SSH: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:05, 3 September 2024
Secure Shell
An encrypted protocol for a remote shell login.
Create a new SSH key
$ ssh-keygen -t ed25519
They key you just created, has a private and a public part:
- private: id_ed25519
- public: id_ed25519.pub
IMPORTANT: only share the public part, never the private!!
Install your SSH key on your server
Manual way
- copy your public key, this is the public part of one ssh key, it ends with
.pub
, like:filename.pub
- log into your server
- edit this file:
$ nano ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
- paste your public key (the output of
$ cat id_ed25519.pub
) here on a new line
Handy command that does the same (linux/mac only)
$ ssh-copy-id username@ip-address
Where are my SSH keys stored?
- linux:
/home/USER/.ssh/
- mac:
/Users/USER/.ssh/
- windows:
C:\Users\USER\.ssh\
SSH config file
The ssh configuration file makes it a lot simpler to ssh scp or sshfs.
It is especially convenient when you have keys for different servers. It helps you to keep them organized and to ssh into servers with easy to remember shortcuts.
Rather than typing
scp myfile username@host:/path/to/copy/file/to
We can simply do with
scp myfile hostname:/path/to/copy/file/to
Create the file:
nano ~/.ssh/config
insert:
Host hostname // name for the shortcut you use to ssh into the server User usename // ssh user Hostname 192.168.10.20 // hostname of the server Port 22 // this is the default ssh port Identityfile ~/.ssh/id_rsa // change and make sure this is the path to the location of your keys Serveraliveinterval 30
Now you can use the short cut to ssh/scp/sshfs to that and any other host in in .ssh/config
using only
ssh hostname
This is an example of a ~/.ssh/config
file:
Host superserver User username Hostname super.server.nl Host superserver2 User anotherusername Hostname super.serverl.nl Port 12345 ForwardAgent yes
Now when you want to ssh/scp to your server you can just do the following:
ssh superserver
Store your passphrase (optional)
Keychain is a software that will keep track of which keys are available in your system and will only ask your passphrase once per session instead. It is a front-end to ssh-add and ssh-agent.
Add the following in your shell resource file:
if [ -e ~/.ssh/id_rsa ]
then
keychain --quiet --nogui ~/.ssh/id_rsa
. ~/.keychain/${HOSTNAME}-sh
fi
Now restart your session and you will be prompted, once for your passphrase. After that you can directly ssh/scp to the machines where your installed your key and you will not be prompted for any passwords!
ssh super
SSFS
SSHFS (SSH Filesystem) is a filesystem client for mounting remote directories on your machine, using an SSH connection.
By using it you can access, read, edit files from a remote machine on your local machine, as long as you have an account in the remote machine.
Install
on Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt update sudo apt install sshfs
on mac
Use homebrew:
brew cask install osxfuse brew install sshfs
If homebrew is not installed, run the installation command:
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Mounting the Remote File System with sshfs
sshfs command essential parameters:
sshfs user@host:remote_directory local_mount_directory
How to mount:
Create a directory in your local machine, to be use as a mount point
mkdir ~/remote
Mount host remote directory onto the ~/remote directory
ssh user@host:/full/path/to/remote/dir ~/remote
That's it
How to unmount
To unmount the remote dir from the local directory we use the umount
NOT unmount, BUT umount
umount ~/remote