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path: root/.ssh/config.d/0000-all.conf
blob: 242be898228c6f1974d1abe92a5e1eb306e85954 (plain)
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# vim:syntax=sshconfig:ts=4
# in case of no ssh-agent:
#IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
#IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
# ...place that inside an extra .conf file.
SendEnv			LANG LC_* MUTTEXEC
HashKnownHosts	yes
ForwardAgent	yes
ControlMaster	auto
ControlPath		/run/user/%i/ssh/cm-%r@%h:%p

# deprecate ssh-rsa (in favour of rsa-sha2-*, see below) unless openssh itself
# did this already:
PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes -ssh-rsa

# ControlMaster: to use SSH multiplexing with ProxyCommand (e.g. to reach host b through host a)
# Host b
#	Hostname b.example.com
#	ProxyCommand ssh a.example.com -W %h:%p
#	# controlpath, controlmaster are the same as above
# 
# For older SSH daemons: RSA SHA-1 is being quickly deprecated across OSes for various security
# vulnerabilities. If you need to re-enable that (e.g. for hardware like network devices which are
# often prone to vulnerabilities due to slow upgrading), you can re-enable this and you SHOULD do
# this ONLY for specific hosts. (Yes, this ofc also affects clients - which it did on an Arch Linux here.)
# Also see https://www.openssh.com/txt/release-8.2
# In any case you should check whether your device understands rsa-sha2-* signature algorithms. While
# testing this, I found out that "ssh-keygen -trsa" made my keys SHA-1 so far – you might want to change
# that to "-t rsa-sha2-256" or whatever and check whether you can still connect to the RSA requiring hosts.
# If you have a proper naming convention for your devices, you can still easily wildcard this. If you
# don't, you either don't have many devices or you moronically did not think device names through. ;-)
# Host sophos* *-mik-*
# 	PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes +ssh-rsa