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OpenSSH has a lot of nice features which let you control how it is used. For example, you can disallow the root account to login, set the port number, protocol version and a lot of other features. This tutorial will show you how to enable certain features for certain hosts, users, groups and addresses with the Match keyword in sshd_config. And as a bonus it also covers the iptables firewall.
Securing sshd
First a few general tips about securing ssh.
- Disable login with username/pasword and use key based authentication.
- Do not allow root to login, limit permissions with sudo or use su.
- Only allow protocol 2, not any of the earlier ones.
- Not a real security measure but makes your logs less dirty: set sshd to a higher port.
Examples
You of course have disabled password authentication and you use public/private key based authentication, right? Buy, you might have that one host which is for whatever reason is not able to use ssh keys. The below config line disables password authentication for everyone, and then it enables it for the IP address 1.2.3.4:
PasswordAuthentication no
### this should be on the bottom of the config file ### Enable password authentication for IP 1.2.3.4 Match Address 1.2.3.4 PasswordAuthentication yes
Or you might have a user which needs to use a graphical application on a server. But all the other users do not have to use that. For example, you might have Matlab for one user. You can install a desktop for them, but you can also let them use X forwarding. The below config allows X forwarding for the user John, but disallows it for everyone else.
X11Forwarding no ### add this to the bottom of the sshd_config Match User John X11Forwarding yes
But lets say John can only use matlab (X-forwarding) from the internal network and you want to X forwarding for every other user, only allowing it from the local 172.16.1.* network, you might want to use this config lines:
X11Forwarding no ### add this to the bottom of the sshd_config Match User John Address 172.16.1.* X11Forwarding yes
And what if you want to allow a few IP addresses and one hostname to login with a password, as root? Note that this is a bad thing to do, you should not allow root to login but use su or sudo, and preferably all users should login with ssh keys.
PaswordAuthentication no PermitRootLogin no ### Add this to the end of the config file Match Address 10.20.30.40,80.90.100.200 Host dispatch.raymii.org PasswordAuthentication Yes PermitRootLogin yes
Restrict access via the firewall
Using iptables is also a good way to restrict access to a few IP addresses. The below example allows the IP addresses 2.3.4.5, 3.4.5.6 and 10.2.3.40 to talk to port 22, and discards all the other traffic.
iptables -I INPUT -s 2.3.4.5 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT iptables -I INPUT -s 3.4.5.6 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT iptables -I INPUT -s 10.2.3.40 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT iptables -I INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 22 -j REJECT
All the options
The available criteria are User, Group, Host, LocalAddress, LocalPort, and Address.
The list below are all the options supported in an SSH Match pattern:
AcceptEnv AllowTcpForwarding AuthorizedKeysFile AuthorizedKeysFile2 Banner ChallengeResponseAuthentication ChallengeResponseAuthentication ClientAliveCountMax ClientAliveInterval GatewayPorts GssAuthentication GssCleanupCreds HostbasedAuthentication HostbasedUsesNameFromPacketOnly IgnoreRhosts IgnoreUserKnownHosts KbdInteractiveAuthentication KerberosAuthentication KerberosGetAFSToken KerberosOrLocalPasswd KerberosTicketCleanup LogFacility LogLevel LoginGraceTime MaxAuthTries PasswordAuthentication PermitEmptyPasswd PermitRootLogin PermitTunnel PermitUserEnvironment PrintLastLog PrintMotd PubkeyAuthentication PubkeyAuthentication RSAAuthentication RhostsRSAAuthentication StrictModes UseLogin UsePAM X11DisplayOffset X11Forwarding X11UseLocalhost XAuthLocation