Sebastian Kuschel reports that pfd_closing can be called for a socket
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / pubkey.but
CommitLineData
39a938f7 1\define{versionidpubkey} \versionid $Id$
024f5783 2
e5b0d077 3\C{pubkey} Using public keys for SSH authentication
4
421406a4 5\H{pubkey-intro} \ii{Public key authentication} - an introduction
024f5783 6
388f343b 7Public key authentication is an alternative means of identifying
8yourself to a login server, instead of typing a password. It is more
9secure and more flexible, but more difficult to set up.
10
11In conventional password authentication, you prove you are who you
12claim to be by proving that you know the correct password. The only
13way to prove you know the password is to tell the server what you
14think the password is. This means that if the server has been
421406a4 15hacked, or \i\e{spoofed} (see \k{gs-hostkey}), an attacker can learn
388f343b 16your password.
17
421406a4 18Public key authentication solves this problem. You generate a \i\e{key
19pair}, consisting of a \i{public key} (which everybody is allowed to
20know) and a \i{private key} (which you keep secret and do not give to
21anybody). The private key is able to generate \i\e{signatures}.
2f8d6d43 22A signature created using your private key cannot be forged by
388f343b 23anybody who does not have that key; but anybody who has your public
24key can verify that a particular signature is genuine.
25
26So you generate a key pair on your own computer, and you copy the
27public key to the server. Then, when the server asks you to prove
2f8d6d43 28who you are, PuTTY can generate a signature using your private key.
388f343b 29The server can verify that signature (since it has your public key)
30and allow you to log in. Now if the server is hacked or spoofed, the
31attacker does not gain your private key or password; they only gain
32one signature. And signatures cannot be re-used, so they have gained
33nothing.
34
35There is a problem with this: if your private key is stored
36unprotected on your own computer, then anybody who gains access to
37\e{that} will be able to generate signatures as if they were you. So
38they will be able to log in to your server under your account. For
421406a4 39this reason, your private key is usually \i\e{encrypted} when it is
40stored on your local machine, using a \i{passphrase} of your choice. In
388f343b 41order to generate a signature, PuTTY must decrypt the key, so you
42have to type your passphrase.
43
44This can make public-key authentication less convenient than
45password authentication: every time you log in to the server,
46instead of typing a short password, you have to type a longer
421406a4 47passphrase. One solution to this is to use an \i\e{authentication
388f343b 48agent}, a separate program which holds decrypted private keys and
49generates signatures on request. PuTTY's authentication agent is
421406a4 50called \i{Pageant}. When you begin a Windows session, you start Pageant
114a2518 51and load your private key into it (typing your passphrase once). For
2f8d6d43 52the rest of your session, you can start PuTTY any number of times
388f343b 53and Pageant will automatically generate signatures without you
54having to do anything. When you close your Windows session, Pageant
55shuts down, without ever having stored your decrypted private key on
56disk. Many people feel this is a good compromise between security
57and convenience. See \k{pageant} for further details.
e5b0d077 58
421406a4 59There is more than one \i{public-key algorithm} available. The most
60common is \i{RSA}, but others exist, notably \i{DSA} (otherwise known as
0906628e 61DSS), the USA's federal Digital Signature Standard. The key types
62supported by PuTTY are described in \k{puttygen-keytype}.
63
421406a4 64\H{pubkey-puttygen} Using \i{PuTTYgen}, the PuTTY key generator
0906628e 65
9dda6459 66\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.general}
67
421406a4 68PuTTYgen is a key generator. It \I{generating keys}generates pairs of
69public and private keys to be used with PuTTY, PSCP, and Plink, as well
70as the PuTTY authentication agent, Pageant (see \k{pageant}). PuTTYgen
71generates RSA and DSA keys.
0906628e 72
73When you run PuTTYgen you will see a window where you have two
74choices: \q{Generate}, to generate a new public/private key pair, or
75\q{Load} to load in an existing private key.
76
77\S{puttygen-generating} Generating a new key
78
79This is a general outline of the procedure for generating a new key
80pair. The following sections describe the process in more detail.
