This role configures the OpenSSH daemon. It:
- By default configures the SSH daemon with the normal OS defaults.
- Works across a variety of
UN*X
distributions - Can be configured by dict or simple variables
- Supports Match sets
- Supports all
sshd_config
options. Templates are programmatically generated. (seemeta/make_option_lists
) - Tests the
sshd_config
before reloading sshd.
WARNING Misconfiguration of this role can lock you out of your server! Please test your configuration and its interaction with your users configuration before using in production!
WARNING Digital Ocean allows root with passwords via SSH on Debian and
Ubuntu. This is not the default assigned by this module - it will set
PermitRootLogin without-password
which will allow access via SSH key but not
via simple password. If you need this functionality, be sure to set
sshd_PermitRootLogin yes
for those hosts.
Tested on:
- Ubuntu precise, trusty, xenial, bionic, focal, jammy, noble
- Debian wheezy, jessie, stretch, buster, bullseye, bookworm
- EL 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 derived distributions
- All Fedora
- Latest Alpine
- FreeBSD 10.1
- OpenBSD 6.0
- AIX 7.1, 7.2
- OpenWrt 21.03
It will likely work on other flavours and more direct support via suitable vars/ files is welcome.
If you want to use advanced functionality of this role that can configure
firewall and selinux for you, which is mostly useful when custom port is used,
the role requires additional collections which are specified in
meta/collection-requirements.yml
. These are not automatically installed.
If you want to manage rpm-ostree
systems, additional collections are required.
You must install them like this:
ansible-galaxy install -vv -r meta/collection-requirements.yml
For more information, see sshd_manage_firewall
and sshd_manage_selinux
options below, and the rpm-ostree
section. This additional functionality is
supported only on Red Hat based Linux.
Unconfigured, this role will provide a sshd_config
that matches the OS default,
minus the comments and in a different order.
If set to false, the role will be completely disabled. Defaults to true.
If set to true, don't apply default values. This means that you must have a
complete set of configuration defaults via either the sshd
dict, or
sshd_Key
variables. Defaults to false unless sshd_config_namespace
is
set or sshd_config_file
points to a drop-in directory to avoid recursive include.
If set to false, the service/daemon won't be managed at all, i.e. will not
try to enable on boot or start or reload the service. Defaults to true
unless: Running inside a docker container (it is assumed ansible is used during
build phase) or AIX (Ansible service
module does not currently support enabled
for AIX)
If set to false, a reload of sshd won't happen on change. This can help with
troubleshooting. You'll need to manually reload sshd if you want to apply the
changed configuration. Defaults to the same value as sshd_manage_service
.
(Except on AIX, where sshd_manage_service
is default false, but
sshd_allow_reload
is default true)
If set to true, the role will install service files for the ssh service. Defaults to false.
The templates for the service files to be used are pointed to by the variables
sshd_service_template_service
(default:templates/sshd.service.j2
)sshd_service_template_at_service
(default:templates/sshd@.service.j2
)sshd_service_template_socket
(default:templates/sshd.socket.j2
)
Using these variables, you can use your own custom templates. With the above
default templates, the name of the installed ssh service will be provided by
the sshd_service
variable.
If set to true, the SSH port(s) will be opened in firewall. Note, this works only on Red Hat based OS. The default is false.
NOTE: sshd_manage_firewall
is limited to adding ports. It cannot be used
for removing ports. If you want to remove ports, you will need to use the
firewall system role directly.
If set to true, the selinux will be configured to allow sshd listening on the given SSH port(s). Note, this works only on Red Hat based OS. The default is false.
NOTE: sshd_manage_selinux
is limited to adding policy. It cannot be used
for removing policy. If you want to remove ports, you will need to use the
selinux system role directly.
