forked from epriestley/sshd-vcs
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
livedata/sshd-vcs
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
Patches to OpenSSH to allow it to authorize access to version control systems (like SVN and Git) in a flexible way. This allows you to run a daemon which gives users access to application resources without real system accounts, similar to how GitHub allows access to Git repositories over SSH without creating real system accounts for each user (instead, users upload public SSH keys). If you're just using Git and don't have all that many user accounts, Gitosis is probably a much better solution to this problem (you could also try Gitolite or Gitorious). sshd-vcs is a much more raw solution; while it is more powerful, it is far more difficult to set up. In more detail, the problem this solves is: - "Application" is whatever you're building, like GitHub. "Application Users" are people who use your application, like GitHub users. - "System" is the underlying Lunix system. "System Users" are real user accounts that have UIDs. - You have an arbitrary number of application users (like GitHub users) who need to access some application resource (like Git repositories). You don't want to create system accounts for each user. sshd-vcs allows all the application users to act as a single system user, while using application credentials (instead of system credentials) to authenticate them. - You either want a more flexible configuration than Gitosis provides, or want to support something other than git. Gitosis is a much simpler solution to this problem if it is suitable for your needs (it should be suitable in nearly all cases). Specifically, there are two new config parameters available: - AuthorizedKeysScript: Public keys can now be loaded from an external source instead of ~/.ssh/authorized_keys. - ForceUser: Ignore the login user and always use a specific account. Basically this allows you to set up sshd something like this: - Write a script which accepts an SSH public key on stdin, and produces either a nonzero exit code to deny login, or a zero exit code with an optional option string on stdout to accept login. Suppose this script is called "auth.sh". - Write a script which accepts a user as argv[1], a command from environmental variable SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND, and uses stdin/stdout to communicate with the remote client. Suppose this script is called "serve.sh". You can adapt something like Gitosis to accomplish this, if your backing service is git but you're choosing sshd-vcs for additional flexibility. - Have "auth.sh" emit something like 'command="serve.sh <user>", no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding,no-pty' when it finds a valid public key. - Set AuthorizedKeysScript to "auth.sh". - Create a real system user account like "git" which all users will act as when logged into the system. - Set ForceUser to "git". - Have application users put their public SSH keys into a database. - Now, when users login, sshd invokes "auth.sh" and sends it the public key on stdin. "auth.sh" checks the database and either sees that the key is not present (in which case it exits nonzero), or sees that the key is valid and identifies an application user, in which case it emits 'command="serve.sh <appuser>",...' to stdout and exits 0. sshd now invokes the command, and puts the user's original command in the environmental variable SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND. "serve.sh" runs with the valid user in argv[1]. It can now execute Gitosis, or wrap raw git commands, or whatever else. You should run sshd-vcs on port 22 and run a real copy of sshd on some other port if you need shell access to the box. It is strongly recommended you do not try to run a copy of sshd-vcs as your real sshd. Instead, run sshd-vcs with every possible access setting locked down and real sshd elsewhere. For some very basic examples, see example/. Building ./configure --prefix=/opt/sshd-vcs make Installing sudo make install Once off setup sudo mkdir /var/empty sudo adduser --system --no-create-home --home /var/run/sshd --shell /usr/sbin/nologin sshd sudo apt-get install -y php5 sudo mkdir /opt/sshd-vcs/etc sudo ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /opt/sshd-vcs/etc/ssh_host_rsa_key sudo ssh-keygen -t dsa -f /opt/sshd-vcs/etc/ssh_host_dsa_key Setup paths to auth script in ./example/sshd_config and path to serve.php in auth.php Running sudo /opt/sshd-vcs/sbin/sshd-vcs -f ./example/sshd_config Testing ssh git@127.0.0.1 sshd-vcs is based extensively on prior work: https://github.com/wuputahllc/openssh-for-git http://www.openssh.com/
About
Modified OpenSSH for VCS services
Resources
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published