summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/man/man8/monkeysphere-authentication.8
blob: 361822d4382b9fe6bb742c50a3a2868a31c79e26 (plain)
  1. .TH MONKEYSPHERE-SERVER "8" "June 2008" "monkeysphere" "User Commands"
  2. .SH NAME
  3. monkeysphere-authentication \- Monkeysphere authentication admin tool.
  4. .SH SYNOPSIS
  5. .B monkeysphere-authentication \fIsubcommand\fP [\fIargs\fP]
  6. .br
  7. .B monkeysphere-authentication expert \fIexpert-subcommand\fP [\fIargs\fP]
  8. .SH DESCRIPTION
  9. \fBMonkeysphere\fP is a framework to leverage the OpenPGP web of trust for
  10. OpenSSH authentication. OpenPGP keys are tracked via GnuPG, and added to the
  11. authorized_keys and known_hosts files used by OpenSSH for connection
  12. authentication.
  13. \fBmonkeysphere-authentication\fP is a Monkeysphere server admin utility.
  14. .SH SUBCOMMANDS
  15. \fBmonkeysphere-authentication\fP takes various subcommands:
  16. .TP
  17. .B update-users [ACCOUNT]...
  18. Rebuild the monkeysphere-controlled authorized_keys files. For each
  19. specified account, the user ID's listed in the account's
  20. authorized_user_ids file are processed. For each user ID, gpg will be
  21. queried for keys associated with that user ID, optionally querying a
  22. keyserver. If an acceptable key is found (see KEY ACCEPTABILITY in
  23. monkeysphere(7)), the key is added to the account's
  24. monkeysphere-controlled authorized_keys file. If the
  25. RAW_AUTHORIZED_KEYS variable is set, then a separate authorized_keys
  26. file (usually ~USER/.ssh/authorized_keys) is appended to the
  27. monkeysphere-controlled authorized_keys file. If no accounts are
  28. specified, then all accounts on the system are processed. `u' may be
  29. used in place of `update-users'.
  30. .TP
  31. .B add-id-certifier KEYID|FILE
  32. Instruct system to trust user identity certifications made by KEYID.
  33. The key ID will be loaded from the keyserver. A file may be loaded
  34. instead of pulling the key from the keyserver by specifying the path
  35. to the file as the argument, or by specifying `-` to load from stdin.
  36. Using the `-n' or `--domain' option allows you to indicate that you
  37. only trust the given KEYID to make identifications within a specific
  38. domain (e.g. "trust KEYID to certify user identities within the
  39. @example.org domain"). A certifier trust level can be specified with
  40. the `-t' or `--trust' option (possible values are `marginal' and
  41. `full' (default is `full')). A certifier trust depth can be specified
  42. with the `-d' or `--depth' option (default is 1). `c+' may be used in
  43. place of `add-id-certifier'.
  44. .TP
  45. .B remove-id-certifier KEYID
  46. Instruct system to ignore user identity certifications made by KEYID.
  47. `c-' may be used in place of `remove-id-certifier'.
  48. .TP
  49. .B list-id-certifiers
  50. List key IDs trusted by the system to certify user identities. `c'
  51. may be used in place of `list-id-certifiers'.
  52. .TP
  53. .B help
  54. Output a brief usage summary. `h' or `?' may be used in place of
  55. `help'.
  56. .TP
  57. .B version
  58. show version number
  59. Other commands:
  60. .TP
  61. .B setup
  62. Setup the server for Monkeysphere user authentication. This command
  63. is idempotent and run automatically by the other commands, and should
  64. therefore not usually need to be run manually. `s' may be used in
  65. place of `setup'.
  66. .TP
  67. .B diagnostics
  68. Review the state of the server with respect to authentication. `d'
  69. may be used in place of `diagnostics'.
  70. .TP
  71. .B gpg-cmd
  72. Execute a gpg command, as the monkeysphere user, on the monkeysphere
  73. authentication "sphere" keyring. This takes a single argument
  74. (multiple gpg arguments need to be quoted). Use this command with
  75. caution, as modifying the authentication sphere keyring can affect ssh
  76. user authentication.