81
82\b First, you need to select which type of key you want to generate,
83and also select the strength of the key. This is described in more
84detail in \k{puttygen-keytype} and
85\k{puttygen-strength}.
86
87\b Then press the \q{Generate} button, to actually generate the key.
88\K{puttygen-generate} describes this step.
89
90\b Once you have generated the key, select a comment field
91(\k{puttygen-comment}) and a passphrase (\k{puttygen-passphrase}).
92
93\b Now you're ready to save the private key to disk; press the
94\q{Save private key} button. (See \k{puttygen-savepriv}).
95
96Your key pair is now ready for use. You may also want to copy the
97public key to your server, either by copying it out of the \q{Public
98key for pasting into authorized_keys file} box (see
99\k{puttygen-pastekey}), or by using the \q{Save public key} button
100(\k{puttygen-savepub}). However, you don't need to do this
101immediately; if you want, you can load the private key back into
102PuTTYgen later (see \k{puttygen-load}) and the public key will be
103available for copying and pasting again.
5c72ca61 104
12100b9c 105\K{pubkey-gettingready} describes the typical process of configuring
0906628e 106PuTTY to attempt public-key authentication, and configuring your SSH
107server to accept it.
108
109\S{puttygen-keytype} Selecting the type of key
110
111\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.keytype}
112
114a2518 113Before generating a key pair using PuTTYgen, you need to select
0906628e 114which type of key you need. PuTTYgen currently supports three types
115of key:
5c72ca61 116
421406a4 117\b An \i{RSA} key for use with the SSH-1 protocol.
9e55cd45 118
2e85c969 119\b An RSA key for use with the SSH-2 protocol.
9e55cd45 120
421406a4 121\b A \i{DSA} key for use with the SSH-2 protocol.
5c72ca61 122
2e85c969 123The SSH-1 protocol only supports RSA keys; if you will be connecting
124using the SSH-1 protocol, you must select the first key type or your
5c72ca61 125key will be completely useless.
126
2e85c969 127The SSH-2 protocol supports more than one key type. The two types
0906628e 128supported by PuTTY are RSA and DSA.
5c72ca61 129
421406a4 130The PuTTY developers \e{strongly} recommend you use RSA.
131\I{security risk}\i{DSA} has an intrinsic weakness which makes it very
132easy to create a signature which contains enough information to give
133away the \e{private} key!
5c72ca61 134This would allow an attacker to pretend to be you for any number of
135future sessions. PuTTY's implementation has taken very careful
136precautions to avoid this weakness, but we cannot be 100% certain we
137have managed it, and if you have the choice we strongly recommend
138using RSA keys instead.
139
140If you really need to connect to an SSH server which only supports
141DSA, then you probably have no choice but to use DSA. If you do use
142DSA, we recommend you do not use the same key to authenticate with
143more than one server.
144
0906628e 145\S{puttygen-strength} Selecting the size (strength) of the key
024f5783 146
0906628e 147\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.bits}
024f5783 148
0906628e 149The \q{Number of bits} input box allows you to choose the strength
150of the key PuTTYgen will generate.
151
152Currently 1024 bits should be sufficient for most purposes.
153
154\S{puttygen-generate} The \q{Generate} button
155
156\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.generate}
157
158Once you have chosen the type of key you want, and the strength of
159the key, press the \q{Generate} button and PuTTYgen will begin the
160process of actually generating the key.
161
162First, a progress bar will appear and PuTTYgen will ask you to move
163the mouse around to generate randomness. Wave the mouse in circles
164over the blank area in the PuTTYgen window, and the progress bar
165will gradually fill up as PuTTYgen collects enough randomness. You
166don't need to wave the mouse in particularly imaginative patterns
167(although it can't hurt); PuTTYgen will collect enough randomness
168just from the fine detail of \e{exactly} how far the mouse has moved
169each time Windows samples its position.
170
171When the progress bar reaches the end, PuTTYgen will begin creating
172the key. The progress bar will reset to the start, and gradually
173move up again to track the progress of the key generation. It will
174not move evenly, and may occasionally slow down to a stop; this is
175unfortunately unavoidable, because key generation is a random
176process and it is impossible to reliably predict how long it will
177take.