A dict containing configuration. e.g.
sshd_config:
Compression: delayed
ListenAddress:
- 0.0.0.0
Note: This variable was previous called sshd
. sshd
is can still be used
but is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
Simple variables can be used rather than a dict. Simple values override dict values. e.g.:
sshd_Compression: off
In all cases, booleans are correctly rendered as yes and no in sshd configuration. Lists can be used for multiline configuration items. e.g.
sshd_ListenAddress:
- 0.0.0.0
- '::'
Renders as:
ListenAddress 0.0.0.0
ListenAddress ::
A list of dicts or just a dict for a Match section. Note, that these variables
do not override match blocks as defined in the sshd
dict. All of the sources
will be reflected in the resulting configuration file. The use of
sshd_match_*
variant is deprecated and no longer recommended.
When set to false, the original sshd_config
file is not backed up. Default
is true.
On RHEL-based systems, sysconfig is used for configuring more details of sshd
service. If set to true, this role will manage also the /etc/sysconfig/sshd
configuration file based on the following configurations. Default is false.
In RHEL8-based systems, this can be used to override system-wide crypto policy by setting to true. Without this option, changes to ciphers, MACs, public key algorithms will have no effect on the resulting service in RHEL8. Defaults to false.
In RHEL-based systems (before RHEL9), this can be used to force sshd to reseed openssl random number generator with the given amount of bytes as an argument. The default is 0, which disables this functionality. It is not recommended to turn this on if the system does not have hardware random number generator.
The path where the openssh configuration produced by this role should be saved. This is useful mostly when generating configuration snippets to Include from drop-in directory (default in Fedora and RHEL9).
When this path points to a drop-in directory (like
/etc/ssh/sshd_config.d/00-custom.conf
), the main configuration file (defined
with the variable sshd_main_config_file
) is checked to contain a proper
Include
directive.
When the system is using drop-in directory, this option can be used to set
a path to the main configuration file and let you configure only the drop-in
configuration file using sshd_config_file
. This is useful in cases when
you need to configure second independent sshd service with different
configuration file. This is also the file used in the service file.
On systems without drop-in directory, it defaults to None
. Otherwise it
defaults to /etc/ssh/sshd_config
. When the sshd_config_file
is set
outside of the drop in directory (its parent directory is not
sshd_main_config_file
~ '.d'), this variable is ignored.
By default (null), the role defines whole content of the configuration file
including system defaults. You can use this variable to invoke this role from
other roles or from multiple places in a single playbook as an alternative to
using a drop-in directory. The sshd_skip_defaults
is ignored and no system
defaults are used in this case.
When this variable is set, the role places the configuration that you specify to configuration snippets in a existing configuration file under the given namespace. You need to select different namespaces when invoking the role several times.
Note that limitations of the openssh configuration file still apply. For example, only the first option specified in a configuration file is effective for most of the variables.
Technically, the role places snippets in Match all
blocks, unless they contain
other match blocks, to ensure they are applied regardless of the previous match
blocks in the existing configuration file. This allows configuring any
non-conflicting options from different roles invocations.
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the openssh configuration file that this role produces.
By default (auto), this list contains all the host keys that are present in the produced configuration file. If there are none, the OpenSSH default list will be used after excluding non-FIPS approved keys in FIPS mode. The paths are checked for presence and new keys are generated if they are missing. Additionally, permissions and file owners are set to sane defaults. This is useful if the role is used in deployment stage to make sure the service is able to start on the first attempt.
To disable this check, set this to empty list.
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the host keys from the above list.
These variables are used by the role internals and can be used to override the defaults that correspond to each supported platform. They are not tested and generally are not needed as the role will determine them from the OS type.
Use this variable to override the default list of packages to install.
The path to the openssh executable
The name of the openssh service. By default, this variable contains the name of
the ssh service that the target platform uses. But it can also be used to set
the name of the custom ssh service when the sshd_install_service
variable is
used.
Default path to the sftp server binary.
This variable is set to true after the role was successfully executed.
To configure SSH certificate authentication on your SSH server, you need to provide at least the trusted user CA key, which will be used to validate client certificates against.
This is done with the sshd_trusted_user_ca_keys_list
variable.
If you need to map some of the authorized principals to system users, you can do that using the sshd_principals
variable.
