Updated usage messages for command-line utilities to reflect new options.
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / pageant.but
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e2a197cf 1\versionid $Id: pageant.but,v 1.8 2002/09/11 17:30:36 jacob Exp $
8f1529bc 2
e5b0d077 3\C{pageant} Using Pageant for authentication
4
ecea795f 5\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.general}
6
e5b0d077 7Pageant is an SSH authentication agent. It holds your private keys
8in memory, already decoded, so that you can use them often without
9needing to type a passphrase.
10
e5b0d077 11\H{pageant-start} Getting started with Pageant
12
55ba634a 13Before you run Pageant, you need to have a private key. See
14\k{pubkey} to find out how to generate and use one.
e5b0d077 15
16When you run Pageant, it will put an icon of a computer wearing a
ecea795f 17hat into the System tray. It will then sit and do nothing, until you
18load a private key into it.
e5b0d077 19
20If you click the Pageant icon with the right mouse button, you will
d60c975d 21see a menu. Select \q{View Keys} from this menu. The Pageant main
e5b0d077 22window will appear. (You can also bring this window up by
23double-clicking on the Pageant icon.)
24
25The Pageant window contains a list box. This shows the private keys
26Pageant is holding. When you start Pageant, it has no keys, so the
ecea795f 27list box will be empty. After you add one or more keys, they will
28show up in the list box.
e5b0d077 29
d60c975d 30To add a key to Pageant, press the \q{Add Key} button. Pageant will
e5b0d077 31bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key File}. Find
d60c975d 32your private key file in this dialog, and press \q{Open}.
e5b0d077 33
34Pageant will now load the private key. If the key is protected by a
35passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase. When the
36key has been loaded, it will appear in the list in the Pageant
37window.
38
39Now start PuTTY and open an SSH session to a site that accepts your
40key. PuTTY will notice that Pageant is running, retrieve the key
41automatically from Pageant, and use it to authenticate. You can now
42open as many PuTTY sessions as you like without having to type your
43passphrase again.
44
45When you want to shut down Pageant, click the right button on the
d60c975d 46Pageant icon in the System tray, and select \q{Exit} from the menu.
e5b0d077 47Closing the Pageant main window does \e{not} shut down Pageant.
48
ecea795f 49\H{pageant-mainwin} The Pageant main window
50
51The Pageant main window appears when you left-click on the Pageant
52system tray icon, or alternatively right-click and select \q{View
53Keys} from the menu. You can use it to keep track of what keys are
54currently loaded into Pageant, and to add new ones or remove the
55existing keys.
56
57\S{pageant-mainwin-keylist} The key list box
58
59\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.keylist}
60
61The large list box in the Pageant main window lists the private keys
62that are currently loaded into Pageant. The list might look
63something like this:
64
65\c ssh1 1024 22:c3:68:3b:09:41:36:c3:39:83:91:ae:71:b2:0f:04 key1
66\c ssh-rsa 1023 74:63:08:82:95:75:e1:7c:33:31:bb:cb:00:c0:89:8b key2
67
68For each key, the list box will tell you:
69
70\b The type of the key. Currently, this can be \c{ssh1} (an RSA key
71for use with the SSH v1 protocol), \c{ssh-rsa} (an RSA key for use
72with the SSH v2 protocol), or \c{ssh-dss} (a DSA key for use with
73the SSH v2 protocol).
74
75\b The size (in bits) of the key.
76
77\b The fingerprint for the public key. This should be the same
78fingerprint given by PuTTYgen, and (hopefully) also the same
79fingerprint shown by remote utilities such as \c{ssh-keygen} when
80applied to your \c{authorized_keys} file.
81
82\b The comment attached to the key.
83
84\S{pageant-mainwin-addkey} The \q{Add Key} button
85
86\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.addkey}
87
88To add a key to Pageant by reading it out of a local disk file,
89press the \q{Add Key} button in the Pageant main window, or
90alternatively right-click on the Pageant icon in the system tray and
91select \q{Add Key} from there.
92
93Pageant will bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key
94File}. Find your private key file in this dialog, and press
95\q{Open}. If you want to add more than one key at once, you can
96select multiple files using Shift-click (to select several adjacent
97files) or Ctrl-click (to select non-adjacent files).
98
99Pageant will now load the private key(s). If a key is protected by a
100passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase.
101
102(This is not the only way to add a private key to Pageant. You can
103also add one from a remote system by using agent forwarding; see
104\k{pageant-forward} for details.)
105
106\S{pageant-mainwin-remkey} The \q{Remove Key} button
107
108\cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.remkey}
109
110If you need to remove a key from Pageant, select that key in the
111list box, and press the \q{Remove Key} button. Pageant will remove
112the key from its memory.
113
114You can apply this to keys you added using the \q{Add Key} button,
115or to keys you added remotely using agent forwarding (see
116\k{pageant-forward}); it makes no difference.
117
3a65c351 118\H{pageant-cmdline} The Pageant command line
119
120Pageant can be made to do things automatically when it starts up, by
121specifying instructions on its command line. If you're starting
122Pageant from the Windows GUI, you can arrange this by editing the
123properties of the Windows shortcut that it was started from.
124
125\S{pageant-cmdline-loadkey} Making Pageant automatically load keys
126on startup
127
128Pageant can automatically load one or more private keys when it
129starts up, if you provide them on the Pageant command line. Your
130command line might then look like:
131
132\c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.key d:\secondary.key
133
134If the keys are stored encrypted, Pageant will request the
135passphrases on startup.