178
179When the key generation is complete, a new set of controls will
180appear in the window to indicate this.
181
421406a4 182\S{puttygen-fingerprint} The \q{\ii{Key fingerprint}} box
024f5783 183
0906628e 184\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.fingerprint}
185
186The \q{Key fingerprint} box shows you a fingerprint value for the
187generated key. This is derived cryptographically from the \e{public}
188key value, so it doesn't need to be kept secret.
189
190The fingerprint value is intended to be cryptographically secure, in
191the sense that it is computationally infeasible for someone to
192invent a second key with the same fingerprint, or to find a key with
193a particular fingerprint. So some utilities, such as the Pageant key
194list box (see \k{pageant-mainwin-keylist}) and the Unix \c{ssh-add}
195utility, will list key fingerprints rather than the whole public key.
196
197\S{puttygen-comment} Setting a comment for your key
198
199\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.comment}
200
201If you have more than one key and use them for different purposes,
202you don't need to memorise the key fingerprints in order to tell
b41cfbb5 203them apart. PuTTYgen allows you to enter a \e{comment} for your key,
0906628e 204which will be displayed whenever PuTTY or Pageant asks you for the
205passphrase.
206
207The default comment format, if you don't specify one, contains the
208key type and the date of generation, such as \c{rsa-key-20011212}.
209Another commonly used approach is to use your name and the name of
210the computer the key will be used on, such as \c{simon@simons-pc}.
211
212To alter the key comment, just type your comment text into the
213\q{Key comment} box before saving the private key. If you want to
214change the comment later, you can load the private key back into
215PuTTYgen, change the comment, and save it again.
216
421406a4 217\S{puttygen-passphrase} Setting a \i{passphrase} for your key
0906628e 218
219\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.passphrase}
220
221The \q{Key passphrase} and \q{Confirm passphrase} boxes allow you to
222choose a passphrase for your key. The passphrase will be used to
421406a4 223\i{encrypt} the key on disk, so you will not be able to use the key
0906628e 224without first entering the passphrase.
225
b41cfbb5 226When you save the key, PuTTYgen will check that the \q{Key passphrase}
0906628e 227and \q{Confirm passphrase} boxes both contain exactly the same
228passphrase, and will refuse to save the key otherwise.
229
230If you leave the passphrase fields blank, the key will be saved
231unencrypted. You should \e{not} do this without good reason; if you
232do, your private key file on disk will be all an attacker needs to
233gain access to any machine configured to accept that key. If you
b21381eb 234want to be able to \I{passwordless login}log in without having to
421406a4 235type a passphrase every time, you should consider using Pageant
236(\k{pageant}) so that your decrypted key is only held in memory
237rather than on disk.
0906628e 238
239Under special circumstances you may genuinely \e{need} to use a key
240with no passphrase; for example, if you need to run an automated
241batch script that needs to make an SSH connection, you can't be
242there to type the passphrase. In this case we recommend you generate
243a special key for each specific batch script (or whatever) that
244needs one, and on the server side you should arrange that each key
245is \e{restricted} so that it can only be used for that specific
246purpose. The documentation for your SSH server should explain how to
247do this (it will probably vary between servers).
248
249Choosing a good passphrase is difficult. Just as you shouldn't use a
250dictionary word as a password because it's easy for an attacker to
8f1529bc 251run through a whole dictionary, you should not use a song lyric,
421406a4 252quotation or other well-known sentence as a passphrase. \i{DiceWare}
eb92e68f 253(\W{http://www.diceware.com/}\cw{www.diceware.com}) recommends using
254at least five words each generated randomly by rolling five dice,
65befd9c 255which gives over 2^64 possible passphrases and is probably not a bad
eb92e68f 256scheme. If you want your passphrase to make grammatical sense, this
257cuts down the possibilities a lot and you should use a longer one as
0906628e 258a result.
259
260\e{Do not forget your passphrase}. There is no way to recover it.
261
262\S{puttygen-savepriv} Saving your private key to a disk file
263
264\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.savepriv}
265
266Once you have generated a key, set a comment field and set a
267passphrase, you are ready to save your private key to disk.
