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Table of Contents
Understanding and using ssh correctly
Everything you always wanted to know about ssh, ssh keys, the passphrase and ssh agent, but were afraid to ask
At least everything you need to know, without getting bored to death
A quick introduction
sshis a program for logging securely into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine- More precisely
sshis an SSH client using the SSH protocol
- We assume below that you have a
my_loginaccount on the remoteremote_servercomputer, and you know your password- This page will also show some examples using the LSCE and IPSL (ciclad) servers
- Instead of a password, you can also use a set of private and public keys and a passphrase
- Many programs are said to work over ssh when they implicitly use the ssh protocol to securely transfer their data from one server to another:
scp(copy remote directories and files),rsync(synchronize remote directories and files), …
- Some history: before you were born, and the world and internet were a safer place, people used less secure programs like
telnet,rlogin,rsh,ftp, …
Using ssh
Standard usage
Note: the following will work in a Linux terminal, but can also work in a terminal on a Mac or on a Windows 10 computer (ssh is directly available in Windows Powershell, Windows Terminal or the old cmd, but it is not the most user-friendly way to use ssh on Windows)
If you have a Windows computer, it is much easier to use PuTTY for creating an ssh connection
ssh [options] [my_login@]remote_server- If your login is the same on the local and remote computer, you can omit the optional
my_login@part:
e.g. just usessh ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr - The first time you connect to a new server,
sshwill ask if you are sure of what you are doing, and then store some unique information about the remote server in theknown_hostsfile (details).sshwill check this security information (without asking you) each time you connect to the same server, and warn you if something seems wrong
PS C:\Users\my_login> ssh ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr The authenticity of host 'ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr (157.136.66.99)' can't be established. ECDSA key fingerprint is SHA256:vMAvkidEg0EukP/RZwPAVuo5+TBegQFx1v8WN9pZLXg. Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes Warning: Permanently added 'ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr,157.136.66.99' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts. my_login@ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr's password:
- Most common options:
-X: Enable X11 forwarding. This option will allow you to start graphical programs on the remote server- If
-Xdoes not work, use-Yinstead (Enable trusted X11 forwarding) - Using the
-X/-Yoption will automatically define theDISPLAYenvironment variable that is required by graphical programs on the remote server. Otherwise,DISPLAYwill not be defined
my_login@lsce5203:~$ echo $DISPLAY localhost:0.0 my_login@lsce5203:~$ ssh ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr Last login: Wed Jul 8 14:45:31 2020 from 176-142-31-75.abo.bbox.fr [my_login@ssh1 ~]$ echo $DISPLAY DISPLAY: Undefined variable. [my_login@ssh1 ~]$ logout Connection to ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr closed. my_login@lsce5203:~$ ssh -X ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr [my_login@ssh1 ~]$ echo $DISPLAY localhost:43.0
- In order to display graphical windows, you also need to have a local X server running!
- Linux computer: nothing to do, an X server is already running
- Windows: install, configure and launch VcXsrv
- Mac:
-A: enable agent forwarding. This is useful when you use ssh keys, and an ssh agent-t command: this option allows you to execute a command on the remote server (without displaying the output of the initialssh). We use this mostly to chain ssh connections, when we want to automatically go through a specific gateway server to access another server
e.g.ssh -A -X my_login@ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr -t ssh -A -X obelix-v: verbose mode. Use this option only when you can't connect, or things don't seem to work correctly. Analyzing the verbose output when you startsshshould allow you, or the system administrators, to find out what is wrong
Useful aliases
If you want to easily use ssh (with the appropriate options), you should define the following aliases in your ~/.bashrc configuration file
# Connecting to LSCE from outside the LSCE network alias sobelix='ssh -A -X my_LSCE_login@ssh1.lsce.ipsl.fr -t ssh -A -X obelix' # Connecting to LSCE from a computer on the LSCE network alias obelix='ssh -A -X my_LSCE_login@obelix' # Connecting to ciclad @ IPSL alias ciclad='ssh -A -X my_ciclad_login@ciclad.ipsl.jussieu.fr'
Configuration files
ssh will store all its configuration text files in the ~/.ssh/ directory (C:\Users\your_windows_login\.ssh on Windows 10)
known_hosts: the file weresshstores security information about all the servers you have connected to (from the local computer)
config: an optional configuration file
authorized_keys, and possibly your private and public ssh keys
A recommended ssh client for Windows
PuTTY is a convenient and user-friendly ssh client for Windows
Copying files between servers/computers
Sometimes you just need to copy files from one remote server (or your desktop) to the other. The files can be securely copied over ssh with the scp command
Note: if you work with big data files, you should keep the files were they are instead of duplicating them, and move the data processing (your scripts, etc…) to the server where the files are located (e.g. the ciclad server)
Copying files with scp
Note: the following will work in a Linux terminal, but can also work in a terminal on a Mac or on a Windows 10 computer (scp is directly available in Windows Powershell, Windows Terminal or the old cmd, but it is not the most user-friendly way to use ssh on Windows)
If you have a Windows computer, it is much easier to use WinSCP for copying files
scp [options] local_path_or_file [my_login@]remote_server:remote_path
orscp [options] [my_login@]remote_server:remote_path_or_file local_path- If your login is the same on the local and remote computer, you can omit the optional
my_login@part
- Most common options:
-p: preserves modification times, access times, and modes from the original file. This option is very useful if you want the copied file(s) to have the same date/time as the original file(s). Otherwise, the time will be the time when you copy the file-r: recursively copy entire directories. You have to use this option if the source location is a directory.scp -rwill copy the complete content of the directory (including sub-directories)
A recommended graphical scp client for Windows
WinSCP is a convenient and user-friendly scp client for Windows
Synchronizing directories
In some cases, you may want to synchronize the content of directories:
- because you are creating a backup
- because you have lots of files, possibly (very) big, and you don't want to start copying everything again if the copy fails due to temporary network problems
- …
In that case, you should use the rsync command, that will only copy files that are not already in the destination (and that have not changed since the previous copy).
rsync has lots of complex options and rules, and should be used carefully if you do not want to lose files. This page does not cover this topic. Use man rsync or ask somebody
Using ssh keys
What are ssh keys?
Creating ssh keys
Installing ssh keys
Using the keys
Using an ssh agent
More...
- If you want to know more (options, etc…), check the man(ual) page on Linux:
man ssh - emacs
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