зеркало из https://github.com/github/putty.git
274 строки
11 KiB
Plaintext
274 строки
11 KiB
Plaintext
\C{pageant} Using \i{Pageant} for authentication
|
|
|
|
\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.general}
|
|
|
|
Pageant is an SSH \i{authentication agent}. It holds your \i{private key}s
|
|
in memory, already decoded, so that you can use them often
|
|
\I{passwordless login}without needing to type a \i{passphrase}.
|
|
|
|
\H{pageant-start} Getting started with Pageant
|
|
|
|
Before you run Pageant, you need to have a private key in \c{*.\i{PPK}}
|
|
format. See \k{pubkey} to find out how to generate and use one.
|
|
|
|
When you run Pageant, it will put an icon of a computer wearing a
|
|
hat into the \ii{System tray}. It will then sit and do nothing, until you
|
|
load a private key into it.
|
|
|
|
If you click the Pageant icon with the right mouse button, you will
|
|
see a menu. Select \q{View Keys} from this menu. The Pageant main
|
|
window will appear. (You can also bring this window up by
|
|
double-clicking on the Pageant icon.)
|
|
|
|
The Pageant window contains a list box. This shows the private keys
|
|
Pageant is holding. When you start Pageant, it has no keys, so the
|
|
list box will be empty. After you add one or more keys, they will
|
|
show up in the list box.
|
|
|
|
To add a key to Pageant, press the \q{Add Key} button. Pageant will
|
|
bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key File}. Find
|
|
your private key file in this dialog, and press \q{Open}.
|
|
|
|
Pageant will now load the private key. If the key is protected by a
|
|
passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase. When the
|
|
key has been loaded, it will appear in the list in the Pageant
|
|
window.
|
|
|
|
Now start PuTTY and open an SSH session to a site that accepts your
|
|
key. PuTTY will notice that Pageant is running, retrieve the key
|
|
automatically from Pageant, and use it to authenticate. You can now
|
|
open as many PuTTY sessions as you like without having to type your
|
|
passphrase again.
|
|
|
|
(PuTTY can be configured not to try to use Pageant, but it will try
|
|
by default. See \k{config-ssh-tryagent} and
|
|
\k{using-cmdline-agentauth} for more information.)
|
|
|
|
When you want to shut down Pageant, click the right button on the
|
|
Pageant icon in the System tray, and select \q{Exit} from the menu.
|
|
Closing the Pageant main window does \e{not} shut down Pageant.
|
|
|
|
\H{pageant-mainwin} The Pageant main window
|
|
|
|
The Pageant main window appears when you left-click on the Pageant
|
|
system tray icon, or alternatively right-click and select \q{View
|
|
Keys} from the menu. You can use it to keep track of what keys are
|
|
currently loaded into Pageant, and to add new ones or remove the
|
|
existing keys.
|
|
|
|
\S{pageant-mainwin-keylist} The key list box
|
|
|
|
\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.keylist}
|
|
|
|
The large list box in the Pageant main window lists the private keys
|
|
that are currently loaded into Pageant. The list might look
|
|
something like this:
|
|
|
|
\c ssh-rsa 2048 22:d6:69:c9:22:51:ac:cb:b9:15:67:47:f7:65:6d:d7 k1
|
|
\c ssh-dss 2048 e4:6c:69:f3:4f:fc:cf:fc:96:c0:88:34:a7:1e:59:d7 k2
|
|
|
|
For each key, the list box will tell you:
|
|
|
|
\b The type of the key. Currently, this can be \c{ssh1} (an RSA key
|
|
for use with the SSH-1 protocol), \c{ssh-rsa} (an RSA key for use
|
|
with the SSH-2 protocol), \c{ssh-dss} (a DSA key for use with
|
|
the SSH-2 protocol), \c{ecdsa-sha2-*} (an ECDSA key for use with
|
|
the SSH-2 protocol), or \c{ssh-ed25519} (an Ed25519 key for use with
|
|
the SSH-2 protocol).
|
|
|
|
\b The size (in bits) of the key.
|
|
|
|
\b The \I{key fingerprint}fingerprint for the public key. This should be
|
|
the same fingerprint given by PuTTYgen, and (hopefully) also the same
|
|
fingerprint shown by remote utilities such as \i\c{ssh-keygen} when
|
|
applied to your \c{authorized_keys} file.
