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author | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2022-06-11 18:39:02 +0200 |
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committer | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2022-06-17 23:39:32 +0200 |
commit | 7f208f68dea828fe02718ca8ce81d5975136cff8 (patch) | |
tree | 94f18e16f3238fd9089454ffb7e4db1ba47ea515 /doc | |
parent | 3e24393e8727984239a48136848fa089f483b7d6 (diff) | |
download | guix-7f208f68dea828fe02718ca8ce81d5975136cff8.tar.gz |
home: Add OpenSSH service.
* gnu/home/services/ssh.scm: New file. * gnu/local.mk (GNU_SYSTEM_MODULES): Add it. * po/guix/POTFILES.in: Add it. * doc/guix.texi (Secure Shell): New section.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 176 |
1 files changed, 175 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index eda0956260..86348fc02c 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -39296,6 +39296,7 @@ services)}. * Shells: Shells Home Services. POSIX shells, Bash, Zsh. * Mcron: Mcron Home Service. Scheduled User's Job Execution. * Shepherd: Shepherd Home Service. Managing User's Daemons. +* SSH: Secure Shell. Setting up the secure shell client. * Desktop: Desktop Home Services. Services for graphical environments. @end menu @c In addition to that Home Services can provide @@ -39616,7 +39617,7 @@ GNU@tie{}mcron, a daemon to run jobs at scheduled times (@pxref{Top,,, mcron, GNU@tie{}mcron}). The information about system's mcron is applicable here (@pxref{Scheduled Job Execution}), the only difference for home services is that they have to be declared in a -@code{home-envirnoment} record instead of an @code{operating-system} +@code{home-environment} record instead of an @code{operating-system} record. @defvr {Scheme Variable} home-mcron-service-type @@ -39684,6 +39685,179 @@ mechanism instead (@pxref{Shepherd Services}). @end table @end deftp +@node Secure Shell +@subsection Secure Shell + +@cindex secure shell client, configuration +@cindex SSH client, configuration +The @uref{https://www.openssh.com, OpenSSH package} includes a client, +the @command{ssh} command, that allows you to connect to remote machines +using the @acronym{SSH, secure shell} protocol. With the @code{(gnu +home services ssh)} module, you can set up OpenSSH so that it works in a +predictable fashion, almost independently of state on the local machine. +To do that, you instantiate @code{home-openssh-service-type} in your +Home configuration, as explained below. + +@defvr {Scheme Variable} home-openssh-service-type +This is the type of the service to set up the OpenSSH client. It takes +care of several things: + +@itemize +@item +providing a @file{~/.ssh/config} file based on your configuration so +that @command{ssh} knows about hosts you regularly connect to and their +associated parameters; + +@item +providing a @file{~/.ssh/authorized_keys}, which lists public keys that +the local SSH server, @command{sshd}, may accept to connect to this user +account; + +@item +optionally providing a @file{~/.ssh/known_hosts} file so that @file{ssh} +can authenticate hosts you connect to. +@end itemize + +Here is a sample configuration you could add to the @code{services} +field of your @code{home-environment}: + +@lisp +(home-openssh-configuration + (hosts (list (openssh-host (name "ci.guix.gnu.org") + (user "charlie")) + (openssh-host (name "chbouib") + (host-name "chbouib.example.org") + (user "supercharlie") + (port 10022)))) + (authorized-keys (list (local-file "alice.pub")))) +@end lisp + +The example above lists two hosts and their parameters. For instance, +running @command{ssh chbouib} will automatically connect to +@code{chbouib.example.org} on port 10022, logging in as user +@samp{supercharlie}. Further, it marks the public key in +@file{alice.pub} as authorized for incoming connections. + +The value associated with a @code{home-openssh-service-type} instance +must be a @code{home-openssh-configuration} record, as describe below. +@end defvr + +@deftp {Data Type} home-openssh-configuration +This is the datatype representing the OpenSSH client and server +configuration in one's home environment. It contains the