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-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/Makefile19
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/book.xml19
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/introduction.xml201
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml411
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/part_notes.xml19
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ref_man.xml23
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh.xml621
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_app.xml340
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_channel.xml315
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_client_key_api.xml117
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_connection.xml523
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_server_key_api.xml96
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftp.xml731
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftpd.xml75
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/usersguide.xml26
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/using_ssh.xml227
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.2.ps3315
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.txt1624
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.2.ps2557
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.txt1232
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.2.ps2853
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt1627
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.2.ps3511
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt1962
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-04.txt2130
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.2.ps3205
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.txt1624
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.2.ps1881
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt896
29 files changed, 2515 insertions, 29665 deletions
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/Makefile b/lib/ssh/doc/src/Makefile
index 0e79d9979f..c0707f8004 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/Makefile
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/Makefile
@@ -3,16 +3,17 @@
#
# Copyright Ericsson AB 2004-2012. All Rights Reserved.
#
-# The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
-# Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
-# compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
-# Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
-# retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
-# Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
-# basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
-# the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
-# under the License.
+# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+#
+# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+# limitations under the License.
#
# %CopyrightEnd%
#
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/book.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/book.xml
index c031d872d7..33b1e0036b 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/book.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/book.xml
@@ -8,16 +8,17 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/introduction.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/introduction.xml
index b42910cb34..187d458092 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/introduction.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/introduction.xml
@@ -9,47 +9,198 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB, All Rights Reserved</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Ericsson AB.
</legalnotice>
<title>Introduction</title>
<prepared>OTP team</prepared>
+ <responsible></responsible>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <approved></approved>
+ <checked></checked>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>introduction.xml</file>
</header>
-
+ <p>SSH is a protocol for secure remote logon and
+ other secure network services over an insecure network.</p>
<section>
- <title>Purpose</title>
+ <title>Scope and Purpose</title>
- <p>Secure Shell (SSH) is a protocol for secure remote login and
- other secure network services over an insecure network. SSH
- provides a single, full-duplex, byte-oriented connection between
+ <p>SSH provides a single, full-duplex, and byte-oriented connection between
client and server. The protocol also provides privacy, integrity,
- server authentication and man-in-the-middle protection.</p>
-
- <p>The Erlang SSH application is an implementation of the SSH
- protocol in Erlang which offers API functions to write customized
- SSH clients and servers as well as making the Erlang shell
- available via SSH. Also included in the SSH application are an
- SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) client <seealso
- marker="ssh_sftp">ssh_sftp</seealso> and server <seealso
- marker="ssh_sftp">ssh_sftpd</seealso>.</p>
+ server authentication, and man-in-the-middle protection.</p>
+
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application is an implementation of the SSH Transport, Connection and Authentication
+ Layer Protocols in Erlang. It provides the following:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>API functions to write customized SSH clients and servers applications</item>
+ <item>The Erlang shell available over SSH</item>
+ <item>An SFTP client (<seealso marker="ssh_sftp">ssh_sftp</seealso>)
+ and server (<seealso marker="ssh_sftp">ssh_sftpd</seealso>)</item>
+ </list>
</section>
<section>
<title>Prerequisites</title>
- <p>It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the concepts of <seealso marker="doc/design_principles:des_princ">OTP</seealso>
- and has a basic understanding of <url href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public-key_cryptography">public keys</url>.</p>
+ <p>It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the Erlang programming language,
+ concepts of <em>OTP</em>, and has a basic understanding of <em>public keys</em>.</p>
+ </section>
+
+<section>
+ <title>SSH Protocol Overview</title>
+
+ <p>Conceptually, the SSH protocol can be partitioned into four
+ layers:</p>
+
+ <image file="SSH_protocols.png">
+ <icaption>SSH Protocol Architecture</icaption>
+ </image>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Transport Protocol</title>
+
+ <p>The SSH Transport Protocol is a secure, low-level transport.
