-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 767
Security protection of various files in Win32 OpenSSH
Various OpenSSH resource files are integral to secure working of both server and client stacks. Here we discuss how to protect these resources, how OpenSSH for Windows enforces permission checks and individual case studies on how to fix any permission related issues.
Improper file permissions will likely result in a broken configuration (OpenSSH fails to work). Here, you'll find icacls based commands to fix such issues.
2 fundamental reasons leading to the differences between how these permission checks work on Unix vs Windows:
- SuperUser on Unix maps to either System (SY) or AdministratorsGroup (AG) on Windows.
- Permission controlling in Windows is more granular than in Unix.
Its important to understand the distinction between "AdministratorsGroup" and an admin user. A logged on admin user would typically run processes in non-elevated mode. Even though an admin user is part of AG, these non-elevated processes do not have authority to access resources that are locked only to AG.
Any misconfigured permissions would manifest as an attention seeking log entry. Ex. if a private key is not protected, you'll see the following:
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
@ WARNING: UNPROTECTED PRIVATE KEY FILE! @
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
Permissions for 'ssh_host_dsa_key' are too open.
Host keys represent host's identity. To prevent unauthorized access to these files, host keys need to be owned by SY or AG. No other user should have access to host key files. Following is a misconfigured host private key because 'otheruser' owns it and has access to the key.
PS C:\>(get-acl .\ssh_host_dsa_key).owner
otheruser
PS C:\>icacls .\ssh_host_dsa_key
ssh_host_dsa_key NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
otheruser:(R)
Steps to fix these permissions
PS C:\>icacls .\ssh_host_dsa_key /setowner system
PS C:\>icacls .\ssh_host_dsa_key /remove otheruser
At this point, you could do the following to replicate these permissions onto other host keys
PS C:\>get-acl .\ssh_host_dsa_key | Set-Acl ssh_host*key
authorized_keys is an user associated file that represents a list of authorized public keys that could be used for (key-based) user authentication. Unauthorized access to this file compromises the associated user's account. This file should not be owned by, nor provide access to any other user. Following is a misconfigured authorized key because
- 'otheruser1' has access to the file (through inheritance)
- 'otheruser2' has access to this file (explicit permission).
PS C:\>(get-acl .\users\thisuser\.ssh\authorized_keys).owner
thisuser
PS C:\>icacls .\users\thisuser\.ssh\authorized_keys
ssh_host_dsa_key BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
thisuser:(F)
otheruser1:(IR)
otheruser2:(R)
Steps to fix these permissions - remove inheritance and inherited permissions
PS C:\>icacls .\users\thisuser\.ssh\authorized_keys /inheritance:r
PS C:\>icacls .\users\thisuser\.ssh\authorized_keys /remove otheruser2
Default location for authorized keys file for users in administrators group is
%programdata%\ssh\administrators_authorized_keys
This file should only be accessible by SYSTEM and Administrators group.
Steps to fix permissions on this file:
PS C:\>icacls administrators_authorized_keys /inheritance:r
PS C:\>icacls administrators_authorized_keys /grant SYSTEM:`(F`)
PS C:\>icacls administrators_authorized_keys /grant BUILTIN\Administrators:`(F`)
User's private keys are user's credentials. To prevent unauthorized access to these files, private keys need to be owned by the user and no other user should have access to user's key files.
User level default ssh_config is located in user's profile (~/.ssh/config). This has similar restrictions as the user's private keys described above.
- MSI Install Instructions
- Script Install Instructions
- Alternative installation using the universal installer
- Retrieving download links for the latest packages