NAME
ssh-vulnkey - check blacklist of compromised keys
SYNOPSIS
ssh-vulnkey [-q | -v] file ...
ssh-vulnkey -a
DESCRIPTION
ssh-vulnkey checks a key against a blacklist of compromised keys.
A substantial number of keys are known to have been generated using a
broken version of OpenSSL distributed by Debian which failed to seed its
random number generator correctly. Keys generated using these OpenSSL
versions should be assumed to be compromised. This tool may be useful in
checking for such keys.
Keys that are compromised cannot be repaired; replacements must be
generated using ssh-keygen(1). Make sure to update authorized_keys files
on all systems where compromised keys were permitted to authenticate.
The argument list will be interpreted as a list of paths to public key
files or authorized_keys files. If no suitable file is found at a given
path, ssh-vulnkey will append .pub and retry, in case it was given a
private key file. If no files are given as arguments, ssh-vulnkey will
check ~/.ssh/id_rsa, ~/.ssh/id_dsa, ~/.ssh/identity,
~/.ssh/authorized_keys and ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2, as well as the
system’s host keys if readable.
If “-” is given as an argument, ssh-vulnkey will read from standard
input. This can be used to process output from ssh-keyscan(1), for
example:
$ ssh-keyscan -t rsa remote.example.org | ssh-vulnkey -
Unless the PermitBlacklistedKeys option is used, sshd(8) will reject
attempts to authenticate with keys in the compromised list.
The output from ssh-vulnkey looks like this:
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_key:1: COMPROMISED: RSA1 2048 xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx root@host
/home/user/.ssh/id_dsa:1: Not blacklisted: DSA 1024 xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx /home/user/.ssh/id_dsa.pub
/home/user/.ssh/authorized_keys:3: Unknown (blacklist file not installed): RSA 1024 xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx user@host
Each line is of the following format (any lines beginning with “#” should
be ignored by scripts):
filename:line: status: type size fingerprint comment
It is important to distinguish between the possible values of status:
COMPROMISED
These keys are listed in a blacklist file, normally because their
corresponding private keys are well-known. Replacements must be
generated using ssh-keygen(1).
Not blacklisted
A blacklist file exists for this key type and size, but this key
is not listed in it. Unless there is some particular reason to
believe otherwise, this key may be used safely. (Note that DSA
keys used with the broken version of OpenSSL distributed by
Debian may be compromised in the event that anyone captured a
network trace, even if they were generated with a secure version
of OpenSSL.)
Unknown (blacklist file not installed)
No blacklist file exists for this key type and size. You should
find a suitable published blacklist and install it before
deciding whether this key is safe to use.
The options are as follows:
-a Check keys of all users on the system. You will typically need
to run ssh-vulnkey as root to use this option. For each user,
ssh-vulnkey will check ~/.ssh/id_rsa, ~/.ssh/id_dsa,
~/.ssh/identity, ~/.ssh/authorized_keys and
~/.ssh/authorized_keys2. It will also check the system’s host
keys.
-q Quiet mode. Normally, ssh-vulnkey outputs the fingerprint of
each key scanned, with a description of its status. This option
suppresses that output.
-v Verbose mode. Normally, ssh-vulnkey does not output anything for
keys that are not listed in their corresponding blacklist file
(although it still produces output for keys for which there is no
blacklist file, since their status is unknown). This option
causes ssh-vulnkey to produce output for all keys.
EXIT STATUS
ssh-vulnkey will exit zero if any of the given keys were in the
compromised list, otherwise non-zero.
BLACKLIST FILE FORMAT
The blacklist file may start with comments, on lines starting with “#”.
After these initial comments, it must follow a strict format:
· All the lines must be exactly the same length (20 characters
followed by a newline) and must be in sorted order.
· Each line must consist of the lower-case hexadecimal MD5 key
fingerprint, without colons, and with the first 12 characters
removed (that is, the least significant 80 bits of the
fingerprint).
The key fingerprint may be generated using ssh-keygen(1):
$ ssh-keygen -l -f /path/to/key
This strict format is necessary to allow the blacklist file to be checked
quickly, using a binary-search algorithm.
FILES
~/.ssh/id_rsa
If present, contains the protocol version 2 RSA authentication
identity of the user.
~/.ssh/id_dsa
If present, contains the protocol version 2 DSA authentication
identity of the user.
~/.ssh/identity
If present, contains the protocol version 1 RSA authentication
identity of the user.
~/.ssh/authorized_keys
If present, lists the public keys (RSA/DSA) that can be used for
logging in as this user.
~/.ssh/authorized_keys2
Obsolete name for ~/.ssh/authorized_keys. This file may still be
present on some old systems, but should not be created if it is
missing.
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
If present, contains the protocol version 2 RSA identity of the
system.
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
If present, contains the protocol version 2 DSA identity of the
system.
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_key
If present, contains the protocol version 1 RSA identity of the
system.
/usr/share/ssh/blacklist.TYPE-LENGTH
If present, lists the blacklisted keys of type TYPE (“RSA” or
“DSA”) and bit length LENGTH. The format of this file is
described above. RSA1 keys are converted to RSA before being
checked in the blacklist. Note that the fingerprints of RSA1
keys are computed differently, so you will not be able to find
them in the blacklist by hand.
/etc/ssh/blacklist.TYPE-LENGTH
Same as /usr/share/ssh/blacklist.TYPE-LENGTH, but may be edited
by the system administrator to add new blacklist entries.
SEE ALSO
ssh-keygen(1), sshd(8)
AUTHORS
Colin Watson 〈cjwatson@ubuntu.com〉
Florian Weimer suggested the option to check keys of all users, and the
idea of processing ssh-keyscan(1) output.