From 886c63a2c533e8ce8818580920232e4903a27da7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Damien Miller Date: Thu, 20 Jan 2000 23:13:36 +1100 Subject: - Big manpage and config file cleanup from Andre Lucas - Re-added latest (unmodified) OpenBSD manpages --- sshd.8 | 806 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 806 insertions(+) create mode 100644 sshd.8 (limited to 'sshd.8') diff --git a/sshd.8 b/sshd.8 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dfbf9c8ec --- /dev/null +++ b/sshd.8 @@ -0,0 +1,806 @@ +.\" -*- nroff -*- +.\" +.\" sshd.8.in +.\" +.\" Author: Tatu Ylonen +.\" +.\" Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen , Espoo, Finland +.\" All rights reserved +.\" +.\" Created: Sat Apr 22 21:55:14 1995 ylo +.\" +.\" $Id: sshd.8,v 1.11 2000/01/20 12:13:39 damien Exp $ +.\" +.Dd September 25, 1999 +.Dt SSHD 8 +.Os +.Sh NAME +.Nm sshd +.Nd secure shell daemon +.Sh SYNOPSIS +.Nm sshd +.Op Fl diqQ46 +.Op Fl b Ar bits +.Op Fl f Ar config_file +.Op Fl g Ar login_grace_time +.Op Fl h Ar host_key_file +.Op Fl k Ar key_gen_time +.Op Fl p Ar port +.Op Fl V Ar client_protocol_id +.Sh DESCRIPTION +.Nm +(Secure Shell Daemon) is the daemon program for +.Xr ssh 1 . +Together these programs replace rlogin and rsh programs, and +provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts +over an insecure network. The programs are intended to be as easy to +install and use as possible. +.Pp +.Nm +is the daemon that listens for connections from clients. It is +normally started at boot from +.Pa /etc/rc . +It forks a new +daemon for each incoming connection. The forked daemons handle +key exchange, encryption, authentication, command execution, +and data exchange. +.Pp +.Nm +works as follows. Each host has a host-specific RSA key +(normally 1024 bits) used to identify the host. Additionally, when +the daemon starts, it generates a server RSA key (normally 768 bits). +This key is normally regenerated every hour if it has been used, and +is never stored on disk. +.Pp +Whenever a client connects the daemon, the daemon sends its host +and server public keys to the client. The client compares the +host key against its own database to verify that it has not changed. +The client then generates a 256 bit random number. It encrypts this +random number using both the host key and the server key, and sends +the encrypted number to the server. Both sides then start to use this +random number as a session key which is used to encrypt all further +communications in the session. The rest of the session is encrypted +using a conventional cipher, currently Blowfish and 3DES, with 3DES +being is used by default. The client selects the encryption algorithm +to use from those offered by the server. +.Pp +Next, the server and the client enter an authentication dialog. The +client tries to authenticate itself using +.Pa .rhosts +authentication, +.Pa .rhosts +authentication combined with RSA host +authentication, RSA challenge-response authentication, or password +based authentication. +.Pp +Rhosts authentication is normally disabled +because it is fundamentally insecure, but can be enabled in the server +configuration file if desired. System security is not improved unless +.Xr rshd 8 , +.Xr rlogind 8 , +.Xr rexecd 8 , +and +.Xr rexd 8 +are disabled (thus completely disabling +.Xr rlogin 1 +and +.Xr rsh 1 +into that machine). +.Pp +If the client successfully authenticates itself, a dialog for +preparing the session is entered. At this time the client may request +things like allocating a pseudo-tty, forwarding X11 connections, +forwarding TCP/IP connections, or forwarding the authentication agent +connection over the secure channel. +.Pp +Finally, the client either requests a shell or execution of a command. +The sides then enter session mode. In this mode, either side may send +data at any time, and such data is forwarded to/from the shell or +command on the server side, and the user terminal in the client side. +.Pp +When the user program terminates and all forwarded X11 and other +connections have been closed, the server sends command exit status to +the client, and both sides exit. +.Pp +.Nm +can be configured using command-line options or a configuration +file. Command-line options override values specified in the +configuration file. +.Pp +.Nm +rereads its configuration file when it receives a hangup signal, +.Dv SIGHUP . +.Pp +The options are as follows: +.Bl -tag -width Ds +.It Fl b Ar bits +Specifies the number of bits in the server key (default 768). +.Pp +.It Fl d +Debug mode. The server sends verbose debug output to the system +log, and does not put itself in the background. The server also will +not fork and will only process one connection. This option is only +intended for debugging for the server. +.It Fl f Ar configuration_file +Specifies the name of the configuration file. The default is +.Pa /etc/sshd_config . +.Nm +refuses to start if there is no configuration