1.\" $OpenBSD: ssh-keygen.1,v 1.160 2019/05/20 06:01:59 jmc Exp $ 2.\" 3.\" Author: Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi> 4.\" Copyright (c) 1995 Tatu Ylonen <ylo@cs.hut.fi>, Espoo, Finland 5.\" All rights reserved 6.\" 7.\" As far as I am concerned, the code I have written for this software 8.\" can be used freely for any purpose. Any derived versions of this 9.\" software must be clearly marked as such, and if the derived work is 10.\" incompatible with the protocol description in the RFC file, it must be 11.\" called by a name other than "ssh" or "Secure Shell". 12.\" 13.\" 14.\" Copyright (c) 1999,2000 Markus Friedl. All rights reserved. 15.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Aaron Campbell. All rights reserved. 16.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Theo de Raadt. All rights reserved. 17.\" 18.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 19.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 20.\" are met: 21.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 22.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 23.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 24.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 25.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 26.\" 27.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR 28.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES 29.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. 30.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, 31.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT 32.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 33.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 34.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 35.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF 36.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 37.\" 38.Dd $Mdocdate: May 20 2019 $ 39.Dt SSH-KEYGEN 1 40.Os 41.Sh NAME 42.Nm ssh-keygen 43.Nd authentication key generation, management and conversion 44.Sh SYNOPSIS 45.Bk -words 46.Nm ssh-keygen 47.Op Fl q 48.Op Fl b Ar bits 49.Op Fl t Cm dsa | ecdsa | ed25519 | rsa 50.Op Fl N Ar new_passphrase 51.Op Fl C Ar comment 52.Op Fl f Ar output_keyfile 53.Op Fl m Ar format 54.Nm ssh-keygen 55.Fl p 56.Op Fl P Ar old_passphrase 57.Op Fl N Ar new_passphrase 58.Op Fl f Ar keyfile 59.Op Fl m Ar format 60.Nm ssh-keygen 61.Fl i 62.Op Fl m Ar key_format 63.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 64.Nm ssh-keygen 65.Fl e 66.Op Fl m Ar key_format 67.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 68.Nm ssh-keygen 69.Fl y 70.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 71.Nm ssh-keygen 72.Fl c 73.Op Fl P Ar passphrase 74.Op Fl C Ar comment 75.Op Fl f Ar keyfile 76.Nm ssh-keygen 77.Fl l 78.Op Fl v 79.Op Fl E Ar fingerprint_hash 80.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 81.Nm ssh-keygen 82.Fl B 83.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 84.Nm ssh-keygen 85.Fl D Ar pkcs11 86.Nm ssh-keygen 87.Fl F Ar hostname 88.Op Fl f Ar known_hosts_file 89.Op Fl l 90.Nm ssh-keygen 91.Fl H 92.Op Fl f Ar known_hosts_file 93.Nm ssh-keygen 94.Fl R Ar hostname 95.Op Fl f Ar known_hosts_file 96.Nm ssh-keygen 97.Fl r Ar hostname 98.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 99.Op Fl g 100.Nm ssh-keygen 101.Fl G Ar output_file 102.Op Fl v 103.Op Fl b Ar bits 104.Op Fl M Ar memory 105.Op Fl S Ar start_point 106.Nm ssh-keygen 107.Fl T Ar output_file 108.Fl f Ar input_file 109.Op Fl v 110.Op Fl a Ar rounds 111.Op Fl J Ar num_lines 112.Op Fl j Ar start_line 113.Op Fl K Ar checkpt 114.Op Fl W Ar generator 115.Nm ssh-keygen 116.Fl s Ar ca_key 117.Fl I Ar certificate_identity 118.Op Fl h 119.Op Fl U 120.Op Fl D Ar pkcs11_provider 121.Op Fl n Ar principals 122.Op Fl O Ar option 123.Op Fl V Ar validity_interval 124.Op Fl z Ar serial_number 125.Ar 126.Nm ssh-keygen 127.Fl L 128.Op Fl f Ar input_keyfile 129.Nm ssh-keygen 130.Fl A 131.Op Fl f Ar prefix_path 132.Nm ssh-keygen 133.Fl k 134.Fl f Ar krl_file 135.Op Fl u 136.Op Fl s Ar ca_public 137.Op Fl z Ar version_number 138.Ar 139.Nm ssh-keygen 140.Fl Q 141.Fl f Ar krl_file 142.Ar 143.Ek 144.Sh DESCRIPTION 145.Nm 146generates, manages and converts authentication keys for 147.Xr ssh 1 . 148.Nm 149can create keys for use by SSH protocol version 2. 150.Pp 151The type of key to be generated is specified with the 152.Fl t 153option. 