Setup SSH Server for Key Authentication on Ubuntu 17.04 17.10 Posted on by Student This brief tutorial shows students and new users how to setup OpenSSH server for key authentication or password-less authentication. Follow the instructions to generate your SSH key pair. Adding your SSH public key to GitLab To add the SSH public key to GitLab, see Adding an SSH key to your.
The procedure to set up secure ssh keys on Ubuntu 18.04:
Where,
In public key based method you can log into remote hosts and server, and transfer files to them, without using your account passwords. Feel free to replace 202.54.1.55 and client names with your actual setup. Enough talk, let’s set up public key authentication on Ubuntu Linux 18.04 LTS.
Open the Terminal and type following commands if .ssh directory does not exists:$ mkdir -p $HOME/.ssh
$ chmod 0700 $HOME/.ssh
Next generate a key pair for the protocol, run:$ ssh-keygen
OR$ ssh-keygen -t rsa 4096 -C 'My key for Linode server'
These days ED25519 keys are favored over RSA keys when backward compatibility is not needed:$ ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C 'My key for Linux server # 42'
The syntax is as follows:ssh-copy-id your-user-name@your-ubuntu-server-name
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/file.pub your-user-name@your-ubuntu-server-name
For example:## for RSA KEY ##
ssh-copy-id -i $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub [email protected]
## for ED25519 KEY ##
ssh-copy-id -i $HOME/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub [email protected]
## install SSH KEY for root user ##
ssh-copy-id -i $HOME/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub [email protected]
I am going to install ssh key for a user named vivek (type command on your laptop/desktop where you generated RSA/ed25519 keys):$ ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub [email protected]
Now try logging into the Ubuntu 18.04 LTS server, with ssh command from your client computer/laptop using ssh keys:$ ssh your-user@your-server-name-here
$ ssh [email protected]
To get rid of a passphrase for the current session, add a passphrase to ssh-agent (see ssh-agent command for more info) and you will not be prompted for it when using ssh or scp/sftp/rsync to connect to hosts with your public key. The syntax is as follows:$ eval $(ssh-agent)
Type the ssh-add command to prompt the user for a private key passphrase and adds it to the list maintained by ssh-agent command:$ ssh-add
Enter your private key passphrase. Now try again to log into [email protected] and you will NOT be prompted for a password:$ ssh [email protected]
Login to your server, type:## client commands ##
$ eval $(ssh-agent)
$ ssh-add
$ ssh [email protected]
Now login as root user:$ sudo -i
OR$ su -i
Edit sshd_config file:# vim /etc/ssh/sshd_config
OR# nano /etc/ssh/sshd_config
Find PermitRootLogin and set it as follows:PermitRootLogin no
Save and close the file. I am going to add a user named vivek to sudoers group on Ubuntu 18.04 server so that we can run sysadmin tasks:# adduser vivek sudo
Restart/reload the sshd service:# systemctl reload ssh
You can exit from all session and test it as follows:$ ssh [email protected]
## become root on server for sysadmin task ##
$ sudo -i
To to change your SSH passphrase type the following command:$ ssh-keygen -p
Just copy files to your backup server or external USB pen/hard drive:
Apr 28, 2017 Generating the Public and Private Keys Open up a new terminal window in Ubuntu like we see in the following screenshot. The ssh-keygen command provides an interactive command line interface for generating both the public and private keys. Invoke ssh-keygen with the following -t and -b arguments to ensure we get a 4096 bit RSA key. Key pairs are just one way to log into a system. (Perhaps the one you currently use is regular username and password ssh login). Key pairs are generally more secure than password logging in. One thing you have to keep in mind is that using key pairs is a two-way method: you'll need to create a private key and a public-key. If you do not have a private key: Open puttygen, Select the desired key type SSH2 DSA (you may use RSA or DSA) within the Parameters section. And it is important that you leave the passphrase field blank, Press generate and follow instructions to generate (public/private) key. Generate public and private key ubuntu. Dec 18, 2019 Copy the Public Key to Ubuntu Server # Now that you generated your SSH key pair, the next step is to copy the public key to the server you want to manage. The easiest and the recommended way to copy your public key to the server is to use a utility called ssh-copy-id. On your local machine terminal type: ssh-copy-id remoteusername@serveripaddress.
See how to create and use an OpenSSH ssh_config file for more info.
See “OpenSSH Server Best Security Practices” for more info.
You learned how to create and install ssh keys for SSH key-based authentication for Ubuntu Linux 18.04 LTS server. See OpenSSH server documents here and here for more info.
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