file. +.It Fl g Ar login_grace_time +Gives the grace time for clients to authenticate themselves (default +300 seconds). If the client fails to authenticate the user within +this many seconds, the server disconnects and exits. A value of zero +indicates no limit. +.It Fl h Ar host_key_file +Specifies the file from which the host key is read (default +.Pa /etc/ssh_host_key ) . +This option must be given if +.Nm +is not run as root (as the normal +host file is normally not readable by anyone but root). +.It Fl i +Specifies that +.Nm +is being run from inetd. +.Nm +is normally not run +from inetd because it needs to generate the server key before it can +respond to the client, and this may take tens of seconds. Clients +would have to wait too long if the key was regenerated every time. +However, with small key sizes (e.g. 512) using +.Nm +from inetd may +be feasible. +.It Fl k Ar key_gen_time +Specifies how often the server key is regenerated (default 3600 +seconds, or one hour). The motivation for regenerating the key fairly +often is that the key is not stored anywhere, and after about an hour, +it becomes impossible to recover the key for decrypting intercepted +communications even if the machine is cracked into or physically +seized. A value of zero indicates that the key will never be regenerated. +.It Fl p Ar port +Specifies the port on which the server listens for connections +(default 22). +.It Fl q +Quiet mode. Nothing is sent to the system log. Normally the beginning, +authentication, and termination of each connection is logged. +.It Fl Q +Do not print an error message if RSA support is missing. +.It Fl V Ar client_protocol_id +SSH2 compatibility mode. +When this options is specified +.Nm +assumes the client has sent the given version string +and skips the +Protocol Version Identification Exchange. +.It Fl 4 +Forces +.Nm +to use IPv4 addresses only. +.It Fl 6 +Forces +.Nm +to use IPv6 addresses only. +.El +.Sh CONFIGURATION FILE +.Nm +reads configuration data from +.Pa /etc/sshd_config +(or the file specified with +.Fl f +on the command line). The file +contains keyword-value pairs, one per line. Lines starting with +.Ql # +and empty lines are interpreted as comments. +.Pp +The following keywords are possible. +.Bl -tag -width Ds +.It Cm AFSTokenPassing +Specifies whether an AFS token may be forwarded to the server. Default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm AllowGroups +This keyword can be followed by a number of group names, separated +by spaces. If specified, login is allowed only for users whose primary +group matches one of the patterns. +.Ql \&* +and +.Ql ? +can be used as +wildcards in the patterns. Only group names are valid, a numerical group +id isn't recognized. By default login is allowed regardless of +the primary group. +.Pp +.It Cm AllowUsers +This keyword can be followed by a number of user names, separated +by spaces. If specified, login is allowed only for users names that +match one of the patterns. +.Ql \&* +and +.Ql ? +can be used as +wildcards in the patterns. Only user names are valid, a numerical user +id isn't recognized. By default login is allowed regardless of +the user name. +.Pp +.It Cm CheckMail +Specifies whether +.Nm +should check for new mail for interactive logins. +The default is +.Dq no . +.It Cm DenyGroups +This keyword can be followed by a number of group names, separated +by spaces. Users whose primary group matches one of the patterns +aren't allowed to log in. +.Ql \&* +and +.Ql ? +can be used as +wildcards in the patterns. Only group names are valid, a numerical group +id isn't recognized. By default login is allowed regardless of +the primary group. +.Pp +.It Cm DenyUsers +This keyword can be followed by a number of user names, separated +by spaces. Login is disallowed for user names that match +one of the patterns. +.Ql \&* +and +.Ql ? +can be used as +wildcards in the patterns. Only user names are valid, a numerical user +id isn't recognized. By default login is allowed regardless of +the user name. +.It Cm HostKey +Specifies the file containing the private host key (default +.Pa /etc/ssh_host_key ) . +Note that +.Nm +does not start if this file is group/world-accessible. +.It Cm IgnoreRhosts +Specifies that rhosts and shosts files will not be used in +authentication. +.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv +and +.Pa /etc/shosts.equiv +are still used. The default is +.Dq no . +.It Cm IgnoreUserKnownHosts +Specifies whether +.Nm +should ignore the user's +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts +during +.