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Network Security Secure-Shell
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RE: Multiple authorized_keys2 files or how to achieve same effect.

Subject: RE: Multiple authorized_keys2 files or how to achieve same effect.
Date: Mon, 5 Sep 2005 10:18:12 +0800
If you are looking for docs on building Centralized LDAP Authentication
with host access (netgroups) control, and user command execution
(sudoers) control, you may find my HOWTOs useful, or not at all.

http://web.singnet.com.sg/~garyttt/

Gary

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeremy Eder [mailto:jeder@invision.net] 
Sent: Friday, September 02, 2005 9:53 PM
To: secureshell@securityfocus.com
Subject: RE: Multiple authorized_keys2 files or how to achieve same
effect.


Thank you Jayson and Johan for your suggestions, they are exactly what I
was looking for.

I will investigate both LDAp/MySQL with PAM and freeradius.

Are there any docs on your technique, Jayson ?

Other than man pages and freeradius.org... ? 


Sincerely,

Jeremy Eder

-----Original Message-----
From: Jayson Anderson [mailto:sonick@sonick.com] 
Sent: Friday, September 02, 2005 12:10 AM
To: secureshell@securityfocus.com; Jeremy Eder
Subject: Re: Multiple authorized_keys2 files or how to achieve same
effect.

Good recommendations so far, but I can't help but think with hundreds of
hosts, and granularity of control spanning one-off host, global host,
/etc/sudoers and more than you've not listed and more that you've not
yet encountered: It's time to think about Radius.  

I've scaled freeradius to levels that hurt a lot of vendor's feelings,
on $500 worth of DIY server hardware to boot; I enthusiastically
recommend it. Performance alone it is the champ, without even mentioning
the obnoxious amount of functionality options beyond most if not all
commercial offerings. I definetely think freeradius would make you
keyboard-smashing mad during planning and integration, and once
integrated will slash an unbelievable amount of minutia and trouble out
of your yearly operations tasks in addition to adding incredible amounts
of applied and available user control. Better yet, all user activity
[licit and otherwise] will become centralized where you can more
effectively manage it (let alone even NOTICE it vs. your current
arrangement). Just make sure to become a stickler about putting AAA on
everything that even LOOKS at your networks. The day I resigned from INS
(version 1.0) was shortly after the day they placed me in a
radius-enabled, deployment-lax environment and said 'cull it all and fix
it'. 

Unless I misunderstood your obstacles which I sometimes do in grand
fashion, I think it's time to bang out a couple freeradius servers once
and for all; then enable AAA on everything with unwavering completeness.
Massaging the groups and configs will evolve naturally over time; no
need to perfect access to every single binary prior to rollout. 

Best Regards,
Jayson


On Thu, 2005-09-01 at 10:49 -0400, Jeremy Eder wrote:
My situation:  multiple admins needing root on hundreds of boxes.

Currently:  using pubkeyauth on openssh (mostly bsd but linux and 
solaris too)

Goal:  ease add/remove of credentials from machines (one-off or
globally
in our network)

Each server may have a completely different (and still valid) list of 
users in the authkeys2 file.

Instead of getting messy with sed/cat/grep...I began to research if it

was possible to have multiple authorized_keys2 files, or at least be 
able to put directives to separate public key files in the global 
authorized_keys2.  This would make the management of my setup much 
easier...

Something like...

AuthorizedKeysFile .ssh/authorized_keys2
AuthorizedKeysFile .ssh/user1
AuthorizedKeysFile /ssh/user2

Etc etc...

Then I can control access to the box simply by creating or deleting
that
file and one line in the conf.

Am I looking in the right direction ?  I haven't yet discovered a way
to
do this under openssh; however .ssh/authorization under ssh2 seems to 
provide the exact feature I am thinking of.  Not an option...

Is this possible ?  Is there some other practice that is more accepted

that I'm not aware of ?

Thanks for your help.

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