svn commit: r44520 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/security
Benjamin Kaduk
kaduk at MIT.EDU
Thu Apr 10 19:09:17 UTC 2014
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Dru Lavigne wrote:
> Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/security/chapter.xml
> ==============================================================================
> --- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/security/chapter.xml Thu Apr 10 16:57:57 2014 (r44519)
> +++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/security/chapter.xml Thu Apr 10 18:05:32 2014 (r44520)
> @@ -2464,34 +2469,39 @@ racoon_enable="yes"</programlisting>
> <secondary>client</secondary>
> </indexterm>
>
> - <para>To use &man.ssh.1; to connect to a system running
> - &man.sshd.8;, specify the username and host to log
> - into:</para>
> + <para>To log into a <acronym>SSH</acronym> server, use
> + <command>ssh</command> and specify a username that exists on
> + that server and the <acronym>IP</acronym> address or hostname
> + of the server. If this is the first time a connection has
> + been made to the specified server, the user will be prompted
> + to first verify the server's fingerprint:</para>
There are a few cases where the user will not be prompted to verify the
server's fingerprint on the first connection (and also some where the user
will be prompted on not-the-first connection). They are probably uncommon
enough that we don't need to document them, but for the record, the ones I
can think of are:
Successful GSSAPIKeyExchange will avoid the need for a prompt
VerifyHostKeyDNS in ssh_config in combination with SSHFP records from
DNSSEC can be configured to validate the key without prompting the user
If there is a software upgrade on either client or server such that the
negotiated key-exchange algorithm changes (e.g., from RSA to ECDSA), the
user will be re-prompted for the new key, even though an old key for a
different mechanism is saved.
> + <para>Since the fingerprint was already verified for this host,
> + the server's key is automatically checked before prompting for
> + the user's password.</para>
> +
> + <para>The arguments passed to <command>scp</command> are similar to
> + <command>cp</command>. The file or files to copy is the first
It is probably worth noting a glaring discrepancy between scp(1) and
cp(1)'s arguments, here, namely with respect to recursive copies. scp
takes -r, but cp takes -R.
> + argument and the destination to copy to is the second. Since the file
> + is fetched over the network, one or more of the file
> arguments takes the form
> <option>user at host:<path_to_remote_file></option>.</para>
>
[...]
> + <para>Instead of using passwords, a client can be configured
> + to connect to the remote machine
> + using keys instead of
> + passwords. To generate <acronym>DSA</acronym> or
"instead of [using] passwords" is duplicated in this sentence.
-Ben
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