154If invoked without any arguments, 155.Nm 156will generate an RSA key. 157.Pp 158.Nm 159is also used to generate groups for use in Diffie-Hellman group 160exchange (DH-GEX). 161See the 162.Sx MODULI GENERATION 163section for details. 164.Pp 165Finally, 166.Nm 167can be used to generate and update Key Revocation Lists, and to test whether 168given keys have been revoked by one. 169See the 170.Sx KEY REVOCATION LISTS 171section for details. 172.Pp 173Normally each user wishing to use SSH 174with public key authentication runs this once to create the authentication 175key in 176.Pa ~/.ssh/id_dsa , 177.Pa ~/.ssh/id_ecdsa , 178.Pa ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 179or 180.Pa ~/.ssh/id_rsa . 181Additionally, the system administrator may use this to generate host keys, 182as seen in 183.Pa /etc/rc . 184.Pp 185Normally this program generates the key and asks for a file in which 186to store the private key. 187The public key is stored in a file with the same name but 188.Dq .pub 189appended. 190The program also asks for a passphrase. 191The passphrase may be empty to indicate no passphrase 192(host keys must have an empty passphrase), or it may be a string of 193arbitrary length. 194A passphrase is similar to a password, except it can be a phrase with a 195series of words, punctuation, numbers, whitespace, or any string of 196characters you want. 197Good passphrases are 10-30 characters long, are 198not simple sentences or otherwise easily guessable (English 199prose has only 1-2 bits of entropy per character, and provides very bad 200passphrases), and contain a mix of upper and lowercase letters, 201numbers, and non-alphanumeric characters. 202The passphrase can be changed later by using the 203.Fl p 204option. 205.Pp 206There is no way to recover a lost passphrase. 207If the passphrase is lost or forgotten, a new key must be generated 208and the corresponding public key copied to other machines. 209.Pp 210.Nm 211will by default write keys in an OpenSSH-specific format. 212This format is preferred as it offers better protection for 213keys at rest as well as allowing storage of key comments within 214the private key file itself. 215The key comment may be useful to help identify the key. 216The comment is initialized to 217.Dq user@host 218when the key is created, but can be changed using the 219.Fl c 220option. 221.Pp 222It is still possible for 223.Nm 224to write the previously-used PEM format private keys using the 225.Fl m 226flag. 227This may be used when generating new keys, and existing new-format 228keys may be converted using this option in conjunction with the 229.Fl p 230(change passphrase) flag. 231.Pp 232After a key is generated, instructions below detail where the keys 233should be placed to be activated. 234.Pp 235The options are as follows: 236.Bl -tag -width Ds 237.It Fl A 238For each of the key types (rsa, dsa, ecdsa and ed25519) 239for which host keys 240do not exist, generate the host keys with the default key file path, 241an empty passphrase, default bits for the key type, and default comment. 242If 243.Fl f 244has also been specified, its argument is used as a prefix to the 245default path for the resulting host key files. 246This is used by 247.Pa /etc/rc 248to generate new host keys. 249.It Fl a Ar rounds 250When saving a private key this option specifies the number of KDF 251(key derivation function) rounds used. 252Higher numbers result in slower passphrase verification and increased 253resistance to brute-force password cracking (should the keys be stolen). 254.Pp 255When screening DH-GEX candidates (using the 256.Fl T 257command). 258This option specifies the number of primality tests to perform. 259.It Fl B 260Show the bubblebabble digest of specified private or public key file. 261.It Fl b Ar bits 262Specifies the number of bits in the key to create. 263For RSA keys, the minimum size is 1024 bits and the default is 3072 bits. 264Generally, 3072 bits is considered sufficient. 265DSA keys must be exactly 1024 bits as specified by FIPS 186-2. 266For ECDSA keys, the 267.Fl b 268flag determines the key length by selecting from one of three elliptic 269curve sizes: 256, 384 or 521 bits. 270Attempting to use bit lengths other than these three values for ECDSA keys 271will fail. 272Ed25519 keys have a fixed length and the 273.Fl b 274flag will be ignored. 275.It Fl C Ar comment 276Provides a new comment. 277.It Fl c 278Requests changing the comment in the private and public key files. 