List of the trusted user CA public keys in OpenSSH (one-line) format (mandatory).
sshd_trustedusercakeys_directory_owner, shsd_trustedusercakeys_directory_group, sshd_trustedusercakeys_directory_mode
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the Trusted User CA Keys directory. Defaults are respectively root, root and 0755.
sshd_trustedusercakeys_file_owner, shsd_trustedusercakeys_file_group, sshd_trustedusercakeys_file_mode
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the Trusted User CA Keys file. Defaults are respectively root, root and 0640.
A dict containing principals for users in the os (optional). e.g.
sshd_principals:
admin:
- frontend-admin
- backend-admin
somelinuxuser:
- some-principal-defined-in-certificate
sshd_authorizedprincipals_directory_owner, shsd_authorizedprincipals_directory_group, sshd_authorizedprincipals_directory_mode
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the Authorized Principals directory. Defaults are respectively root, root and 0755.
sshd_authorizedprincipals_file_owner, shsd_authorizedprincipals_file_group, sshd_authorizedprincipals_file_mode
Use these variables to set the ownership and permissions for the Authorized Principals file. Defaults are respectively root, root and 0644.
The SSH server needs this information stored in files so in addition to the above variables, respective configuration options TrustedUserCAKeys
(mandatory) and AuthorizedPrincipalsFile
(optional) need to be present the sshd
dictionary when invoking the role. For example:
sshd_config:
TrustedUserCAKeys: /etc/ssh/path-to-trusted-user-ca-keys/trusted-user-ca-keys.pub
AuthorizedPrincipalsFile: "/etc/ssh/path-to-auth-principals/auth_principals/%u"
To learn more about SSH Certificates, here is a nice tutorial to pure SSH certificates, from wikibooks.
To understand principals and to set up SSH certificates with Vault, this is a well-explained tutorial from Hashicorp.
None
For tests, the ansible.posix
collection is required for the mount
role to
emulate FIPS mode.
DANGER! This example is to show the range of configuration this role provides. Running it will likely break your SSH access to the server!
---
- hosts: all
vars:
sshd_skip_defaults: true
sshd_config:
Compression: true
ListenAddress:
- "0.0.0.0"
- "::"
GSSAPIAuthentication: false
Match:
- Condition: "Group user"
GSSAPIAuthentication: true
sshd_UsePrivilegeSeparation: false
sshd_match:
- Condition: "Group xusers"
X11Forwarding: true
roles:
- role: willshersystems.sshd
Results in:
# Ansible managed: ...
Compression yes
GSSAPIAuthentication no
UsePrivilegeSeparation no
Match Group user
GSSAPIAuthentication yes
Match Group xusers
X11Forwarding yes
Since Ansible 2.4, the role can be invoked using include_role
keyword,
for example:
---
- hosts: all
become: true
tasks:
- name: "Configure sshd"
include_role:
name: willshersystems.sshd
vars:
sshd_skip_defaults: true
sshd_config:
Compression: true
ListenAddress:
- "0.0.0.0"
- "::"
GSSAPIAuthentication: false
Match:
- Condition: "Group user"
GSSAPIAuthentication: true
sshd_UsePrivilegeSeparation: false
sshd_match:
- Condition: "Group xusers"
X11Forwarding: true
You can just add a configuration snippet with the sshd_config_namespace
option:
---
- hosts: all
tasks:
- name: Configure sshd to accept some useful environment variables
include_role:
name: willshersystems.sshd
vars:
sshd_config_namespace: accept-env
sshd_config:
# there are some handy environment variables to accept
AcceptEnv:
LANG
LS_COLORS
EDITOR
The following snippet will be added to the default configuration file (if not yet present):
# BEGIN sshd system role managed block: namespace accept-env
Match all
AcceptEnv LANG LS_COLORS EDITOR
# END sshd system role managed block: namespace accept-env
More example playbooks can be found in examples/
directory.
The sshd_config.j2
and
sshd_config_snippet.j2
templates are
programmatically generated by the scripts in meta. New options should be added
to the options_body
and/or options_match
.
To regenerate the templates, from within the meta/
directory run:
./make_option_lists
See README-ostree.md
LGPLv3
Matt Willsher matt@willsher.systems
© 2014,2015 Willsher Systems Ltd.
Jakub Jelen jjelen@redhat.com
© 2020 - 2024 Red Hat, Inc.