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication . +The default is +.Dq no . +.It Cm KeepAlive +Specifies whether the system should send keepalive messages to the +other side. If they are sent, death of the connection or crash of one +of the machines will be properly noticed. However, this means that +connections will die if the route is down temporarily, and some people +find it annoying. On the other hand, if keepalives are not send, +sessions may hang indefinitely on the server, leaving +.Dq ghost +users and consuming server resources. +.Pp +The default is +.Dq yes +(to send keepalives), and the server will notice +if the network goes down or the client host reboots. This avoids +infinitely hanging sessions. +.Pp +To disable keepalives, the value should be set to +.Dq no +in both the server and the client configuration files. +.It Cm KerberosAuthentication +Specifies whether Kerberos authentication is allowed. This can +be in the form of a Kerberos ticket, or if +.Cm PasswordAuthentication +is yes, the password provided by the user will be validated through +the Kerberos KDC. Default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm KerberosOrLocalPasswd +If set then if password authentication through Kerberos fails then +the password will be validated via any additional local mechanism +such as +.Pa /etc/passwd +or SecurID. Default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm KerberosTgtPassing +Specifies whether a Kerberos TGT may be forwarded to the server. +Default is +.Dq no , +as this only works when the Kerberos KDC is actually an AFS kaserver. +.It Cm KerberosTicketCleanup +Specifies whether to automatically destroy the user's ticket cache +file on logout. Default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm KeyRegenerationInterval +The server key is automatically regenerated after this many seconds +(if it has been used). The purpose of regeneration is to prevent +decrypting captured sessions by later breaking into the machine and +stealing the keys. The key is never stored anywhere. If the value is +0, the key is never regenerated. The default is 3600 +(seconds). +.It Cm ListenAddress +Specifies what local address +.Nm +should listen on. +The default is to listen to all local addresses. +Multiple options of this type are permitted. +Additionally, the +.Cm Ports +options must precede this option. +.It Cm LoginGraceTime +The server disconnects after this time if the user has not +successfully logged in. If the value is 0, there is no time limit. +The default is 600 (seconds). +.It Cm LogLevel +Gives the verbosity level that is used when logging messages from +.Nm sshd . +The possible values are: +QUIET, FATAL, ERROR, INFO, VERBOSE and DEBUG. +The default is INFO. +Logging with level DEBUG violates the privacy of users +and is not recommended. +.It Cm PasswordAuthentication +Specifies whether password authentication is allowed. +The default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm PermitEmptyPasswords +When password authentication is allowed, it specifies whether the +server allows login to accounts with empty password strings. The default +is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm PermitRootLogin +Specifies whether the root can log in using +.Xr ssh 1 . +The argument must be +.Dq yes , +.Dq without-password +or +.Dq no . +The default is +.Dq yes . +If this options is set to +.Dq without-password +only password authentication is disabled for root. +.Pp +Root login with RSA authentication when the +.Ar command +option has been +specified will be allowed regardless of the value of this setting +(which may be useful for taking remote backups even if root login is +normally not allowed). +.It Cm Port +Specifies the port number that +.Nm +listens on. The default is 22. +Multiple options of this type are permitted. +.It Cm PrintMotd +Specifies whether +.Nm +should print +.Pa /etc/motd +when a user logs in interactively. (On some systems it is also +printed by the shell, +.Pa /etc/profile , +or equivalent.) The default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm RandomSeed +Obsolete. Random number generation uses other techniques. +.It Cm RhostsAuthentication +Specifies whether authentication using rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv +files is sufficient. Normally, this method should not be permitted +because it is insecure. +.Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication +should be used +instead, because it performs RSA-based host authentication in addition +to normal rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv authentication. +The default is +.Dq no . +.It Cm RhostsRSAAuthentication +Specifies whether rhosts or /etc/hosts.equiv authentication together +with successful RSA host authentication is allowed. The default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm RSAAuthentication +Specifies whether pure RSA authentication is allowed. The default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm ServerKeyBits +Defines the number of bits in the server key. The minimum value is +512, and the default is 768. +.It Cm SkeyAuthentication +Specifies whether +.Xr skey 1 +authentication is allowed. The default is +.Dq yes . +Note that s/key authentication is enabled only if +.Cm PasswordAuthentication +is allowed, too. +.It Cm