Introduce a new checkbox and command-line option to inhibit use of
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / pageant.but
1 \define{versionidpageant} \versionid $Id$
2
3 \C{pageant} Using \i{Pageant} for authentication
4
5 \cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.general}
6
7 Pageant is an SSH \i{authentication agent}. It holds your \i{private key}s
8 in memory, already decoded, so that you can use them often
9 \I{passwordless login}without needing to type a \i{passphrase}.
10
11 \H{pageant-start} Getting started with Pageant
12
13 Before you run Pageant, you need to have a private key in \c{*.\i{PPK}}
14 format. See \k{pubkey} to find out how to generate and use one.
15
16 When you run Pageant, it will put an icon of a computer wearing a
17 hat into the \ii{System tray}. It will then sit and do nothing, until you
18 load a private key into it.
19
20 If you click the Pageant icon with the right mouse button, you will
21 see a menu. Select \q{View Keys} from this menu. The Pageant main
22 window will appear. (You can also bring this window up by
23 double-clicking on the Pageant icon.)
24
25 The Pageant window contains a list box. This shows the private keys
26 Pageant is holding. When you start Pageant, it has no keys, so the
27 list box will be empty. After you add one or more keys, they will
28 show up in the list box.
29
30 To add a key to Pageant, press the \q{Add Key} button. Pageant will
31 bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key File}. Find
32 your private key file in this dialog, and press \q{Open}.
33
34 Pageant will now load the private key. If the key is protected by a
35 passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase. When the
36 key has been loaded, it will appear in the list in the Pageant
37 window.
38
39 Now start PuTTY and open an SSH session to a site that accepts your
40 key. PuTTY will notice that Pageant is running, retrieve the key
41 automatically from Pageant, and use it to authenticate. You can now
42 open as many PuTTY sessions as you like without having to type your
43 passphrase again.
44
45 (PuTTY can be configured not to try to use Pageant, but it will try
46 by default. See \k{config-ssh-tryagent} and
47 \k{using-cmdline-agentauth} for more information.)
48
49 When you want to shut down Pageant, click the right button on the
50 Pageant icon in the System tray, and select \q{Exit} from the menu.
51 Closing the Pageant main window does \e{not} shut down Pageant.
52
53 \H{pageant-mainwin} The Pageant main window
54
55 The Pageant main window appears when you left-click on the Pageant
56 system tray icon, or alternatively right-click and select \q{View
57 Keys} from the menu. You can use it to keep track of what keys are
58 currently loaded into Pageant, and to add new ones or remove the
59 existing keys.
60
61 \S{pageant-mainwin-keylist} The key list box
62
63 \cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.keylist}
64
65 The large list box in the Pageant main window lists the private keys
66 that are currently loaded into Pageant. The list might look
67 something like this:
68
69 \c ssh1 1024 22:c3:68:3b:09:41:36:c3:39:83:91:ae:71:b2:0f:04 k1
70 \c ssh-rsa 1023 74:63:08:82:95:75:e1:7c:33:31:bb:cb:00:c0:89:8b k2
71
72 For each key, the list box will tell you:
73
74 \b The type of the key. Currently, this can be \c{ssh1} (an RSA key
75 for use with the SSH-1 protocol), \c{ssh-rsa} (an RSA key for use
76 with the SSH-2 protocol), or \c{ssh-dss} (a DSA key for use with
77 the SSH-2 protocol).
78
79 \b The size (in bits) of the key.
80
81 \b The \I{key fingerprint}fingerprint for the public key. This should be
82 the same fingerprint given by PuTTYgen, and (hopefully) also the same
83 fingerprint shown by remote utilities such as \i\c{ssh-keygen} when
84 applied to your \c{authorized_keys} file.
85
86 \b The comment attached to the key.
87
88 \S{pageant-mainwin-addkey} The \q{Add Key} button
89
90 \cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.addkey}
91
92 To add a key to Pageant by reading it out of a local disk file,
93 press the \q{Add Key} button in the Pageant main window, or
94 alternatively right-click on the Pageant icon in the system tray and
95 select \q{Add Key} from there.
96
97 Pageant will bring up a file dialog, labelled \q{Select Private Key
98 File}. Find your private key file in this dialog, and press
99 \q{Open}. If you want to add more than one key at once, you can
100 select multiple files using Shift-click (to select several adjacent
101 files) or Ctrl-click (to select non-adjacent files).
102
103 Pageant will now load the private key(s). If a key is protected by a
104 passphrase, Pageant will ask you to type the passphrase.
105
106 (This is not the only way to add a private key to Pageant. You can
107 also add one from a remote system by using agent forwarding; see
108 \k{pageant-forward} for details.)
109
110 \S{pageant-mainwin-remkey} The \q{Remove Key} button
111
112 \cfg{winhelp-topic}{pageant.remkey}
113
114 If you need to remove a key from Pageant, select that key in the
115 list box, and press the \q{Remove Key} button. Pageant will remove
116 the key from its memory.
117
118 You can apply this to keys you added using the \q{Add Key} button,
119 or to keys you added remotely using agent forwarding (see
120 \k{pageant-forward}); it makes no difference.
121
122 \H{pageant-cmdline} The Pageant command line
123
124 Pageant can be made to do things automatically when it starts up, by
125 \I{command-line arguments}specifying instructions on its command line.
126 If you're starting Pageant from the Windows GUI, you can arrange this
127 by editing the properties of the \i{Windows shortcut} that it was
128 started from.
129
130 \S{pageant-cmdline-loadkey} Making Pageant automatically load keys
131 on startup
132
133 Pageant can automatically load one or more private keys when it
134 starts up, if you provide them on the Pageant command line. Your
135 command line might then look like:
136
137 \c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.ppk d:\secondary.ppk
138
139 If the keys are stored encrypted, Pageant will request the
140 passphrases on startup.