  77. .SH SETUP USER AUTHENTICATION
  78. If the server will handle user authentication through
  79. monkeysphere-generated authorized_keys files, the server must be told
  80. which keys will act as identity certifiers. This is done with the
  81. \fBadd-id-certifier\fP command:
  82. $ monkeysphere-authentication add-id-certifier KEYID
  83. where KEYID is the key ID of the server admin, or whoever's
  84. certifications should be acceptable to the system for the purposes of
  85. authenticating remote users. You can run this command multiple times
  86. to indicate that multiple certifiers are trusted. You may also
  87. specify a filename instead of a key ID, as long as the file contains a
  88. single OpenPGP public key. Certifiers can be removed with the
  89. \fBremove-id-certifier\fP command, and listed with the
  90. \fBlist-id-certifiers\fP command.
  91. Remote users will then be granted access to a local account based on
  92. the appropriately-signed and valid keys associated with user IDs
  93. listed in that account's authorized_user_ids file. By default, the
  94. authorized_user_ids file for an account is
  95. ~/.monkeysphere/authorized_user_ids. This can be changed in the
  96. monkeysphere-authentication.conf file.
  97. The \fBupdate-users\fP command can then be used to generate
  98. authorized_keys file for local accounts based on the authorized user
  99. IDs listed in the account's authorized_user_ids file:
  100. $ monkeysphere-authentication update-users USER
  101. Not specifying USER will cause all accounts on the system to updated.
  102. sshd can then use these monkeysphere generated authorized_keys files
  103. to grant access to user accounts for remote users. You must also tell
  104. sshd to look at the monkeysphere-generated authorized_keys file for
  105. user authentication by setting the following in the sshd_config:
  106. AuthorizedKeysFile /var/lib/monkeysphere/authentication/authorized_keys/%u
  107. It is recommended to add "monkeysphere-authentication update-users" to a
  108. system crontab, so that user keys are kept up-to-date, and key
  109. revocations and expirations can be processed in a timely manner.
  110. .SH ENVIRONMENT
  111. The following environment variables will override those specified in
  112. the config file (defaults in parentheses):
  113. .TP
  114. MONKEYSPHERE_MONKEYSPHERE_USER
  115. User to control authentication keychain. (monkeysphere)
  116. .TP
  117. MONKEYSPHERE_LOG_LEVEL
  118. Set the log level. Can be SILENT, ERROR, INFO, VERBOSE, DEBUG, in
  119. increasing order of verbosity. (INFO)
  120. .TP
  121. MONKEYSPHERE_KEYSERVER
  122. OpenPGP keyserver to use. (pool.sks-keyservers.net)
  123. .TP
  124. MONKEYSPHERE_AUTHORIZED_USER_IDS
  125. Path to user's authorized_user_ids file. %h gets replaced with the
  126. user's homedir, %u with the username.
  127. (%h/.monkeysphere/authorized_user_ids)
  128. .TP
  129. MONKEYSPHERE_RAW_AUTHORIZED_KEYS
  130. Path to regular ssh-style authorized_keys file to append to
  131. monkeysphere-generated authorized_keys. `none' means not to add any
  132. raw authorized_keys file. %h gets replaced with the user's homedir,
  133. %u with the username. (%h/.ssh/authorized_keys)
  134. .TP
  135. MONKEYSPHERE_PROMPT
  136. If set to `false', never prompt the user for confirmation. (true)
  137. .SH FILES
  138. .TP
  139. /etc/monkeysphere/monkeysphere-authentication.conf
  140. System monkeysphere-authentication config file.
  141. .TP
  142. /var/lib/monkeysphere/authorized_keys/USER
  143. Monkeysphere-generated user authorized_keys files.
  144. .SH AUTHOR
  145. Written by:
  146. Jameson Rollins <jrollins@fifthhorseman.net>,
  147. Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>,
  148. Matthew Goins <mjgoins@openflows.com>
  149. .SH SEE ALSO
  150. .BR monkeysphere (1),
  151. .BR monkeysphere-host (8),
  152. .BR monkeysphere (7),
  153. .BR gpg (1),
  154. .BR ssh (1)