Author: | Stéphane Martin |
---|
vssh
is a SSH client that uses Hashicorp's vault to authenticate with SSH
certificates.
How it works:
- first of all you need to configure the SSH certificate authority in Vault
(see Vault documentation)
- inject the CA private and public keys into Vault
- configure the target OpenSSH servers to accept keys signed by the CA
- just as with an usual SSH client, specify to vssh
- which server you want to connect to
- witch which remote user
- witch private key to use
- say how to to connect to Vault
- Vault address
- Vault authentication (token, login/password, ...)
- say which SSH signing role to use in Vault
vssh will then
- submit your SSH private key to vault for signing
- fetch the signed SSH certificate from vault
- use the private key and the certificate to authenticate and connect to the remote SSH server
vssh can open an interactive shell on the remote server, or execute a command.
Nothing special. Just copy the binary into your PATH.
The dependencies are vondored using dep. You
do not need it to compile vssh. Just clone in an appropriate directoty (GOROOT)
and run make release
.
mdkir -p ~/go/src/github.com/stephane-martin
cd ~/go/src/github.com/stephane-martin
git clone https://github.com/stephane-martin/vssh
cd vssh
make release
- Clone the repository in an appropriate go directory.
- Install dep and golangci-lint.
- Compile with
make debug
and lint withmake lint
.
vssh can open an interactive SSH session (vssh ssh
), execute a remote
command (vssh ssh
), and download (vssh download
) / upload (vssh upload
)
files using the scp protocol.
Most of command line options can be specified with environnemt variables instead.
Check vssh --help
for details.
The global options are useful for the different vssh commands. They configure the connection to Vault.
Global option | Value Example | Definition |
--vault-addr |
http://127.0.0.1:8200 |
vault connection URL |
--vault-method |
userpass |
vault authentication method [token, userpass, ldap, approle] |
--vault-username |
myvaultuser |
username for vault authentication |
--vault-password |
myvaultpass |
password for vault authentication |
--vault-ssh-role |
myrole |
name of the SSH sign role you have configured in Vault |
--vault-token |
s.lIz3muuaUOZe424j2ZI5GTDK |
token for vault authentication |
--vault-ssh-mount |
ssh-client-signer |
the path to the SSH signer in Vault |
--vault-auth-path |
custompath |
if the Vault authentication method is mounted to a custom path |
vssh [global options] ssh [ssh options] user@host
vssh ssh --help
vssh needs a private key to send to Vault for signature. You can give it:
- a private key that is stored locally on your filesystem with
--identity
- or a private key stored in vault with
--videntity
vssh will ask for a passphrase if the private key is stored in encrypted form.
SSH option | Value Example | Definition |
--identity |
/path/to/id_rsa |
file path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--videntity |
secret/id_rsa_in_vault |
Vault path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--insecure |
do not check the SSH server host key | |
--native |
use the local ssh binary to make the connection |
|
--terminal |
force pseudo-terminal allocation | |
--ssh-port |
22 |
SSH server listen port |
--login |
admin |
alternate way to specify the remote user |
vssh [global options] ssh [ssh options] user@host command
vssh [global options] ssh -t [ssh options] user@host command
Just put the command the execute at the end of the vssh ssh
command line.
If the command is meant to be interactive, then you need to add the -t
flag.
For example, to launch an alternate shell:
vssh ssh -t me@remote zsh
It is also possible to inject some Vault secrets into the remote command environment,
similarly to --envconsul
, with the following flags:
SSH option | Value Example | Definition |
--secret |
secret/path |
path of a secret to read from Vault |
--upcase |
convert environment variable keys to UPPERCASE | |
--prefix |
prefix the environment variable keys with names of secrets |
vssh [global options] download [download options] --target file1 [--target file2...] user@host
vssh download --help
Specify the remote files/directories you want to download with the --target
flag. It can appear multiple times.
Specify the local destination path with the --destination
flag.
The other flags are similar to the vssh ssh
command.
download option | Value Example | Definition |
--identity |
/path/to/id_rsa |
file path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--videntity |
secret/id_rsa_in_vault |
Vault path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--insecure |
do not check the SSH server host key | |
--target |
remotefile |
path to the remote file to be downloaded |
--destination |
/tmp |
local destination path |
--ssh-port |
22 |
SSH server listen port |
--login |
admin |
alternate way to specify the remote user |
--preserve |
preserve file mode, access time and modification time |
vssh [global options] upload [upload options] user@host
vssh upload --help
Specify the local files/directories you want to upload with the --source
flag. It can appear multiple times.
Specify the remote destination path with the --destination
flag.
The other flags are similar to the vssh ssh
command.
download option | Value Example | Definition |
--identity |
/path/to/id_rsa |
file path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--videntity |
secret/id_rsa_in_vault |
Vault path to the SSH private key that should be signed |
--insecure |
do not check the SSH server host key | |
--source |
localfile |
path to the local file to be uploaded |
--destination |
/tmp |
remote destination path |
--ssh-port |
22 |
SSH server listen port |
--login |
admin |
alternate way to specify the remote user |
TODO
Let's assume you have configured a few environment variables, to avoid repetition in the examples.
export VAULT_ADDR=https://vault.example.org:8200
export VAULT_SSH_MOUNT=ssh-client-signer
export VAULT_SIGNING_ROLE=my-vault-ssh-role
With such variables, vssh knowns:
- how to connect to the Vault server instance
- which certificate authority to use in Vault
- which SSH role to use in Vault to produce the certificates
Let's also assume you have generated a SSH private key for your local current user:
ssh-keygen
Open a terminal, then authenticate yourself with Vault:
vault login -method=userpass username=bob
The vault login
command writes the resulting token in ~/.vault_token
.
If you don't specify to vssh how to authenticate to Vault, by default it will
use that token.
You can then SSH to any server that recognizes the Vault CA:
vssh ssh [email protected]
vssh ssh [email protected] ls -al /
vssh ssh -t [email protected] zsh
Now let's say you want to execute a remote command on a server, but some part of the configuration for that command is stored in Vault.
vssh
can work similar to envconsul
:
vssh ssh --secret secret/mysecret [email protected] backupcommand
Locally, vssh
will read the required secret from Vault. Then it opens the SSH
connection. Then the command will be executed, with environment variables
corresponding to the secrets.
So, if secret/mysecret
is something like:
foo=bar ZOG=ZOG
then vssh executes on the remote SSH server:
env foo=bar ZOG=ZOG backupcommand
with the additional --upcase
flag, it becomes:
env FOO=bar ZOG=ZOG backupcommand
or with the additional --prefix
flag it becomes:
env secret_mysecret_foo=bar secret_mysecret_ZOG=ZOG backupcommand
Your remote SSH environment doesn't have to know anything about Vault by itself.
By default vssh uses an internal SSH client implemented in Go.
- Go implementation, so vssh does not need to launch another process.
- Might behave differently compared to the native ssh command.
- Does not read
.ssh/config
. - The signed certificate is not written to the filesystem, it is passed directly to the SSH client in memory.
With --native
, vssh wraps the native ssh
binary. It can be useful it you
wish to enable the native configuration of the SSH client (man 5 ssh_config
).
- there vssh launches a SSH subprocess
- the SSH subprocess will read ssh_config as usual
- to pass the signed certificate to SSH, vssh has to write it to the filesystem (it will be removed at the end of execution)
Very short. After Vault has signed the SSH certificate, vssh uses that certificate immediatly and only once. Every time vssh is executed, another certificate will be created. So in theory, a TTL of a few seconds is just enough.