SSH-AGENT(1) General Commands Manual SSH-AGENT(1)

ssh-agent
authentication agent

ssh-agent command

ssh-agent is a program to hold authentication private keys. The idea is that ssh-agent is started in the beginning of an X-session or a login session, and all other windows or programs are started as children of the ssh-agent program (the command normally starts X or is the user shell). Programs started under the agent inherit a connection to the agent, and the agent is automatically used for RSA authentication when logging to other machines using ssh(1).

The agent initially does not have any private keys. Keys are added using ssh-add(1). When executed without arguments, ssh-add(1) adds the $HOME/.ssh/identity file. If the identity has a passphrase, ssh-add(1) asks for the passphrase (using a small X11 application if running under X11, or from the terminal if running without X). It then sends the identity to the agent. Several identities can be stored in the agent; the agent can automatically use any of these identities. ssh-add -l displays the identities currently held by the agent.

The idea is that the agent is run in the user's local PC, laptop, or terminal. Authentication data need not be stored on any other machine, and authentication passphrases never go over the network. However, the connection to the agent is forwarded over SSH remote logins, and the user can thus use the privileges given by the identities anywhere in the network in a secure way.

A connection to the agent is inherited by child programs: A unix-domain socket is created (/tmp/ssh-XXXX/agent.<pid>), and the name of this socket is stored in the SSH_AUTH_SOCK environment variable. The socket is made accessible only to the current user. This method is easily abused by root or another instance of the same user.

The agent exits automatically when the command given on the command line terminates.

$HOME/.ssh/identity
Contains the RSA authentication identity of the user. This file should not be readable by anyone but the user. It is possible to specify a passphrase when generating the key; that passphrase will be used to encrypt the private part of this file. This file is not used by ssh-agent but is normally added to the agent using ssh-add(1) at login time.
/tmp/ssh-XXXX/agent.<pid>,
Unix-domain sockets used to contain the connection to the authentication agent. These sockets should only be readable by the owner. The sockets should get automatically removed when the agent exits.

Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>

OpenSSH is a derivative of the original (free) ssh 1.2.12 release, but with bugs removed and newer features re-added. Rapidly after the 1.2.12 release, newer versions bore successively more restrictive licenses. This version of OpenSSH

  • has all components of a restrictive nature (ie. patents, see ssl(8)) directly removed from the source code; any licensed or patented components are chosen from external libraries.
  • has been updated to support ssh protocol 1.5.
  • contains added support for kerberos(8) authentication and ticket passing.
  • supports one-time password authentication with skey(1).

The libraries described in ssl(8) are required for proper operation.

ssh(1), ssh-add(1), ssh-keygen(1), sshd(8), ssl(8)
September 25, 1999 BSD