Heeelllooooooooo everybody.
I have SSH working with putty and FileZilla with just password authentication, but I CANNOT for the life of me get SSH keys to work. This is the deal, I have a 12.10 Ubuntu home server with an encrypted home folder. This means that I have to put my Authorized_keys file in /etc/ssh/[my name here].
I generated the public key and private key without passwords with PuTTYgen on my windows 7 computer and named the keys:
RSAprivatekey.ppk
RSApubkey
The keys are 2048 bits. (is that enough?)
Then, I used an USB dongle to copy the public key to the Ubuntu server. So, in my /etc/ssh/[my name here] folder I put the RSApubkey file. This is the ONLY file in here. I actually don't have a file names authorized_keys. Do I need this file?
Next, I changed the sshd_config file to this configuration:
************************************************** *********
# Package generated configuration file
# See the sshd_config(5) manpage for details
# What ports, IPs and protocols we listen for
Port 2222
# Use these options to restrict which interfaces/protocols sshd will bind to
#ListenAddress ::
#ListenAddress 0.0.0.0
Protocol 2
# HostKeys for protocol version 2
HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
#Privilege Separation is turned on for security
UsePrivilegeSeparation yes
# Lifetime and size of ephemeral version 1 server key
KeyRegenerationInterval 3600
ServerKeyBits 2048
# Logging
SyslogFacility AUTH
LogLevel VERBOSE
# Authentication:
LoginGraceTime 120
PermitRootLogin no
AllowUsers [ny name here]
StrictModes yes
RSAAuthentication yes
PubkeyAuthentication yes
AuthorizedKeysFile /etc/ssh/[my name here]/RSApubkey
# Don't read the user's ~/.rhosts and ~/.shosts files
IgnoreRhosts yes
# For this to work you will also need host keys in /etc/ssh_known_hosts
RhostsRSAAuthentication no
# similar for protocol version 2
HostbasedAuthentication no
# Uncomment if you don't trust ~/.ssh/known_hosts for RhostsRSAAuthentication
#IgnoreUserKnownHosts yes
# To enable empty passwords, change to yes (NOT RECOMMENDED)
PermitEmptyPasswords no
# Change to yes to enable challenge-response passwords (beware issues with
# some PAM modules and threads)
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
# Change to no to disable tunnelled clear text passwords
PasswordAuthentication yes
# Kerberos options
#KerberosAuthentication no
#KerberosGetAFSToken no
#KerberosOrLocalPasswd yes
#KerberosTicketCleanup yes
# GSSAPI options
#GSSAPIAuthentication no
#GSSAPICleanupCredentials yes
X11Forwarding yes
X11DisplayOffset 10
PrintMotd no
PrintLastLog yes
TCPKeepAlive yes
#UseLogin no
#MaxStartups 10:30:60
Banner /etc/issue.net
# Allow client to pass locale environment variables
AcceptEnv LANG LC_*
Subsystem sftp internal-sftp
# Set this to 'yes' to enable PAM authentication, account processing,
# and session processing. If this is enabled, PAM authentication will
# be allowed through the ChallengeResponseAuthentication and
# PasswordAuthentication. Depending on your PAM configuration,
# PAM authentication via ChallengeResponseAuthentication may bypass
# the setting of "PermitRootLogin without-password".
# If you just want the PAM account and session checks to run without
# PAM authentication, then enable this but set PasswordAuthentication
# and ChallengeResponseAuthentication to 'no'.
UsePAM no
IgnoreUserKnownHosts no
PasswordAuthentication no
Match group sftponly
ChrootDirectory /home/
X11Forwarding no
AllowTcpForwarding no
ForceCommand internal-sftp
************************************************** ***********
Can anyone help? What am I doing wrong?
Thanks in advance for your help.
BTW, I have read this page and a few others like it: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SSH/OpenSSH/Keys
Bookmarks