141
142 \S{pageant-cmdline-command} Making Pageant run another program
143
144 You can arrange for Pageant to start another program once it has
145 initialised itself and loaded any keys specified on its command
146 line. This program (perhaps a PuTTY, or a WinCVS making use of
147 Plink, or whatever) will then be able to use the keys Pageant has
148 loaded.
149
150 You do this by specifying the \I{-c-pageant}\c{-c} option followed
151 by the command, like this:
152
153 \c C:\PuTTY\pageant.exe d:\main.ppk -c C:\PuTTY\putty.exe
154
155 \H{pageant-forward} Using \i{agent forwarding}
156
157 Agent forwarding is a mechanism that allows applications on your SSH
158 server machine to talk to the agent on your client machine.
159
160 Note that at present, agent forwarding in SSH-2 is only available
161 when your SSH server is \i{OpenSSH}. The \i\cw{ssh.com} server uses a
162 different agent protocol, which PuTTY does not yet support.
163
164 To enable agent forwarding, first start Pageant. Then set up a PuTTY
165 SSH session in which \q{Allow agent forwarding} is enabled (see
166 \k{config-ssh-agentfwd}). Open the session as normal. (Alternatively,
167 you can use the \c{-A} command line option; see
168 \k{using-cmdline-agent} for details.)
169
170 If this has worked, your applications on the server should now have
171 access to a Unix domain socket which the SSH server will forward
172 back to PuTTY, and PuTTY will forward on to the agent. To check that
173 this has actually happened, you can try this command on Unix server
174 machines:
175
176 \c unixbox:~$ echo $SSH_AUTH_SOCK
177 \c /tmp/ssh-XXNP18Jz/agent.28794
178 \c unixbox:~$
179
180 If the result line comes up blank, agent forwarding has not been
181 enabled at all.
182
183 Now if you run \c{ssh} on the server and use it to connect through
184 to another server that accepts one of the keys in Pageant, you
185 should be able to log in without a password:
186
187 \c unixbox:~$ ssh -v otherunixbox
188 \c [...]
189 \c debug: next auth method to try is publickey
190 \c debug: userauth_pubkey_agent: trying agent key my-putty-key
191 \c debug: ssh-userauth2 successful: method publickey
192 \c [...]
193
194 If you enable agent forwarding on \e{that} SSH connection as well
195 (see the manual for your server-side SSH client to find out how to
196 do this), your authentication keys will still be available on the
197 next machine you connect to - two SSH connections away from where
198 they're actually stored.
199
200 In addition, if you have a private key on one of the SSH servers,
201 you can send it all the way back to Pageant using the local
202 \i\c{ssh-add} command:
203
204 \c unixbox:~$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
205 \c Need passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa
206 \c Enter passphrase for /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa:
207 \c Identity added: /home/fred/.ssh/id_rsa (/home/simon/.ssh/id_rsa)
208 \c unixbox:~$
209
210 and then it's available to every machine that has agent forwarding
211 available (not just the ones downstream of the place you added it).
212
213 \H{pageant-security} Security considerations
214
215 \I{security risk}Using Pageant for public-key authentication gives you the
216 convenience of being able to open multiple SSH sessions without
217 having to type a passphrase every time, but also gives you the
218 security benefit of never storing a decrypted private key on disk.
219 Many people feel this is a good compromise between security and
220 convenience.
221
222 It \e{is} a compromise, however. Holding your decrypted private keys
223 in Pageant is better than storing them in easy-to-find disk files,
224 but still less secure than not storing them anywhere at all. This is
225 for two reasons:
226
227 \b Windows unfortunately provides no way to protect pieces of memory
228 from being written to the system \i{swap file}. So if Pageant is holding
229 your private keys for a long period of time, it's possible that
230 decrypted private key data may be written to the system swap file,
231 and an attacker who gained access to your hard disk later on might
232 be able to recover that data. (However, if you stored an unencrypted
233 key in a disk file they would \e{certainly} be able to recover it.)
234
235 \b Although, like most modern operating systems, Windows prevents
236 programs from accidentally accessing one another's memory space, it
237 does allow programs to access one another's memory space
238 deliberately, for special purposes such as debugging. This means
239 that if you allow a virus, trojan, or other malicious program on to
240 your Windows system while Pageant is running, it could access the
241 memory of the Pageant process, extract your decrypted authentication
242 keys, and send them back to its master.
243
244 Similarly, use of agent \e{forwarding} is a security improvement on
245 other methods of one-touch authentication, but not perfect. Holding
246 your keys in Pageant on your Windows box has a security advantage
247 over holding them on the remote server machine itself (either in an
248 agent or just unencrypted on disk), because if the server machine
249 ever sees your unencrypted private key then the sysadmin or anyone
250 who cracks the machine can steal the keys and pretend to be you for
251 as long as they want.
252
253 However, the sysadmin of the server machine can always pretend to be
254 you \e{on that machine}. So if you forward your agent to a server
255 machine, then the sysadmin of that machine can access the forwarded
256 agent connection and request signatures from your private keys, and
257 can therefore log in to other machines as you. They can only do this
258 to a limited extent - when the agent forwarding disappears they lose
259 the ability - but using Pageant doesn't actually \e{prevent} the
260 sysadmin (or hackers) on the server from doing this.
261
262 Therefore, if you don't trust the sysadmin of a server machine, you
263 should \e{never} use agent forwarding to that machine. (Of course
264 you also shouldn't store private keys on that machine, type
265 passphrases into it, or log into other machines from it in any way
266 at all; Pageant is hardly unique in this respect.)