With my sysadmin background, being as lazy as possible, I always try to have the lowest overhead maintenance possible over systems.
Securely maintain ssh keys to access servers is a tricky business. Keys have to be rotated regularly, individuals join/leave projects/companies, ssh key passwords are forgotten, etc.
Typically, admins add ssh keys to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys or %h/.ssh/authorized_keys, others LDAP.
Updating these is a nightmare, even with packaging tools like ansile or puppet.
Some have crons to update these, but that can create a delay, and we all know what happens when you add delays.
Instead, I've opted to move away from managing keys in the instances, and move them to a centrally controlled location, where it is easy to update objects/permissions and have the instances check back on login attempt.
sshauth-install.sh needs to be run in the instance.
It can be executed at anytime, or ideally during the creation of the instance. When deploying AWS instances, you can pass this with UserData
You will need to modify [https://s3.amazonaws.com/BUCKET/userkeys.sh] to use your server personalised version.
The script will modify ssh_config, pull your custom userkeys.sh, and restart sshd.
SSH AuthorizedKeysCommand was introduced in 2013's OpenSSH 6.1, although you will only find is commonly around in OpenSSH 6.9 distro packages.
From the manual:
sshd(8): Added a sshd_config(5) option AuthorizedKeysCommand to support fetching authorized_keys from a command in addition to (or instead of) from the filesystem. The command is run under an account specified by an AuthorizedKeysCommandUser sshd_config(5) option.
This allows us to execute an arbitary command when a login attemp it made via ssh. In the case of this setup, it executes userkeys.sh
Depending on wether you are curling github API for keys [https://github.com/USER.keys] (for individual devs or extremelly small teams) or a s3 bucket object (one object per set of permissions), you will need to create your custom userkeys.sh.
When there's an attempt login via ssh, sshd will execute userkeys.sh, which will then curl a file for ssh public keys, and match that against the one provided during login.
You can use Match User
or Match Group
to parse public keys against logins, but while increasing security, it also increases overhead.
ssh public key historicly have been created with RSA algorithm. But like everytghing in tech, that's old by today's standards.
The new shiny algorithm is Ed25519. It uses a Diffie-Hellman elliptic-curve, allowing it to be much smaller than tradicional RSA keys. Where a good RSA key starts in 2048 bits, an Ed25519 is just 256.
Combine that with the easeness of reading, storing, curl them, you got a winner.
To generate one, run $ ssh-keygen -t ed25519
with as many rounds as you see fit, and don't forget to password-protect it.
Copy the contents of its public key to GitHub key settings or your project permission object, and you are ready to go.
Please setup your instance with Fail2Ban, to prevent anyone from hammering your ssh port.
Also disable root PermitRootLogin no
and disable passwords PasswordAuthentication no
.
[sshauth-install.sh] already adds AuthenticationMethods publickey
to /etc/ssh/sshd_config
When curling against Internet webservices, developers need to account with services rate limits, in place to prevent abuse.
GitHub API rate limit is of 60 requests per hour
for unauthenticated requests, and 5000
when used with OAuth.
An AWS s3 bucket as a limit of 800 GET requests per second
.
If you have many devs login into a server or even bot scanning (hence Fail2Ban), your host can easily reach the limit and prevent you from legitimately accessing your server.
To minimise this, the response of the external request (either Github or AWS) is saved to the file $HOME/.ssh/ak_cache
and cached for 5 minutes.
Right now, we are querying GitHub user profiles for sshkeys.
An advanced process can probably be developed using GitHub GraphQL API to queries Teams instead of users, allowing further control over Projects access
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch:
git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request :D