136
137\S{pageant-cmdline-command} Making Pageant run another program
138
139You can arrange for Pageant to start another program once it has
140initialised itself and loaded any keys specified on its command
141line. This program (perhaps a PuTTY, or a WinCVS making use of
142Plink, or whatever) will then be able to use the keys Pageant has
143loaded.
144
145You do this by specifying the \c{-c} option followed by the command,
146like this:
147
148\c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.key -c C:\PuTTY\putty.exe
149
e5b0d077 150\H{pageant-forward} Using agent forwarding
151
8f1529bc 152Agent forwarding is a mechanism that allows applications on your SSH
153server machine to talk to the agent on your client machine.
154
155Note that at present, agent forwarding in SSH2 is only available
156when your SSH server is OpenSSH. The \cw{ssh.com} server uses a
157different agent protocol which they have not published. If you would
158like PuTTY to be able to support agent forwarding to an \cw{ssh.com}
159server, please write to \cw{ssh.com} and explain to them that they
160are hurting themselves and their users by keeping their protocol
161secret.
162
163To enable agent forwarding, first start Pageant. Then set up a PuTTY
164SSH session in which \q{Allow agent forwarding} is enabled (see
e2a197cf 165\k{config-ssh-agentfwd}). Open the session as normal. (Alternatively,
166you can use the \c{-A} command line option; see
167\k{using-cmdline-agent} for details.)
8f1529bc 168
169If this has worked, your applications on the server should now have
170access to a Unix domain socket which the SSH server will forward
171back to PuTTY, and PuTTY will forward on to the agent. To check that
172this has actually happened, you can try this command on Unix server
173machines:
174
175\c unixbox:~$ echo $SSH_AUTH_SOCK
176\c /tmp/ssh-XXNP18Jz/agent.28794
177\c unixbox:~$
178
179If the result line comes up blank, agent forwarding has not been
180enabled at all.
181
182Now if you run \c{ssh} on the server and use it to connect through
183to another server that accepts one of the keys in Pageant, you
184should be able to log in without a password:
185
186\c unixbox:~$ ssh -v otherunixbox
187\c [...]
188\c debug: next auth method to try is publickey
189\c debug: userauth_pubkey_agent: trying agent key my-putty-key
190\c debug: ssh-userauth2 successful: method publickey
191\c [...]
192
193If you enable agent forwarding on \e{that} SSH connection as well
194(see the manual for your server-side SSH client to find out how to
195do this), your authentication keys will still be available on the
196next machine you connect to - two SSH connections away from where
197they're actually stored.
198
199In addition, if you have a private key on one of the SSH servers,
200you can send it all the way back to Pageant using the local
201\c{ssh-add} command:
202
203\c unixbox:~$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
204\c Need passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa
205\c Enter passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa:
206\c Identity added: /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa (/home/simon/.ssh/id_rsa)
207\c unixbox:~$
208
209and then it's available to every machine that has agent forwarding
210available (not just the ones downstream of the place you added it).
e5b0d077 211
212\H{pageant-security} Security considerations
213
8f1529bc 214Using Pageant for public-key authentication gives you the
215convenience of being able to open multiple SSH sessions without
216having to type a passphrase every time, but also gives you the
217security benefit of never storing a decrypted private key on disk.
218Many people feel this is a good compromise between security and
219convenience.
220
221It \e{is} a compromise, however. Holding your decrypted private keys
222in Pageant is better than storing them in easy-to-find disk files,
223but still less secure than not storing them anywhere at all. This is
224for two reasons:
225
226\b Windows unfortunately provides no way to protect pieces of memory
227from being written to the system swap file. So if Pageant is holding
228your private keys for a long period of time, it's possible that
229decrypted private key data may be written to the system swap file,
230and an attacker who gained access to your hard disk later on might
231be able to recover that data. (However, if you stored an unencrypted
232key in a disk file they would \e{certainly} be able to recover it.)
233
234\b Although, like most modern operating systems, Windows prevents
235programs from accidentally accessing one another's memory space, it
236does allow programs to access one another's memory space
237deliberately, for special purposes such as debugging. This means
238that if you allow a virus, trojan, or other malicious program on to
239your Windows system while Pageant is running, it could access the
240memory of the Pageant process, extract your decrypted authentication
241keys, and send them back to its master.
242
243Similarly, use of agent \e{forwarding} is a security improvement on
244other methods of one-touch authentication, but not perfect. Holding
245your keys in Pageant on your Windows box has a security advantage
246over holding them on the remote server machine itself (either in an
247agent or just unencrypted on disk), because if the server machine
248ever sees your unencrypted private key then the sysadmin or anyone
249who cracks the machine can steal the keys and pretend to be you for
250as long as they want.
251
252However, the sysadmin of the server machine can always pretend to be
253you \e{on that machine}. So if you forward your agent to a server
254machine, then the sysadmin of that machine can access the forwarded
255agent connection and request signatures from your public keys, and
256can therefore log in to other machines as you. They can only do this
257to a limited extent - when the agent forwarding disappears they lose
258the ability - but using Pageant doesn't actually \e{prevent} the
259sysadmin (or hackers) on the server from doing this.
260
261Therefore, if you don't trust the sysadmin of a server machine, you
262should \e{never} use agent forwarding to that machine. (Of course
263you also shouldn't store private keys on that machine, type
264passphrases into it, or log into other machines from it in any way
265at all; Pageant is hardly unique in this respect.)