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How to verify host keys using OpenSSH and DNS
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OpenSSH contains experimental support for verifying host keys using DNS
as described in draft-ietf-secsh-dns-xx.txt. The document contains
very brief instructions on how to test this feature. Configuring DNS
and DNSSEC is out of the scope of this document.
(1) Enable DNS fingerprint support in OpenSSH
configure --with-dns
(2) Generate and publish the DNS RR
To create a DNS resource record (RR) containing a fingerprint of the
public host key, use the following command:
ssh-keygen -r hostname -f keyfile -g
where "hostname" is your fully qualified hostname and "keyfile" is the
file containing the public host key file. If you have multiple keys,
you should generate one RR for each key.
In the example above, ssh-keygen will print the fingerprint in a
generic DNS RR format parsable by most modern name server
implementations. If your nameserver has support for the SSHFP RR, as
defined by the draft, you can omit the -g flag and ssh-keygen will
print a standard RR.
To publish the fingerprint using the DNS you must add the generated RR
to your DNS zone file and sign your zone.
(3) Enable the ssh client to verify host keys using DNS
To enable the ssh client to verify host keys using DNS, you have to
add the following option to the ssh configuration file
($HOME/.ssh/config or /etc/ssh/ssh_config):
VerifyHostKeyDNS yes
Upon connection the client will try to look up the fingerprint RR
using DNS. If the fingerprint received from the DNS server matches
the remote host key, the user will be notified.
Jakob Schlyter
Wesley Griffin
$OpenBSD: README.dns,v 1.1 2003/05/14 18:16:20 jakob Exp $