279The program will prompt for the file containing the private keys, for 280the passphrase if the key has one, and for the new comment. 281.It Fl D Ar pkcs11 282Download the public keys provided by the PKCS#11 shared library 283.Ar pkcs11 . 284When used in combination with 285.Fl s , 286this option indicates that a CA key resides in a PKCS#11 token (see the 287.Sx CERTIFICATES 288section for details). 289.It Fl E Ar fingerprint_hash 290Specifies the hash algorithm used when displaying key fingerprints. 291Valid options are: 292.Dq md5 293and 294.Dq sha256 . 295The default is 296.Dq sha256 . 297.It Fl e 298This option will read a private or public OpenSSH key file and 299print to stdout a public key in one of the formats specified by the 300.Fl m 301option. 302The default export format is 303.Dq RFC4716 . 304This option allows exporting OpenSSH keys for use by other programs, including 305several commercial SSH implementations. 306.It Fl F Ar hostname | [hostname]:port 307Search for the specified 308.Ar hostname 309(with optional port number) 310in a 311.Pa known_hosts 312file, listing any occurrences found. 313This option is useful to find hashed host names or addresses and may also be 314used in conjunction with the 315.Fl H 316option to print found keys in a hashed format. 317.It Fl f Ar filename 318Specifies the filename of the key file. 319.It Fl G Ar output_file 320Generate candidate primes for DH-GEX. 321These primes must be screened for 322safety (using the 323.Fl T 324option) before use. 325.It Fl g 326Use generic DNS format when printing fingerprint resource records using the 327.Fl r 328command. 329.It Fl H 330Hash a 331.Pa known_hosts 332file. 333This replaces all hostnames and addresses with hashed representations 334within the specified file; the original content is moved to a file with 335a .old suffix. 336These hashes may be used normally by 337.Nm ssh 338and 339.Nm sshd , 340but they do not reveal identifying information should the file's contents 341be disclosed. 342This option will not modify existing hashed hostnames and is therefore safe 343to use on files that mix hashed and non-hashed names. 344.It Fl h 345When signing a key, create a host certificate instead of a user 346certificate. 347Please see the 348.Sx CERTIFICATES 349section for details. 350.It Fl I Ar certificate_identity 351Specify the key identity when signing a public key. 352Please see the 353.Sx CERTIFICATES 354section for details. 355.It Fl i 356This option will read an unencrypted private (or public) key file 357in the format specified by the 358.Fl m 359option and print an OpenSSH compatible private 360(or public) key to stdout. 361This option allows importing keys from other software, including several 362commercial SSH implementations. 363The default import format is 364.Dq RFC4716 . 365.It Fl J Ar num_lines 366Exit after screening the specified number of lines 367while performing DH candidate screening using the 368.Fl T 369option. 370.It Fl j Ar start_line 371Start screening at the specified line number 372while performing DH candidate screening using the 373.Fl T 374option. 375.It Fl K Ar checkpt 376Write the last line processed to the file 377.Ar checkpt 378while performing DH candidate screening using the 379.Fl T 380option. 381This will be used to skip lines in the input file that have already been 382processed if the job is restarted. 383.It Fl k 384Generate a KRL file. 385In this mode, 386.Nm 387will generate a KRL file at the location specified via the 388.Fl f 389flag that revokes every key or certificate presented on the command line. 390Keys/certificates to be revoked may be specified by public key file or 391using the format described in the 392.Sx KEY REVOCATION LISTS 393section. 394.It Fl L 395Prints the contents of one or more certificates. 396.It Fl l 397Show fingerprint of specified public key file. 398For RSA and DSA keys 399.Nm 400tries to find the matching public key file and prints its fingerprint. 401If combined with 402.Fl v , 403a visual ASCII art representation of the key is supplied with the 404fingerprint. 405.It Fl M Ar memory 406Specify the amount of memory to use (in megabytes) when generating 407candidate moduli for DH-GEX. 408.It Fl m Ar key_format 409Specify a key format for key generation, the 410.Fl i 411(import), 412.Fl e 413(export) conversion options, and the 414.Fl p 415change passphrase operation. 416The latter may be used to convert between OpenSSH private key and PEM 417private key formats. 