268
269Press the \q{Save private key} button. PuTTYgen will put up a dialog
270box asking you where to save the file. Select a directory, type in a
271file name, and press \q{Save}.
024f5783 272
421406a4 273This file is in PuTTY's native format (\c{*.\i{PPK}}); it is the one you
8cee3b72 274will need to tell PuTTY to use for authentication (see
275\k{config-ssh-privkey}) or tell Pageant to load (see
276\k{pageant-mainwin-addkey}).
024f5783 277
0906628e 278\S{puttygen-savepub} Saving your public key to a disk file
024f5783 279
0906628e 280\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.savepub}
024f5783 281
4b33f610 282RFC 4716 specifies a \I{SSH-2 public key format}standard format for
283storing SSH-2 public keys on disk. Some SSH servers (such as
421406a4 284\i\cw{ssh.com}'s) require a public key in this format in order to accept
0906628e 285authentication with the corresponding private key. (Others, such as
286OpenSSH, use a different format; see \k{puttygen-pastekey}.)
287
2e85c969 288To save your public key in the SSH-2 standard format, press the
0906628e 289\q{Save public key} button in PuTTYgen. PuTTYgen will put up a
290dialog box asking you where to save the file. Select a directory,
291type in a file name, and press \q{Save}.
292
293You will then probably want to copy the public key file to your SSH
294server machine. See \k{pubkey-gettingready} for general instructions
295on configuring public-key authentication once you have generated a
296key.
297
2e85c969 298If you use this option with an SSH-1 key, the file PuTTYgen saves
0906628e 299will contain exactly the same text that appears in the \q{Public key
2e85c969 300for pasting} box. This is the only existing standard for SSH-1
0906628e 301public keys.
302
421406a4 303\S{puttygen-pastekey} \q{Public key for pasting into \i{authorized_keys
304file}}
0906628e 305
306\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.pastekey}
307
2e85c969 308All SSH-1 servers require your public key to be given to it in a
0906628e 309one-line format before it will accept authentication with your
421406a4 310private key. The \i{OpenSSH} server also requires this for SSH-2.
0906628e 311
312The \q{Public key for pasting into authorized_keys file} gives the
313public-key data in the correct one-line format. Typically you will
314want to select the entire contents of the box using the mouse, press
315Ctrl+C to copy it to the clipboard, and then paste the data into a
316PuTTY session which is already connected to the server.
317
318See \k{pubkey-gettingready} for general instructions on configuring
319public-key authentication once you have generated a key.
320
321\S{puttygen-load} Reloading a private key
322
323\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.load}
324
325PuTTYgen allows you to load an existing private key file into
326memory. If you do this, you can then change the passphrase and
327comment before saving it again; you can also make extra copies of
328the public key.
329
330To load an existing key, press the \q{Load} button. PuTTYgen will
331put up a dialog box where you can browse around the file system and
332find your key file. Once you select the file, PuTTYgen will ask you
333for a passphrase (if necessary) and will then display the key
334details in the same way as if it had just generated the key.
335
b723338c 336If you use the Load command to load a foreign key format, it will
337work, but you will see a message box warning you that the key you
338have loaded is not a PuTTY native key. See \k{puttygen-conversions}
339for information about importing foreign key formats.
9d07b2db 340
b723338c 341\S{puttygen-conversions} Dealing with private keys in other formats
9d07b2db 342
b723338c 343\cfg{winhelp-topic}{puttygen.conversions}
9d07b2db 344
2e85c969 345Most SSH-1 clients use a standard format for storing private keys on
9d07b2db 346disk. PuTTY uses this format as well; so if you have generated an
2e85c969 347SSH-1 private key using OpenSSH or \cw{ssh.com}'s client, you can use
9d07b2db 348it with PuTTY, and vice versa.
349
421406a4 350However, SSH-2 private keys have no standard format. \I{OpenSSH private
351key format}OpenSSH and \I{ssh.com private key format}\cw{ssh.com} have
352different formats, and PuTTY's is different again.
9d07b2db 353So a key generated with one client cannot immediately be used with
354another.
