1d1ffb87 1347These files are not
610cd5c6 1348sensitive and can (but need not) be readable by anyone.
1d1ffb87 1349These files are
c44559d2 1350never used automatically and are not necessary; they are only provided for
bf740959 1351the convenience of the user.
1352.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/config
610cd5c6 1353This is the per-user configuration file.
1354The format of this file is described above.
1355This file is used by the
bf740959 1356.Nm
610cd5c6 1357client.
1358This file does not usually contain any sensitive information,
bf740959 1359but the recommended permissions are read/write for the user, and not
1360accessible by others.
1361.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
96a7b0cc 1362Lists the public keys (RSA/DSA) that can be used for logging in as this user.
610cd5c6 1363The format of this file is described in the
bf740959 1364.Xr sshd 8
610cd5c6 1365manual page.
f49bc4f7 1366In the simplest form the format is the same as the .pub
1367identity files.
1d1ffb87 1368This file is not highly sensitive, but the recommended
1369permissions are read/write for the user, and not accessible by others.
2a8a6488 1370.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts
610cd5c6 1371Systemwide list of known host keys.
f49bc4f7 1372This file should be prepared by the
bf740959 1373system administrator to contain the public host keys of all machines in the
610cd5c6 1374organization.
1375This file should be world-readable.
1376This file contains
bf740959 1377public keys, one per line, in the following format (fields separated
f49bc4f7 1378by spaces): system name, public key and optional comment field.
610cd5c6 1379When different names are used
bf740959 1380for the same machine, all such names should be listed, separated by
610cd5c6 1381commas.
1382The format is described on the
bf740959 1383.Xr sshd 8
1384manual page.
1385.Pp
1386The canonical system name (as returned by name servers) is used by
1387.Xr sshd 8
1388to verify the client host when logging in; other names are needed because
1389.Nm
1390does not convert the user-supplied name to a canonical name before
1391checking the key, because someone with access to the name servers
1392would then be able to fool host authentication.
2a8a6488 1393.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_config
610cd5c6 1394Systemwide configuration file.
1395This file provides defaults for those
bf740959 1396values that are not specified in the user's configuration file, and
610cd5c6 1397for those users who do not have a configuration file.
1398This file must be world-readable.
2a8a6488 1399.It Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key, /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key, /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
dd58cb5e 1400These three files contain the private parts of the host keys
1401and are used for
1402.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication
1403and
1404.Cm HostbasedAuthentication .
1405Since they are readable only by root
1406.Nm
1407must be setuid root if these authentication methods are desired.
bf740959 1408.It Pa $HOME/.rhosts
1409This file is used in
1410.Pa \&.rhosts
1411authentication to list the
610cd5c6 1412host/user pairs that are permitted to log in.
1413(Note that this file is
bf740959 1414also used by rlogin and rsh, which makes using this file insecure.)
1415Each line of the file contains a host name (in the canonical form
1416returned by name servers), and then a user name on that host,
610cd5c6 1417separated by a space.
e91c60f2 1418On some machines this file may need to be
bf740959 1419world-readable if the user's home directory is on a NFS partition,
1420because
1421.Xr sshd 8
610cd5c6 1422reads it as root.
1423Additionally, this file must be owned by the user,
1424and must not have write permissions for anyone else.
1425The recommended
bf740959 1426permission for most machines is read/write for the user, and not
1427accessible by others.
1428.Pp
1429Note that by default
1430.Xr sshd 8
1431will be installed so that it requires successful RSA host
610cd5c6 1432authentication before permitting \s+2.\s0rhosts authentication.
91789042 1433If the server machine does not have the client's host key in
2a8a6488 1434.Pa /etc/ssh/ssh_known_hosts ,
91789042 1435it can be stored in
bf740959 1436.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts .
1437The easiest way to do this is to
1438connect back to the client from the server machine using ssh; this
1d1ffb87 1439will automatically add the host key to
bf740959 1440.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts .
1441.It Pa $HOME/.shosts
1442This file is used exactly the same way as
1443.Pa \&.rhosts .
1444The purpose for
1445having this file is to be able to use rhosts authentication with
1446.Nm
1447without permitting login with
1448.Xr rlogin 1
1449or
1450.Xr rsh 1 .
1451.It Pa /etc/hosts.equiv
1452This file is used during
610cd5c6 1453.Pa \&.rhosts authentication.
1454It contains
bf740959 1455canonical hosts names, one per line (the full format is described on
1456the
1457.Xr sshd 8
610cd5c6 1458manual page).
1459If the client host is found in this file, login is
bf740959 1460automatically permitted provided client and server user names are the
610cd5c6 1461same.
1462Additionally, successful RSA host authentication is normally
1463required.
1464This file should only be writable by root.
5f4fdfae 1465.It Pa /etc/shosts.equiv
f54651ce 1466This file is processed exactly as
bf740959 1467.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv .
1468This file may be useful to permit logins using
1469.Nm
1470but not using rsh/rlogin.
2a8a6488 1471.It Pa /etc/ssh/sshrc
bf740959 1472Commands in this file are executed by
1473.Nm
1474when the user logs in just before the user's shell (or command) is started.
1475See the
1476.Xr sshd 8
1477manual page for more information.
1478.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/rc
1479Commands in this file are executed by
1480.Nm
1481when the user logs in just before the user's shell (or command) is
1482started.
f54651ce 1483See the
bf740959 1484.Xr sshd 8
1485manual page for more information.
83b7f649 1486.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/environment
1487Contains additional definitions for environment variables, see section
1488.Sx ENVIRONMENT
1489above.
b5e300c2 1490.El
16210ef7 1491.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
1492.Nm
1493exits with the exit status of the remote command or with 255
1494if an error occurred.
fa08c86b 1495.Sh AUTHORS
5fb622e4 1496OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free
1497ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen.
1498Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos,
1499Theo de Raadt and Dug Song
1500removed many bugs, re-added newer features and
1501created OpenSSH.
1502Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH
1503protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0.
bf740959 1504.Sh SEE ALSO
1505.Xr rlogin 1 ,
1506.Xr rsh 1 ,
1507.Xr scp 1 ,
61e96248 1508.Xr sftp 1 ,
bf740959 1509.Xr ssh-add 1 ,
1510.Xr ssh-agent 1 ,
1511.Xr ssh-keygen 1 ,
1512.Xr telnet 1 ,
9afadca8 1513.Xr sshd 8
2cad6cef 1514.Rs
1515.%A T. Ylonen
1516.%A T. Kivinen
1517.%A M. Saarinen
1518.%A T. Rinne
1519.%A S. Lehtinen
1520.%T "SSH Protocol Architecture"
1930af48 1521.%N draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-09.txt
1522.%D July 2001
2cad6cef 1523.%O work in progress material
1524.Re
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