418The supported key formats are: 419.Dq RFC4716 420(RFC 4716/SSH2 public or private key), 421.Dq PKCS8 422(PEM PKCS8 public key) 423or 424.Dq PEM 425(PEM public key). 426The default conversion format is 427.Dq RFC4716 . 428Setting a format of 429.Dq PEM 430when generating or updating a supported private key type will cause the 431key to be stored in the legacy PEM private key format. 432.It Fl N Ar new_passphrase 433Provides the new passphrase. 434.It Fl n Ar principals 435Specify one or more principals (user or host names) to be included in 436a certificate when signing a key. 437Multiple principals may be specified, separated by commas. 438Please see the 439.Sx CERTIFICATES 440section for details. 441.It Fl O Ar option 442Specify a certificate option when signing a key. 443This option may be specified multiple times. 444See also the 445.Sx CERTIFICATES 446section for further details. 447.Pp 448At present, no standard options are valid for host keys. 449The options that are valid for user certificates are: 450.Pp 451.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact 452.It Ic clear 453Clear all enabled permissions. 454This is useful for clearing the default set of permissions so permissions may 455be added individually. 456.Pp 457.It Ic critical : Ns Ar name Ns Op Ns = Ns Ar contents 458.It Ic extension : Ns Ar name Ns Op Ns = Ns Ar contents 459Includes an arbitrary certificate critical option or extension. 460The specified 461.Ar name 462should include a domain suffix, e.g.\& 463.Dq name@example.com . 464If 465.Ar contents 466is specified then it is included as the contents of the extension/option 467encoded as a string, otherwise the extension/option is created with no 468contents (usually indicating a flag). 469Extensions may be ignored by a client or server that does not recognise them, 470whereas unknown critical options will cause the certificate to be refused. 471.Pp 472.It Ic force-command Ns = Ns Ar command 473Forces the execution of 474.Ar command 475instead of any shell or command specified by the user when 476the certificate is used for authentication. 477.Pp 478.It Ic no-agent-forwarding 479Disable 480.Xr ssh-agent 1 481forwarding (permitted by default). 482.Pp 483.It Ic no-port-forwarding 484Disable port forwarding (permitted by default). 485.Pp 486.It Ic no-pty 487Disable PTY allocation (permitted by default). 488.Pp 489.It Ic no-user-rc 490Disable execution of 491.Pa ~/.ssh/rc 492by 493.Xr sshd 8 494(permitted by default). 495.Pp 496.It Ic no-x11-forwarding 497Disable X11 forwarding (permitted by default). 498.Pp 499.It Ic permit-agent-forwarding 500Allows 501.Xr ssh-agent 1 502forwarding. 503.Pp 504.It Ic permit-port-forwarding 505Allows port forwarding. 506.Pp 507.It Ic permit-pty 508Allows PTY allocation. 509.Pp 510.It Ic permit-user-rc 511Allows execution of 512.Pa ~/.ssh/rc 513by 514.Xr sshd 8 . 515.Pp 516.It Ic permit-X11-forwarding 517Allows X11 forwarding. 518.Pp 519.It Ic source-address Ns = Ns Ar address_list 520Restrict the source addresses from which the certificate is considered valid. 521The 522.Ar address_list 523is a comma-separated list of one or more address/netmask pairs in CIDR 524format. 525.El 526.It Fl P Ar passphrase 527Provides the (old) passphrase. 528.It Fl p 529Requests changing the passphrase of a private key file instead of 530creating a new private key. 531The program will prompt for the file 532containing the private key, for the old passphrase, and twice for the 533new passphrase. 534.It Fl Q 535Test whether keys have been revoked in a KRL. 536.It Fl q 537Silence 538.Nm ssh-keygen . 539.It Fl R Ar hostname | [hostname]:port 540Removes all keys belonging to the specified 541.Ar hostname 542(with optional port number) 543from a 544.Pa known_hosts 545file. 546This option is useful to delete hashed hosts (see the 547.Fl H 548option above). 549.It Fl r Ar hostname 550Print the SSHFP fingerprint resource record named 551.Ar hostname 552for the specified public key file. 553.It Fl S Ar start 554Specify start point (in hex) when generating candidate moduli for DH-GEX. 555.It Fl s Ar ca_key 556Certify (sign) a public key using the specified CA key. 557Please see the 558.Sx CERTIFICATES 559section for details. 560.Pp 561When generating a KRL, 562.Fl s 563specifies a path to a CA public key file used to revoke certificates directly 564by key ID or serial number. 565See the 566.Sx KEY REVOCATION LISTS 567section for details. 