StrictModes +Specifies whether +.Nm +should check file modes and ownership of the +user's files and home directory before accepting login. This +is normally desirable because novices sometimes accidentally leave their +directory or files world-writable. The default is +.Dq yes . +.It Cm SyslogFacility +Gives the facility code that is used when logging messages from +.Nm sshd . +The possible values are: DAEMON, USER, AUTH, LOCAL0, LOCAL1, LOCAL2, +LOCAL3, LOCAL4, LOCAL5, LOCAL6, LOCAL7. The default is AUTH. +.It Cm UseLogin +Specifies whether +.Xr login 1 +is used. The default is +.Dq no . +.It Cm X11DisplayOffset +Specifies the first display number available for +.Nm sshd Ns 's +X11 forwarding. This prevents +.Nm +from interfering with real X11 servers. +.It Cm X11Forwarding +Specifies whether X11 forwarding is permitted. The default is +.Dq yes . +Note that disabling X11 forwarding does not improve security in any +way, as users can always install their own forwarders. +.El +.Sh LOGIN PROCESS +When a user successfully logs in, +.Nm +does the following: +.Bl -enum -offset indent +.It +If the login is on a tty, and no command has been specified, +prints last login time and +.Pa /etc/motd +(unless prevented in the configuration file or by +.Pa $HOME/.hushlogin ; +see the +.Sx FILES +section). +.It +If the login is on a tty, records login time. +.It +Checks +.Pa /etc/nologin ; +if it exists, prints contents and quits +(unless root). +.It +Changes to run with normal user privileges. +.It +Sets up basic environment. +.It +Reads +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/environment +if it exists. +.It +Changes to user's home directory. +.It +If +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/rc +exists, runs it; else if +.Pa /etc/sshrc +exists, runs +it; otherwise runs xauth. The +.Dq rc +files are given the X11 +authentication protocol and cookie in standard input. +.It +Runs user's shell or command. +.El +.Sh AUTHORIZED_KEYS FILE FORMAT +The +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys +file lists the RSA keys that are +permitted for RSA authentication. Each line of the file contains one +key (empty lines and lines starting with a +.Ql # +are ignored as +comments). Each line consists of the following fields, separated by +spaces: options, bits, exponent, modulus, comment. The options field +is optional; its presence is determined by whether the line starts +with a number or not (the option field never starts with a number). +The bits, exponent, modulus and comment fields give the RSA key; the +comment field is not used for anything (but may be convenient for the +user to identify the key). +.Pp +Note that lines in this file are usually several hundred bytes long +(because of the size of the RSA key modulus). You don't want to type +them in; instead, copy the +.Pa identity.pub +file and edit it. +.Pp +The options (if present) consists of comma-separated option +specifications. No spaces are permitted, except within double quotes. +The following option specifications are supported: +.Bl -tag -width Ds +.It Cm from="pattern-list" +Specifies that in addition to RSA authentication, the canonical name +of the remote host must be present in the comma-separated list of +patterns ('*' and '?' serve as wildcards). The list may also contain +patterns negated by prefixing them with '!'; if the canonical host +name matches a negated pattern, the key is not accepted. The purpose +of this option is to optionally increase security: RSA authentication +by itself does not trust the network or name servers or anything (but +the key); however, if somebody somehow steals the key, the key +permits an intruder to log in from anywhere in the world. This +additional option makes using a stolen key more difficult (name +servers and/or routers would have to be compromised in addition to +just the key). +.It Cm command="command" +Specifies that the command is executed whenever this key is used for +authentication. The command supplied by the user (if any) is ignored. +The command is run on a pty if the connection requests a pty; +otherwise it is run without a tty. A quote may be included in the +command by quoting it with a backslash. This option might be useful +to restrict certain RSA keys to perform just a specific operation. An +example might be a key that permits remote backups but nothing +else. Notice that the client may specify TCP/IP and/or X11 +forwardings unless they are explicitly prohibited. +.It Cm environment="NAME=value" +Specifies that the string is to be added to the environment when +logging in using this key. Environment variables set this way +override other default environment values. Multiple options of this +type are permitted. +.It Cm no-port-forwarding +Forbids TCP/IP forwarding when this key is used for authentication. +Any port forward requests by the client will return an error. This +might be used, e.g., in connection with the +.Cm command +option. +.It Cm no-X11-forwarding +Forbids X11 forwarding when this key is used for authentication. +Any X11 forward requests by the client will return an error. +.It Cm no-agent-forwarding +Forbids authentication agent forwarding when this key is used for +authentication. +.It Cm no-pty +Prevents tty allocation (a request to allocate a pty will fail). +.El +.Ss Examples +1024 33 12121.