|
|
|
|
\b The comment attached to the key.
|
|
|
|
\S{pageant-mainwin-addkey} The \q{Add Key} button
|
|
|
|
\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.addkey}
|
|
|
|
To add a key to Pageant by reading it out of a local disk file,
|
|
press the \q{Add Key} button in the Pageant main window, or
|
|
alternatively right-click on the Pageant icon in the system tray and
|
|
select \q{Add Key} from there.
|
|
|
|
Pageant will bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key
|
|
File}. Find your private key file in this dialog, and press
|
|
\q{Open}. If you want to add more than one key at once, you can
|
|
select multiple files using Shift-click (to select several adjacent
|
|
files) or Ctrl-click (to select non-adjacent files).
|
|
|
|
Pageant will now load the private key(s). If a key is protected by a
|
|
passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase.
|
|
|
|
(This is not the only way to add a private key to Pageant. You can
|
|
also add one from a remote system by using agent forwarding; see
|
|
\k{pageant-forward} for details.)
|
|
|
|
\S{pageant-mainwin-remkey} The \q{Remove Key} button
|
|
|
|
\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.remkey}
|
|
|
|
If you need to remove a key from Pageant, select that key in the
|
|
list box, and press the \q{Remove Key} button. Pageant will remove
|
|
the key from its memory.
|
|
|
|
You can apply this to keys you added using the \q{Add Key} button,
|
|
or to keys you added remotely using agent forwarding (see
|
|
\k{pageant-forward}); it makes no difference.
|
|
|
|
\H{pageant-cmdline} The Pageant command line
|
|
|
|
Pageant can be made to do things automatically when it starts up, by
|
|
\I{command-line arguments}specifying instructions on its command line.
|
|
If you're starting Pageant from the Windows GUI, you can arrange this
|
|
by editing the properties of the \i{Windows shortcut} that it was
|
|
started from.
|
|
|
|
If Pageant is already running, invoking it again with the options
|
|
below causes actions to be performed with the existing instance, not a
|
|
new one.
|
|
|
|
\S{pageant-cmdline-loadkey} Making Pageant automatically load keys
|
|
on startup
|
|
|
|
Pageant can automatically load one or more private keys when it
|
|
starts up, if you provide them on the Pageant command line. Your
|
|
command line might then look like:
|
|
|
|
\c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.ppk d:\secondary.ppk
|
|
|
|
If the keys are stored encrypted, Pageant will request the
|
|
passphrases on startup.
|
|
|
|
If Pageant is already running, this syntax loads keys into the
|
|
existing Pageant.
|
|
|
|
\S{pageant-cmdline-command} Making Pageant run another program
|
|
|
|
You can arrange for Pageant to start another program once it has
|
|
initialised itself and loaded any keys specified on its command
|
|
line. This program (perhaps a PuTTY, or a WinCVS making use of
|
|
Plink, or whatever) will then be able to use the keys Pageant has
|
|
loaded.
|
|
|
|
You do this by specifying the \I{-c-pageant}\c{-c} option followed
|
|
by the command, like this:
|
|
|
|
\c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.ppk -c C:\PuTTY\putty.exe
|
|
|
|
\H{pageant-forward} Using \i{agent forwarding}
|
|
|
|
Agent forwarding is a mechanism that allows applications on your SSH
|
|
server machine to talk to the agent on your client machine.
|
|
|
|
Note that at present, agent forwarding in SSH-2 is only available
|
|
when your SSH server is \i{OpenSSH}. The \i\cw{ssh.com} server uses a
|
|
different agent protocol, which PuTTY does not yet support.
|
|
|
|
To enable agent forwarding, first start Pageant. Then set up a PuTTY
|
|
SSH session in which \q{Allow agent forwarding} is enabled (see
|
|
\k{config-ssh-agentfwd}). Open the session as normal. (Alternatively,
|
|
you can use the \c{-A} command line option; see
|
|
\k{using-cmdline-agent} for details.)
|
|
|
|
If this has worked, your applications on the server should now have
|
|
access to a Unix domain socket which the SSH server will forward
|
|
back to PuTTY, and PuTTY will forward on to the agent. To check that
|
|
this has actually happened, you can try this command on Unix server
|
|
machines:
|
|
|
|
\c unixbox:~$ echo $SSH_AUTH_SOCK
|
|
\c /tmp/ssh-XXNP18Jz/agent.28794
|
|
\c unixbox:~$
|
|
|
|
If the result line comes up blank, agent forwarding has not been
|
|
enabled at all.