following +fields: + +@table @asis +@item @code{hosts} (default: @code{'()}) +A list of @code{openssh-host} records specifying host names and +associated connection parameters (see below). This host list goes into +@file{~/.ssh/config}, which @command{ssh} reads at startup. + +@item @code{known-hosts} (default: @code{*unspecified*}) +This must be either: + +@itemize +@item +@code{*unspecified*}, in which case @code{home-openssh-service-type} +leaves it up to @command{ssh} and to the user to maintain the list of +known hosts at @file{~/.ssh/known_hosts}, or + +@item +a list of file-like objects, in which case those are concatenated and +emitted as @file{~/.ssh/known_hosts}. +@end itemize + +The @file{~/.ssh/known_hosts} contains a list of host name/host key +pairs that allow @command{ssh} to authenticate hosts you connect to and +to detect possible impersonation attacks. By default, @command{ssh} +updates it in a @dfn{TOFU, trust-on-first-use} fashion, meaning that it +records the host's key in that file the first time you connect to it. +This behavior is preserved when @code{known-hosts} is set to +@code{*unspecified*}. + +If you instead provide a list of host keys upfront in the +@code{known-hosts} field, your configuration becomes self-contained and +stateless: it can be replicated elsewhere or at another point in time. +Preparing this list can be relatively tedious though, which is why +@code{*unspecified*} is kept as a default. + +@item @code{authorized-keys} (default: @code{'()}) +This must be a list of file-like objects, each of which containing an +SSH public key that should be authorized to connect to this machine. + +Concretely, these files are concatenated and made available as +@file{~/.ssh/authorized_keys}. If an OpenSSH server, @command{sshd}, is +running on this machine, then it @emph{may} take this file into account: +this is what @command{sshd} does by default, but be aware that it can +also be configured to ignore it. +@end table +@end deftp + +@c %start of fragment + +@deftp {Data Type} openssh-host +Available @code{openssh-host} fields are: + +@table @asis +@item @code{name} (type: string) +Name of this host declaration. + +@item @code{host-name} (type: maybe-string) +Host name---e.g., @code{"foo.example.org"} or @code{"192.168.1.2"}. + +@item @code{address-family} (type: address-family) +Address family to use when connecting to this host: one of +@code{AF_INET} (for IPv4 only), @code{AF_INET6} (for IPv6 only), or +@code{*unspecified*} (allowing any address family). + +@item @code{identity-file} (type: maybe-string) +The identity file to use---e.g., @code{"/home/charlie/.ssh/id_ed25519"}. + +@item @code{port} (type: maybe-natural-number) +TCP port number to connect to. + +@item @code{user} (type: maybe-string) +User name on the remote host. + +@item @code{forward-x11?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean) +Whether to forward remote client connections to the local X11 graphical +display. + +@item @code{forward-x11-trusted?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean) +Whether remote X11 clients have full access to the original X11 +graphical display. + +@item @code{forward-agent?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean) +Whether the authentication agent (if any) is forwarded to the remote +machine. + +@item @code{compression?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean) +Whether to compress data in transit. + +@item @code{proxy-command} (type: maybe-string) +The command to use to connect to the server. As an example, a command +to connect via an HTTP proxy at 192.0.2.0 would be: @code{"nc -X connect +-x 192.0.2.0:8080 %h %p"}. + +@item @code{host-key-algorithms} (type: maybe-string-list) +The list of accepted host key algorithms---e.g., +@code{'("ssh-ed25519")}. + +@item @code{accepted-key-types} (type: maybe-string-list) +The list of accepted user public key types. + +@item @code{extra-content} (default: @code{""}) (type: raw-configuration-string) +Extra content appended as-is to this @code{Host} block in +@file{~/.ssh/config}. + +@end table + +@end deftp + + +@c %end of fragment + + @node Desktop Home Services @subsection Desktop Home Services |