568.It Fl T Ar output_file 569Test DH group exchange candidate primes (generated using the 570.Fl G 571option) for safety. 572.It Fl t Cm dsa | ecdsa | ed25519 | rsa 573Specifies the type of key to create. 574The possible values are 575.Dq dsa , 576.Dq ecdsa , 577.Dq ed25519 , 578or 579.Dq rsa . 580.Pp 581This flag may also be used to specify the desired signature type when 582signing certificates using an RSA CA key. 583The available RSA signature variants are 584.Dq ssh-rsa 585(SHA1 signatures, not recommended), 586.Dq rsa-sha2-256 , 587and 588.Dq rsa-sha2-512 589(the default). 590.It Fl U 591When used in combination with 592.Fl s , 593this option indicates that a CA key resides in a 594.Xr ssh-agent 1 . 595See the 596.Sx CERTIFICATES 597section for more information. 598.It Fl u 599Update a KRL. 600When specified with 601.Fl k , 602keys listed via the command line are added to the existing KRL rather than 603a new KRL being created. 604.It Fl V Ar validity_interval 605Specify a validity interval when signing a certificate. 606A validity interval may consist of a single time, indicating that the 607certificate is valid beginning now and expiring at that time, or may consist 608of two times separated by a colon to indicate an explicit time interval. 609.Pp 610The start time may be specified as the string 611.Dq always 612to indicate the certificate has no specified start time, 613a date in YYYYMMDD format, a time in YYYYMMDDHHMM[SS] format, 614a relative time (to the current time) consisting of a minus sign followed by 615an interval in the format described in the 616TIME FORMATS section of 617.Xr sshd_config 5 . 618.Pp 619The end time may be specified as a YYYYMMDD date, a YYYYMMDDHHMM[SS] time, 620a relative time starting with a plus character or the string 621.Dq forever 622to indicate that the certificate has no expirty date. 623.Pp 624For example: 625.Dq +52w1d 626(valid from now to 52 weeks and one day from now), 627.Dq -4w:+4w 628(valid from four weeks ago to four weeks from now), 629.Dq 20100101123000:20110101123000 630(valid from 12:30 PM, January 1st, 2010 to 12:30 PM, January 1st, 2011), 631.Dq -1d:20110101 632(valid from yesterday to midnight, January 1st, 2011). 633.Dq -1m:forever 634(valid from one minute ago and never expiring). 635.It Fl v 636Verbose mode. 637Causes 638.Nm 639to print debugging messages about its progress. 640This is helpful for debugging moduli generation. 641Multiple 642.Fl v 643options increase the verbosity. 644The maximum is 3. 645.It Fl W Ar generator 646Specify desired generator when testing candidate moduli for DH-GEX. 647.It Fl y 648This option will read a private 649OpenSSH format file and print an OpenSSH public key to stdout. 650.It Fl z Ar serial_number 651Specifies a serial number to be embedded in the certificate to distinguish 652this certificate from others from the same CA. 653If the 654.Ar serial_number 655is prefixed with a 656.Sq + 657character, then the serial number will be incremented for each certificate 658signed on a single command-line. 659The default serial number is zero. 660.Pp 661When generating a KRL, the 662.Fl z 663flag is used to specify a KRL version number. 664.El 665.Sh MODULI GENERATION 666.Nm 667may be used to generate groups for the Diffie-Hellman Group Exchange 668(DH-GEX) protocol. 669Generating these groups is a two-step process: first, candidate 670primes are generated using a fast, but memory intensive process. 671These candidate primes are then tested for suitability (a CPU-intensive 672process). 673.Pp 674Generation of primes is performed using the 675.Fl G 676option. 677The desired length of the primes may be specified by the 678.Fl b 679option. 680For example: 681.Pp 682.Dl # ssh-keygen -G moduli-2048.candidates -b 2048 683.Pp 684By default, the search for primes begins at a random point in the 685desired length range. 686This may be overridden using the 687.Fl S 688option, which specifies a different start point (in hex). 689.Pp 690Once a set of candidates have been generated, they must be screened for 691suitability. 692This may be performed using the 693.Fl T 694option. 695In this mode 696.Nm 697will read candidates from standard input (or a file specified using the 698.Fl f 699option). 700For example: 701.Pp 702.Dl # ssh-keygen -T moduli-2048 -f moduli-2048.candidates 703.Pp 704By default, each candidate will be subjected to 100 primality tests. 705This may be overridden using the 706.Fl a 707option. 