2494
Comment: Client side firewall setting for krb.
|
1686
Make part of member manual
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 1: | Line 1: |
## page was renamed from PasswordlessLogin | |
Line 2: | Line 3: |
Line 5: | Line 5: |
First, you must make sure that your `/etc/krb5.conf` (or, on MacOS, your `/Library/Preferences/edu.mit.Kerberos` file) is sane. All you need to do is make sure that there are NOT entries in there which disable the `dns_lookup_kdc` or `dns_lookup_realm` options (unfortunately Fedora ships with these crippled). If you don't see those options in the file, you're fine. | Then, you must obtain kerberos tickets. If your username is "fred", you would do this by typing |
Line 7: | Line 7: |
Then, you must obtain kerberos tickets. If your username is "fred", you would do this by typing | |
Line 11: | Line 10: |
Line 15: | Line 13: |
Line 21: | Line 20: |
Line 22: | Line 22: |
ssh -o 'GSSAPIAuthentication yes' -o 'GSSAPIDelegateCredentials yes' mire.hcoop.net | ssh -o 'GSSAPIAuthentication yes' -o 'GSSAPIDelegateCredentials yes' fred@mire.hcoop.net |
Line 42: | Line 42: |
== Client side firewall Setting == If you are using a firewall you might want to open it for UDP packets to and from deleuze.hcoop.net:88. Lines for [http://www.netfilter.org/ iptables] saved rules ''might'' look like the following: {{{ [0:0] -A INPUT -s 69.90.123.67 -p udp -m udp --sport 88 --dport 1024:65535 -j ACCEPT }}} {{{ [0:0] -A OUTPUT -d 69.90.123.67 -p udp -m udp --dport 88 --sport 1024:65535 -j ACCEPT }}} Put them before any rules that conflicts them (and before 'COMMIT' line in the saved rules file). |
== If it doesn't work == See TroubleshootingKerberos |
1. How to log in to mire without typing your password
Zeroth, you must have openssh client 4.3 or later. Other versions may work, but we make no guarantees. You will also want the krb5-user package if you are using Debian or Ubuntu.
Then, you must obtain kerberos tickets. If your username is "fred", you would do this by typing
kinit fred@HCOOP.NET
Then type your password when prompted. Note that you MUST capitalize HCOOP.NET and you MUST NOT capitalize your user name. This is important.
Next, make sure you have your tickets. To do this, type
klist
You should see your tickets and their expiration dates.
Last, type
ssh -o 'GSSAPIAuthentication yes' -o 'GSSAPIDelegateCredentials yes' fred@mire.hcoop.net
(GSSAPI is sort of like Kerberos. Don't worry about the difference at this point.)
If that doesn't work, add "-vvv" to the command line and copy and paste the ENTIRE output into an email to hcoop-discuss and we'll tell you what's up.
If you do this a lot, you can include the GSSAPIAuthentication and GSSAPIDelegateCredentials options in your .ssh/config file. But you should NOT turn on GSSAPIDelegateCredentials for arbitrary hosts (make sure you only enable it for HCOOP hosts). Here's what AdamMegacz uses:
Host deleuze.hcoop.net ForwardX11Trusted yes GSSAPIAuthentication yes GSSAPIDelegateCredentials yes User megacz_admin Host mire.hcoop.net ForwardX11Trusted yes GSSAPIAuthentication yes GSSAPIDelegateCredentials yes User megacz_admin