@jefferai and I discussed this on Friday. With three fully-documented SSH backends, the page is lengthy, ungreppable, and intimidating. This commit separates the SSH backends into their own pages with as little text changes as possible.
3.6 KiB
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docs | One-Time SSH Passwords (OTP) - SSH Secret Backend | docs-secrets-ssh-one-time-ssh-passwords | The One-Time SSH Password (OTP) SSH secret backend type allows a Vault server to issue a One-Time Password every time a client wants to SSH into a remote host using a helper command on the remote host to perform verification. |
One-Time SSH Passwords
The One-Time SSH Password (OTP) SSH secret backend type allows a Vault server to issue a One-Time Password every time a client wants to SSH into a remote host using a helper command on the remote host to perform verification.
An authenticated client requests credentials from the Vault server and, if authorized, is issued an OTP. When the client establishes an SSH connection to the desired remote host, the OTP used during SSH authentication is received by the Vault helper, which then validates the OTP with the Vault server. The Vault server then deletes this OTP, ensuring that it is only used once.
Since the Vault server is contacted during SSH connection establishment, every login attempt and the correlating Vault lease information is logged to the audit backend.
See Vault-SSH-Helper for details on the helper.
This page will show a quick start for this backend. For detailed documentation
on every path, use vault path-help
after mounting the backend.
Drawbacks
The main concern with the OTP backend type is the remote host's connection to Vault; if compromised, an attacker could spoof the Vault server returning a successful request. This risk can be mitigated by using TLS for the connection to Vault and checking certificate validity; future enhancements to this backend may allow for extra security on top of what TLS provides.
Mount the backend
$ vault mount ssh
Successfully mounted 'ssh' at 'ssh'!
Create a Role
Create a role with the key_type
parameter set to otp
. All of the machines
represented by the role's CIDR list should have helper properly installed and
configured.
$ vault write ssh/roles/otp_key_role \
key_type=otp \
default_user=username \
cidr_list=x.x.x.x/y,m.m.m.m/n
Success! Data written to: ssh/roles/otp_key_role
Create a Credential
Create an OTP credential for an IP of the remote host that belongs to
otp_key_role
.
$ vault write ssh/creds/otp_key_role ip=x.x.x.x
Key Value
lease_id ssh/creds/otp_key_role/73bbf513-9606-4bec-816c-5a2f009765a5
lease_duration 600
lease_renewable false
port 22
username username
ip x.x.x.x
key 2f7e25a2-24c9-4b7b-0d35-27d5e5203a5c
key_type otp
Establish an SSH session
$ ssh username@localhost
Password: <Enter OTP>
username@ip:~$
Automate it!
A single CLI command can be used to create a new OTP and invoke SSH with the correct parameters to connect to the host.
$ vault ssh -role otp_key_role username@x.x.x.x
OTP for the session is `b4d47e1b-4879-5f4e-ce5c-7988d7986f37`
[Note: Install `sshpass` to automate typing in OTP]
Password: <Enter OTP>
The OTP will be entered automatically using sshpass
if it is installed.
$ vault ssh -role otp_key_role -strict-host-key-checking=no username@x.x.x.x
username@<IP of remote host>:~$
Note: sshpass
cannot handle host key checking. Host key checking can be
disabled by setting -strict-host-key-checking=no
.
API
The SSH secret backend has a full HTTP API. Please see the SSH secret backend API for more details.