|
|
|
|
Now if you run \c{ssh} on the server and use it to connect through
|
|
to another server that accepts one of the keys in Pageant, you
|
|
should be able to log in without a password:
|
|
|
|
\c unixbox:~$ ssh -v otherunixbox
|
|
\c [...]
|
|
\c debug: next auth method to try is publickey
|
|
\c debug: userauth_pubkey_agent: trying agent key my-putty-key
|
|
\c debug: ssh-userauth2 successful: method publickey
|
|
\c [...]
|
|
|
|
If you enable agent forwarding on \e{that} SSH connection as well
|
|
(see the manual for your server-side SSH client to find out how to
|
|
do this), your authentication keys will still be available on the
|
|
next machine you connect to - two SSH connections away from where
|
|
they're actually stored.
|
|
|
|
In addition, if you have a private key on one of the SSH servers,
|
|
you can send it all the way back to Pageant using the local
|
|
\i\c{ssh-add} command:
|
|
|
|
\c unixbox:~$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
|
|
\c Need passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa
|
|
\c Enter passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa:
|
|
\c Identity added: /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa (/home/simon/.ssh/id_rsa)
|
|
\c unixbox:~$
|
|
|
|
and then it's available to every machine that has agent forwarding
|
|
available (not just the ones downstream of the place you added it).
|
|
|
|
\H{pageant-security} Security considerations
|
|
|
|
\I{security risk}Using Pageant for public-key authentication gives you the
|
|
convenience of being able to open multiple SSH sessions without
|
|
having to type a passphrase every time, but also gives you the
|
|
security benefit of never storing a decrypted private key on disk.
|
|
Many people feel this is a good compromise between security and
|
|
convenience.
|
|
|
|
It \e{is} a compromise, however. Holding your decrypted private keys
|
|
in Pageant is better than storing them in easy-to-find disk files,
|
|
but still less secure than not storing them anywhere at all. This is
|
|
for two reasons:
|
|
|
|
\b Windows unfortunately provides no way to protect pieces of memory
|
|
from being written to the system \i{swap file}. So if Pageant is holding
|
|
your private keys for a long period of time, it's possible that
|
|
decrypted private key data may be written to the system swap file,
|
|
and an attacker who gained access to your hard disk later on might
|
|
be able to recover that data. (However, if you stored an unencrypted
|
|
key in a disk file they would \e{certainly} be able to recover it.)
|
|
|
|
\b Although, like most modern operating systems, Windows prevents
|
|
programs from accidentally accessing one another's memory space, it
|
|
does allow programs to access one another's memory space
|
|
deliberately, for special purposes such as debugging. This means
|
|
that if you allow a virus, trojan, or other malicious program on to
|
|
your Windows system while Pageant is running, it could access the
|
|
memory of the Pageant process, extract your decrypted authentication
|
|
keys, and send them back to its master.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, use of agent \e{forwarding} is a security improvement on
|
|
other methods of one-touch authentication, but not perfect. Holding
|
|
your keys in Pageant on your Windows box has a security advantage
|
|
over holding them on the remote server machine itself (either in an
|
|
agent or just unencrypted on disk), because if the server machine
|
|
ever sees your unencrypted private key then the sysadmin or anyone
|
|
who cracks the machine can steal the keys and pretend to be you for
|
|
as long as they want.
|
|
|
|
However, the sysadmin of the server machine can always pretend to be
|
|
you \e{on that machine}. So if you forward your agent to a server
|
|
machine, then the sysadmin of that machine can access the forwarded
|
|
agent connection and request signatures from your private keys, and
|
|
can therefore log in to other machines as you. They can only do this
|
|
to a limited extent - when the agent forwarding disappears they lose
|
|
the ability - but using Pageant doesn't actually \e{prevent} the
|
|
sysadmin (or hackers) on the server from doing this.
|
|
|
|
Therefore, if you don't trust the sysadmin of a server machine, you
|
|
should \e{never} use agent forwarding to that machine. (Of course
|
|
you also shouldn't store private keys on that machine, type
|
|
passphrases into it, or log into other machines from it in any way
|
|
at all; Pageant is hardly unique in this respect.)
|