\|.\|.\|312314325 ylo@foo.bar +.Pp +from="*.niksula.hut.fi,!pc.niksula.hut.fi" 1024 35 23.\|.\|.\|2334 ylo@niksula +.Pp +command="dump /home",no-pty,no-port-forwarding 1024 33 23.\|.\|.\|2323 backup.hut.fi +.Sh SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS FILE FORMAT +The +.Pa /etc/ssh_known_hosts +and +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts +files contain host public keys for all known hosts. The global file should +be prepared by the admistrator (optional), and the per-user file is +maintained automatically: whenever the user connects an unknown host +its key is added to the per-user file. +.Pp +Each line in these files contains the following fields: hostnames, +bits, exponent, modulus, comment. The fields are separated by spaces. +.Pp +Hostnames is a comma-separated list of patterns ('*' and '?' act as +wildcards); each pattern in turn is matched against the canonical host +name (when authenticating a client) or against the user-supplied +name (when authenticating a server). A pattern may also be preceded +by +.Ql ! +to indicate negation: if the host name matches a negated +pattern, it is not accepted (by that line) even if it matched another +pattern on the line. +.Pp +Bits, exponent, and modulus are taken directly from the host key; they +can be obtained, e.g., from +.Pa /etc/ssh_host_key.pub . +The optional comment field continues to the end of the line, and is not used. +.Pp +Lines starting with +.Ql # +and empty lines are ignored as comments. +.Pp +When performing host authentication, authentication is accepted if any +matching line has the proper key. It is thus permissible (but not +recommended) to have several lines or different host keys for the same +names. This will inevitably happen when short forms of host names +from different domains are put in the file. It is possible +that the files contain conflicting information; authentication is +accepted if valid information can be found from either file. +.Pp +Note that the lines in these files are typically hundreds of characters +long, and you definitely don't want to type in the host keys by hand. +Rather, generate them by a script +or by taking +.Pa /etc/ssh_host_key.pub +and adding the host names at the front. +.Ss Examples +closenet,closenet.hut.fi,.\|.\|.\|,130.233.208.41 1024 37 159.\|.\|.93 closenet.hut.fi +.Sh FILES +.Bl -tag -width Ds +.It Pa /etc/sshd_config +Contains configuration data for +.Nm sshd . +This file should be writable by root only, but it is recommended +(though not necessary) that it be world-readable. +.It Pa /etc/ssh_host_key +Contains the private part of the host key. +This file should only be owned by root, readable only by root, and not +accessible to others. +Note that +.Nm +does not start if this file is group/world-accessible. +.It Pa /etc/ssh_host_key.pub +Contains the public part of the host key. +This file should be world-readable but writable only by +root. Its contents should match the private part. This file is not +really used for anything; it is only provided for the convenience of +the user so its contents can be copied to known hosts files. +These two files are created using +.Xr ssh-keygen 1 . +.It Pa /var/run/sshd.pid +Contains the process ID of the +.Nm +listening for connections (if there are several daemons running +concurrently for different ports, this contains the pid of the one +started last). The contents of this file are not sensitive; it can be +world-readable. +.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys +Lists the RSA keys that can be used to log into the user's account. +This file must be readable by root (which may on some machines imply +it being world-readable if the user's home directory resides on an NFS +volume). It is recommended that it not be accessible by others. The +format of this file is described above. +.It Pa "/etc/ssh_known_hosts" and "$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts" +These files are consulted when using rhosts with RSA host +authentication to check the public key of the host. The key must be +listed in one of these files to be accepted. +The client uses the same files +to verify that the remote host is the one we intended to +connect. These files should be writable only by root/the owner. +.Pa /etc/ssh_known_hosts +should be world-readable, and +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/known_hosts +can but need not be world-readable. +.It Pa /etc/nologin +If this file exists, +.Nm +refuses to let anyone except root log in. The contents of the file +are displayed to anyone trying to log in, and