355
421406a4 356Using the \I{importing keys}\q{Import} command from the \q{Conversions}
357menu, PuTTYgen can load SSH-2 private keys in OpenSSH's format and
358\cw{ssh.com}'s format. Once you have loaded one of these key types, you
359can then save it back out as a PuTTY-format key (\c{*.\i{PPK}}) so that
360you can use it with the PuTTY suite. The passphrase will be unchanged by this
8cee3b72 361process (unless you deliberately change it). You may want to change
2e85c969 362the key comment before you save the key, since OpenSSH's SSH-2 key
8cee3b72 363format contains no space for a comment and \cw{ssh.com}'s default
364comment format is long and verbose.
b723338c 365
421406a4 366PuTTYgen can also \i{export private keys} in OpenSSH format and in
b723338c 367\cw{ssh.com} format. To do so, select one of the \q{Export} options
368from the \q{Conversions} menu. Exporting a key works exactly like
369saving it (see \k{puttygen-savepriv}) - you need to have typed your
370passphrase in beforehand, and you will be warned if you are about to
371save a key without a passphrase.
372
2e85c969 373Note that since only SSH-2 keys come in different formats, the export
374options are not available if you have generated an SSH-1 key.
9d07b2db 375
0906628e 376\H{pubkey-gettingready} Getting ready for public key authentication
024f5783 377
378Connect to your SSH server using PuTTY with the SSH protocol. When the
379connection succeeds you will be prompted for your user name and
5c72ca61 380password to login. Once logged in, you must configure the server to
381accept your public key for authentication:
382
2e85c969 383\b If your server is using the SSH-1 protocol, you should change
421406a4 384into the \i\c{.ssh} directory and open the file \i\c{authorized_keys}
f21d1674 385with your favourite editor. (You may have to create this file if
386this is the first key you have put in it). Then switch to the
387PuTTYgen window, select all of the text in the \q{Public key for
388pasting into authorized_keys file} box (see \k{puttygen-pastekey}),
389and copy it to the clipboard (\c{Ctrl+C}). Then, switch back to the
390PuTTY window and insert the data into the open file, making sure it
391ends up all on one line. Save the file.
5c72ca61 392
421406a4 393\b If your server is \i{OpenSSH} and is using the SSH-2 protocol, you
0906628e 394should follow the same instructions, except that in earlier versions
395of OpenSSH 2 the file might be called \c{authorized_keys2}. (In
396modern versions the same \c{authorized_keys} file is used for both
2e85c969 397SSH-1 and SSH-2 keys.)
5c72ca61 398
421406a4 399\b If your server is \i\cw{ssh.com}'s product and is using SSH-2, you
6a5316a5 400need to save a \e{public} key file from PuTTYgen (see
421406a4 401\k{puttygen-savepub}), and copy that into the \i\c{.ssh2} directory on
6a5316a5 402the server. Then you should go into that \c{.ssh2} directory, and edit
403(or create) a file called \c{authorization}. In this file you should
404put a line like \c{Key mykey.pub}, with \c{mykey.pub} replaced by the
405name of your key file.
5c72ca61 406
407\b For other SSH server software, you should refer to the manual for
408that server.
409
0906628e 410You may also need to ensure that your home directory, your \c{.ssh}
411directory, and any other files involved (such as
412\c{authorized_keys}, \c{authorized_keys2} or \c{authorization}) are
ae0d43f1 413not group-writable or world-writable. You can typically do this by
414using a command such as
0906628e 415
ae0d43f1 416\c chmod go-w $HOME $HOME/.ssh $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
0906628e 417
418Your server should now be configured to accept authentication using
419your private key. Now you need to configure PuTTY to \e{attempt}
e2a197cf 420authentication using your private key. You can do this in any of
421three ways:
0906628e 422
423\b Select the private key in PuTTY's configuration. See
424\k{config-ssh-privkey} for details.
425
e2a197cf 426\b Specify the key file on the command line with the \c{-i} option.
427See \k{using-cmdline-identity} for details.
428
0906628e 429\b Load the private key into Pageant (see \k{pageant}). In this case
430PuTTY will automatically try to use it for authentication if it can.