These are the settings that I use on my servers. You may want to also review the settings that are used at Mozilla.

Basic configuration

There are a few basic things that most admins will already know (and that tiger will warn you about if you forget):

only allow version 2 of the protocol

disable root logins

disable password authentication

This is what /etc/ssh/sshd_config should contain:

HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key HostKey /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key AuthenticationMethods publickey PasswordAuthentication no PermitRootLogin no AuthorizedKeysFile .ssh/authorized_keys

Once you've done that, make sure you have all of the required host keys by running:

ssh-keygen -A

as root.

You may also want to ensure you are using strong ciphers and hash functions:

KexAlgorithms <insert Mozilla list> Ciphers <insert Mozilla list> MACs <insert Mozilla list>

and that you deactivate short Diffie-Hellman moduli:

awk '$5 >= 3071' /etc/ssh/moduli > /etc/ssh/moduli.tmp mv /etc/ssh/moduli.tmp /etc/ssh/moduli

Finally, if you don't need sftp support, Mozilla recommends disabling it, which can be done by commenting out this line:

#Subsystem sftp /usr/lib/openssh/sftp-server

On the other hand, if you do need it, it's generally better to replace it with the internal sftp server:

Subsystem sftp internal-sftp

Whitelist approach to giving users ssh access

To ensure that only a few users have ssh access to the server and that newly created users don't have it enabled by default, create a new group:

addgroup sshuser

and then add the relevant users to it:

adduser francois sshuser

Finally, add this to /etc/ssh/sshd_config :

AllowGroups sshuser

Deterring brute-force (or dictionary) attacks

One way to ban attackers who try to brute-force your ssh server is to install the fail2ban package. It keeps an eye on the ssh log file ( /var/log/auth.log ) and temporarily blocks IP addresses after a number of failed login attempts.

To prevent your own IP addresses from being blocked, add them to /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/local.conf :

[DEFAULT] ignoreip = 127.0.0.1/8 1.2.3.4

Another approach is to hide the ssh service using Single-Packet Authentication. I have fwknop installed on some of my servers and use small wrapper scripts to connect to them.

Restricting shell access

For those users who only need an ssh account on the server in order to transfer files (using scp or rsync ), it's a good idea to restrict their access further. I used to switch these users' shell (via chsh) to a restricted one like rssh, but that project has been abandoned.

I now use a different approach which consists of using an essentially empty chroot for these users and limiting them to internal-sftp by putting the following in /etc/ssh/sshd_config :

Match Group sftponly ForceCommand internal-sftp ChrootDirectory /mnt/data

creating a group:

adduser sftponly

and a base chroot directory:

mkdir -p /mnt/data/home

Note that the base directory, and each parent directory all the way to the root directory, must be owned by root:root (user and group) otherwise you'll see an unhelpful error message like this when you try to connect via sftp:

$ sftp user1@server.example client_loop: send disconnect: Broken pipe

Then for each user, we need to do the following:

adduser user1 sftp-only chsh user1 -s /bin/false mkdir -p /mnt/data/home/user1 chown user1:user1 /mnt/data/home/user1 chmod 700 /mnt/data/home/user1

before restarting the ssh daemon:

systemctl restart sshd.service

Should one of these users attempt to connect via ssh instead of stp, they will see the following:

$ ssh user1@server.example This service allows sftp connections only. Connection to server.example closed.

Restricting authorized keys to certain IP addresses

In addition to listing all of the public keys that are allowed to log into a user account, the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file also allows (as the man page points out) a user to impose a number of restrictions.

Perhaps the most useful option is from which allows a user to restrict the IP addresses which can login using a specific key.

Here's what one of my authorized_keys looks like:

from="192.0.2.2" ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nz...zvCn bot@example

You may also want to include the following options to each entry: no-X11-forwarding , no-user-rc , no-pty , no-agent-forwarding and no-port-forwarding .

Increasing the amount of logging

Ff you run logcheck and would like to whitelist the "Accepted publickey" messages on your server, you'll have to start by deleting the first line of /etc/logcheck/ignore.d.server/sshd . Then you can add an entry for all of the usernames, IP addresses and ssh keys that you expect to see.

Finally, it is also possible to log all commands issued by a specific user over ssh by enabling the pam_tty_audit module in /etc/pam.d/sshd :

session required pam_tty_audit.so enable=francois

However this module is not included in wheezy and has only recently been re-added to Debian.

Identifying stolen keys

One thing I'd love to have is a way to identify a stolen public key. Given the IP restrictions described above, if a public key is stolen and used from a different IP, I will see something like this in /var/log/auth.log :

sshd: Connection from 198.51.100.10 port 39492 sshd: Authentication tried for francois with correct key but not from a permitted host (host=198.51.100.10, ip=198.51.100.10). sshd: Failed publickey for francois from 198.51.100.10 port 39492 ssh2 sshd: Connection closed by 198.51.100.10 [preauth]

So I can get the IP address of the attacker (likely to be a random VPS or a Tor exit node), but unfortunately, the key fingerprints don't appear for failed connections like they do for successful ones. So I don't know which key to revoke.