708The DH generator value will be chosen automatically for the 709prime under consideration. 710If a specific generator is desired, it may be requested using the 711.Fl W 712option. 713Valid generator values are 2, 3, and 5. 714.Pp 715Screened DH groups may be installed in 716.Pa /etc/moduli . 717It is important that this file contains moduli of a range of bit lengths and 718that both ends of a connection share common moduli. 719.Sh CERTIFICATES 720.Nm 721supports signing of keys to produce certificates that may be used for 722user or host authentication. 723Certificates consist of a public key, some identity information, zero or 724more principal (user or host) names and a set of options that 725are signed by a Certification Authority (CA) key. 726Clients or servers may then trust only the CA key and verify its signature 727on a certificate rather than trusting many user/host keys. 728Note that OpenSSH certificates are a different, and much simpler, format to 729the X.509 certificates used in 730.Xr ssl 8 . 731.Pp 732.Nm 733supports two types of certificates: user and host. 734User certificates authenticate users to servers, whereas host certificates 735authenticate server hosts to users. 736To generate a user certificate: 737.Pp 738.Dl $ ssh-keygen -s /path/to/ca_key -I key_id /path/to/user_key.pub 739.Pp 740The resultant certificate will be placed in 741.Pa /path/to/user_key-cert.pub . 742A host certificate requires the 743.Fl h 744option: 745.Pp 746.Dl $ ssh-keygen -s /path/to/ca_key -I key_id -h /path/to/host_key.pub 747.Pp 748The host certificate will be output to 749.Pa /path/to/host_key-cert.pub . 750.Pp 751It is possible to sign using a CA key stored in a PKCS#11 token by 752providing the token library using 753.Fl D 754and identifying the CA key by providing its public half as an argument 755to 756.Fl s : 757.Pp 758.Dl $ ssh-keygen -s ca_key.pub -D libpkcs11.so -I key_id user_key.pub 759.Pp 760Similarly, it is possible for the CA key to be hosted in a 761.Xr ssh-agent 1 . 762This is indicated by the 763.Fl U 764flag and, again, the CA key must be identified by its public half. 765.Pp 766.Dl $ ssh-keygen -Us ca_key.pub -I key_id user_key.pub 767.Pp 768In all cases, 769.Ar key_id 770is a "key identifier" that is logged by the server when the certificate 771is used for authentication. 772.Pp 773Certificates may be limited to be valid for a set of principal (user/host) 774names. 775By default, generated certificates are valid for all users or hosts. 776To generate a certificate for a specified set of principals: 777.Pp 778.Dl $ ssh-keygen -s ca_key -I key_id -n user1,user2 user_key.pub 779.Dl "$ ssh-keygen -s ca_key -I key_id -h -n host.domain host_key.pub" 780.Pp 781Additional limitations on the validity and use of user certificates may 782be specified through certificate options. 783A certificate option may disable features of the SSH session, may be 784valid only when presented from particular source addresses or may 785force the use of a specific command. 786For a list of valid certificate options, see the documentation for the 787.Fl O 788option above. 789.Pp 790Finally, certificates may be defined with a validity lifetime. 791The 792.Fl V 793option allows specification of certificate start and end times. 794A certificate that is presented at a time outside this range will not be 795considered valid. 796By default, certificates are valid from 797.Ux 798Epoch to the distant future. 799.Pp 800For certificates to be used for user or host authentication, the CA 801public key must be trusted by 802.Xr sshd 8 803or 804.Xr ssh 1 . 805Please refer to those manual pages for details. 806.Sh KEY REVOCATION LISTS 807.Nm 808is able to manage OpenSSH format Key Revocation Lists (KRLs). 809These binary files specify keys or certificates to be revoked using a 810compact format, taking as little as one bit per certificate if they are being 811revoked by serial number. 812.Pp 813KRLs may be generated using the 814.Fl k 815flag. 816This option reads one or more files from the command line and generates a new 817KRL. 818The files may either contain a KRL specification (see below) or public keys, 819listed one per line. 820Plain public keys are revoked by listing their hash or contents in the KRL and 821certificates revoked by serial number or key ID (if the serial is zero or 822not available). 