non-root connections are +refused. The file should be world-readable. +.It Pa /etc/hosts.allow, /etc/hosts.deny +If compiled with +.Sy LIBWRAP +support, tcp-wrappers access controls may be defined here as described in +.Xr hosts_access 5 . +.It Pa $HOME/.rhosts +This file contains host-username pairs, separated by a space, one per +line. The given user on the corresponding host is permitted to log in +without password. The same file is used by rlogind and rshd. +The file must +be writable only by the user; it is recommended that it not be +accessible by others. +.Pp +If is also possible to use netgroups in the file. Either host or user +name may be of the form +@groupname to specify all hosts or all users +in the group. +.It Pa $HOME/.shosts +For ssh, +this file is exactly the same as for +.Pa .rhosts . +However, this file is +not used by rlogin and rshd, so using this permits access using SSH only. +.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv +This file is used during +.Pa .rhosts +authentication. In the +simplest form, this file contains host names, one per line. Users on +those hosts are permitted to log in without a password, provided they +have the same user name on both machines. The host name may also be +followed by a user name; such users are permitted to log in as +.Em any +user on this machine (except root). Additionally, the syntax +.Dq +@group +can be used to specify netgroups. Negated entries start with +.Ql \&- . +.Pp +If the client host/user is successfully matched in this file, login is +automatically permitted provided the client and server user names are the +same. Additionally, successful RSA host authentication is normally +required. This file must be writable only by root; it is recommended +that it be world-readable. +.Pp +.Sy "Warning: It is almost never a good idea to use user names in" +.Pa hosts.equiv . +Beware that it really means that the named user(s) can log in as +.Em anybody , +which includes bin, daemon, adm, and other accounts that own critical +binaries and directories. Using a user name practically grants the +user root access. The only valid use for user names that I can think +of is in negative entries. +.Pp +Note that this warning also applies to rsh/rlogin. +.It Pa /etc/shosts.equiv +This is processed exactly as +.Pa /etc/hosts.equiv . +However, this file may be useful in environments that want to run both +rsh/rlogin and ssh. +.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/environment +This file is read into the environment at login (if it exists). It +can only contain empty lines, comment lines (that start with +.Ql # ) , +and assignment lines of the form name=value. The file should be writable +only by the user; it need not be readable by anyone else. +.It Pa $HOME/.ssh/rc +If this file exists, it is run with /bin/sh after reading the +environment files but before starting the user's shell or command. If +X11 spoofing is in use, this will receive the "proto cookie" pair in +standard input (and +.Ev DISPLAY +in environment). This must call +.Xr xauth 1 +in that case. +.Pp +The primary purpose of this file is to run any initialization routines +which may be needed before the user's home directory becomes +accessible; AFS is a particular example of such an environment. +.Pp +This file will probably contain some initialization code followed by +something similar to: "if read proto cookie; then echo add $DISPLAY +$proto $cookie | xauth -q -; fi". +.Pp +If this file does not exist, +.Pa /etc/sshrc +is run, and if that +does not exist either, xauth is used to store the cookie. +.Pp +This file should be writable only by the user, and need not be +readable by anyone else. +.It Pa /etc/sshrc +Like +.Pa $HOME/.ssh/rc . +This can be used to specify +machine-specific login-time initializations globally. This file +should be writable only by root, and should be world-readable. +.Sh AUTHOR +Tatu Ylonen +.Pp +Information about new releases, mailing lists, and other related +issues can be found from the SSH WWW home page: +.Pp +.Dl http://www.cs.hut.fi/ssh. +.Pp +OpenSSH +is a derivative of the original (free) ssh 1.2.12 release, but with bugs +removed and newer features re-added. Rapidly after the 1.2.12 release, +newer versions bore successively more restrictive licenses. This version +of OpenSSH +.Bl -bullet +.It +has all components of a restrictive nature (ie. patents, see +.Xr ssl 8 ) +directly removed from the source code; any licensed or patented components +are chosen from +external libraries. +.It +has been updated to support ssh protocol 1.5. +.It +contains added support for +.Xr kerberos 8 +authentication and ticket passing. +.It +supports one-time password authentication with +.Xr skey 1 . +.El +.Pp +The libraries described in +.Xr ssl 8 +are required for proper operation. +.Sh SEE ALSO +.Xr rlogin 1 , +.Xr rsh 1 , +.Xr scp 1 , +.Xr ssh 1 , +.Xr ssh-add 1 , +.Xr ssh-agent 1 , +.Xr ssh-keygen 1 , +.Xr ssl 8 -- cgit v1.2.3