openssh Cookbook
Installs and configures OpenSSH client and daemon.
Maintainers
This cookbook is maintained by the Sous Chefs. The Sous Chefs are a community of Chef cookbook maintainers working together to maintain important cookbooks. If you’d like to know more please visit sous-chefs.org or come chat with us on the Chef Community Slack in #sous-chefs.
Requirements
Platforms
- Debian/Ubuntu
- RHEL/CentOS/Scientific/Oracle
- Fedora
- FreeBSD
- Suse Enterprise Linux
- openSUSE / openSUSE leap
- AIX 7.1
Chef
- Chef 12.1+
Cookbooks
- iptables
Recipes
default
Installs openssh packages, manages the sshd config file, configure trusted ca keys, configure revoked keys, and starts/enables the sshd service.
iptables
Creates an iptables firewall rule to allow inbound SSH connections.
Usage
Apply the default recipe to the node's run_list to ensure that the openssh packages are installed, sshd is configured, and the service is started and enabled
Attributes List
The attributes list is dynamically generated, and lines up with the default openssh configs.
This means anything located in sshd_config or ssh_config can be used in your node attributes.
- If the option can be entered more then once, use an Array, otherwise, use a String. If the option is host-specific use a
Hash
(please see below for more details). - Each attribute is stored as ruby case, and converted to camel case for the config file on the fly.
- The current default attributes match the stock
ssh_config
andsshd_config
provided by openssh. - The namespace for
sshd_config
isnode['openssh']['server']
. - Likewise, the namespace for
ssh_config
isnode['openssh']['client']
. - An attribute can be an
Array
, aHash
or aString
. - If it is an
Array
, each item in the array will get it's own line in the config file. Hash
attributes are meant to used withssh_config
namespace to create host-specific configurations. The keys of theHash
will be used as theHost
entries and their associated entries as the configuration values.- All the values in openssh are commented out in the
attributes/default.rb
file for a base starting point. - There is one special attribute name, which is
match
. This is not included in the default template like the others.node['openssh']['server']['match']
must be a Hash, where the key is the match pattern criteria and the value should be a Hash of normal keywords and values. The same transformations listed above apply to these keywords. To get improved sorting of match items, you can prefix the key with a number. See examples below.
Dynamic ListenAddress
Pass in a Hash
of interface names, and IP address type(s) to bind sshd to. This will expand to a list of IP addresses which override the default node['openssh']['server']['listen_address']
value.
Examples and Common usage
These can be mixed and matched in roles and attributes. Please note, it is possible to get sshd into a state that it will not run. If this is the case, you will need to login via an alternate method and debug sshd like normal.
No Password logins
This requires use of identity files to connect
"openssh": {
"server": {
"password_authentication": "no"
}
}
Change sshd Port
"openssh": {
"server": {
"port": "14188"
}
}
Match
"openssh": {
"server": {
"match": {
"Address 192.168.1.0/24": {
"password_authentication": "yes"
},
"Group admins": {
"permit_tunnel": "yes",
"max_sessions": "20"
}
}
}
}
Match with sorting
"openssh": {
"server": {
"match": {
"0 User foobar": {
"force_command": "internal-sftp -d /home/%u -l VERBOSE"
},
"Group admins": {
"force_command": "internal-sftp -d /home/admins -l VERBOSE"
}
}
}
}
Enable X Forwarding
"openssh": {
"server": {
"x11_forwarding": "yes"
}
}
Bind to a specific set of address (this example actually binds to all)
Not to be used with node['openssh']['listen_interfaces']
.
"openssh": {
"server": {
"address_family": "any",
"listen_address": [ "192.168.0.1", "::" ]
}
}
}
Bind to the addresses tied to a set of interfaces
"openssh": {
"listen_interfaces": {
"eth0": "inet",
"eth1": "inet6"
}
}
Configure Trusted User CA Keys
"openssh": {
"ca_keys": [
"ssh-rsa key... ca_id_1",
"ssh-rsa key... ca_id_2"
]
}
Configure Revoked Keys
"openssh": {
"server": {
"revoked_keys": [
"ssh-rsa key... user_key_1",
"ssh-rsa key... user_key_2"
]
}
}
Host-specific configurations with hashes
You can use a Hash
with node['openssh']['client']
to configure different values for different hosts.
"client": {
"*": {
"g_s_s_a_p_i_authentication": "yes",
"send_env": "LANG LC_*",
"hash_known_hosts": "yes"
},
"localhost": {
"user_known_hosts_file": "/dev/null",
"strict_host_key_checking": "no"
},
"127.0.0.1": {
"user_known_hosts_file": "/dev/null",
"strict_host_key_checking": "no"
},
"other*": {
"user_known_hosts_file": "/dev/null",
"strict_host_key_checking": "no"
}
}
The keys are used as values with the Host
entries. So, the configuration fragment shown above generates:
Host *
SendEnv LANG LC_*
HashKnownHosts yes
GSSAPIAuthentication yes
Host localhost
StrictHostKeyChecking no
UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null
Host 127.0.0.1
StrictHostKeyChecking no
UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null
Host other*
StrictHostKeyChecking no
UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null
SSH Subsystems
Configure multiple SSH subsystems (e.g. sftp, netconf):
"openssh": {
"server": {
"subsystem": {
"sftp": "/usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server",
"appX": "/usr/sbin/appX"
}
}
}
Former declaration of single subsystem:
"openssh": {
"server": {
"subsystem": "sftp /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server"
}
}
Contributors
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
Backers
Thank you to all our backers!
Sponsors
Support this project by becoming a sponsor. Your logo will show up here with a link to your website.