823.Pp 824Revoking keys using a KRL specification offers explicit control over the 825types of record used to revoke keys and may be used to directly revoke 826certificates by serial number or key ID without having the complete original 827certificate on hand. 828A KRL specification consists of lines containing one of the following directives 829followed by a colon and some directive-specific information. 830.Bl -tag -width Ds 831.It Cm serial : Ar serial_number Ns Op - Ns Ar serial_number 832Revokes a certificate with the specified serial number. 833Serial numbers are 64-bit values, not including zero and may be expressed 834in decimal, hex or octal. 835If two serial numbers are specified separated by a hyphen, then the range 836of serial numbers including and between each is revoked. 837The CA key must have been specified on the 838.Nm 839command line using the 840.Fl s 841option. 842.It Cm id : Ar key_id 843Revokes a certificate with the specified key ID string. 844The CA key must have been specified on the 845.Nm 846command line using the 847.Fl s 848option. 849.It Cm key : Ar public_key 850Revokes the specified key. 851If a certificate is listed, then it is revoked as a plain public key. 852.It Cm sha1 : Ar public_key 853Revokes the specified key by including its SHA1 hash in the KRL. 854.It Cm sha256 : Ar public_key 855Revokes the specified key by including its SHA256 hash in the KRL. 856KRLs that revoke keys by SHA256 hash are not supported by OpenSSH versions 857prior to 7.9. 858.It Cm hash : Ar fingerprint 859Revokes a key using a fingerprint hash, as obtained from a 860.Xr sshd 8 861authentication log message or the 862.Nm 863.Fl l 864flag. 865Only SHA256 fingerprints are supported here and resultant KRLs are 866not supported by OpenSSH versions prior to 7.9. 867.El 868.Pp 869KRLs may be updated using the 870.Fl u 871flag in addition to 872.Fl k . 873When this option is specified, keys listed via the command line are merged into 874the KRL, adding to those already there. 875.Pp 876It is also possible, given a KRL, to test whether it revokes a particular key 877(or keys). 878The 879.Fl Q 880flag will query an existing KRL, testing each key specified on the command line. 881If any key listed on the command line has been revoked (or an error encountered) 882then 883.Nm 884will exit with a non-zero exit status. 885A zero exit status will only be returned if no key was revoked. 886.Sh FILES 887.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact 888.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_dsa 889.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_ecdsa 890.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 891.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_rsa 892Contains the DSA, ECDSA, Ed25519 or RSA 893authentication identity of the user. 894This file should not be readable by anyone but the user. 895It is possible to 896specify a passphrase when generating the key; that passphrase will be 897used to encrypt the private part of this file using 128-bit AES. 898This file is not automatically accessed by 899.Nm 900but it is offered as the default file for the private key. 901.Xr ssh 1 902will read this file when a login attempt is made. 903.Pp 904.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub 905.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_ecdsa.pub 906.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub 907.It Pa ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub 908Contains the DSA, ECDSA, Ed25519 or RSA 909public key for authentication. 910The contents of this file should be added to 911.Pa ~/.ssh/authorized_keys 912on all machines 913where the user wishes to log in using public key authentication. 914There is no need to keep the contents of this file secret. 915.Pp 916.It Pa /etc/moduli 917Contains Diffie-Hellman groups used for DH-GEX. 918The file format is described in 919.Xr moduli 5 . 920.El 921.Sh SEE ALSO 922.Xr ssh 1 , 923.Xr ssh-add 1 , 924.Xr ssh-agent 1 , 925.Xr moduli 5 , 926.Xr sshd 8 927.Rs 928.%R RFC 4716 929.%T "The Secure Shell (SSH) Public Key File Format" 930.%D 2006 931.Re 932.Sh AUTHORS 933OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free 934ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen. 935Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos, 936Theo de Raadt and Dug Song 937removed many bugs, re-added newer features and 938created OpenSSH. 939Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH 940protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0. 941