+ It provides strong encryption, cryptographic host
+ authentication, and integrity protection. A minimum of
+ Message Authentication Code (MAC) and encryption
+ algorithms are supported. For details, see the
+ <seealso marker="ssh">ssh(3)</seealso> manual page in <c>ssh</c>.</p>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Authentication Protocol</title>
+
+ <p>The SSH Authentication Protocol is a general-purpose user
+ authentication protocol run over the SSH Transport Layer
+ Protocol. The <c>ssh</c> application supports user authentication as follows:
+ </p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>
+ Using public key technology. RSA and DSA, X509-certificates
+ are not supported.
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ Using keyboard-interactive authentication.
+ This is suitable for interactive authentication methods
+ that do not need any special software support on the client side.
+ Instead, all authentication data is entered from the keyboard.
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ Using a pure password-based authentication scheme.
+ Here, the plain text password is encrypted before sent
+ over the network.
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ <p>Several configuration options for
+ authentication handling are available in
+ <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso>
+ and <seealso marker="ssh#daemon-2">ssh:daemon/[2,3]</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>
+ The public key handling can be customized by implementing
+ the following behaviours from <c>ssh</c>:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>Module
+ <seealso marker="ssh_client_key_api">ssh_client_key_api</seealso>.
+ </item>
+ <item>Module
+ <seealso marker="ssh_server_key_api">ssh_server_key_api</seealso>.
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Connection Protocol</title>
+
+ <p>The SSH Connection Protocol provides application-support
+ services over the transport pipe, for example, channel multiplexing,
+ flow control, remote program execution, signal propagation, and
+ connection forwarding. Functions for handling the SSH
+ Connection Protocol can be found in the module <seealso
+ marker="ssh_connection">ssh_connection</seealso> in <c>ssh</c>.
+ </p>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Channels</title>
+
+ <p>All terminal sessions, forwarded connections, and so on, are
+ channels. Multiple channels are multiplexed into a single
+ connection. All channels are flow-controlled. This means that no
+ data is sent to a channel peer until a message is received to
+ indicate that window space is available.
+ The <em>initial window size</em> specifies how many bytes of channel
+ data that can be sent to the channel peer without adjusting the
+ window. Typically, an SSH client opens a channel, sends data (commands),
+ receives data (control information), and then closes the channel.
+ The <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel</seealso> behaviour
+ handles generic parts of SSH channel management. This makes it easy
+ to write your own SSH client/server processes that use flow-control
+ and thus opens for more focus on the application logic.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>Channels come in the following three flavors:</p>
+
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><em>Subsystem</em> - Named services that can be run as
+ part of an SSH server, such as SFTP <seealso
+ marker="ssh_sftpd">(ssh_sftpd)</seealso>, that is built into the
+ SSH daemon (server) by default, but it can be disabled. The Erlang <c>ssh</c>
+ daemon can be configured to run any Erlang-
+ implemented SSH subsystem.
+ </item>
+ <item><em>Shell</em> - Interactive shell. By default the
+ Erlang daemon runs the Erlang shell. The shell can be customized by
+ providing your own read-eval-print loop. You can also provide your
+ own Command-Line Interface (CLI) implementation,
+ but that is much more work.
+ </item>
+ <item><em>Exec</em> - One-time remote execution of commands. See function
+ <seealso marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4</seealso>
+ for more information.</item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+
</section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Where to Find More Information</title>
+ <p>
+ For detailed information about the SSH protocol, refer to the
+ following Request for Comments(RFCs):
+ </p>
+
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4250.txt">RFC 4250</url> -
+ Protocol Assigned Numbers</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4251.txt">RFC 4251</url> -
+ Protocol Architecture</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4252.txt">RFC 4252</url> -
+ Authentication Protocol</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4253.txt">RFC 4253</url> -
+ Transport Layer Protocol</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url> -
+ Connection Protocol</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4255.txt">RFC 4255</url> -
+ Key Fingerprints</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4344.txt">RFC 4344</url> -
+ Transport Layer Encryption Modes</item>
+ <item><url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4716.txt">RFC 4716</url> -
+ Public Key File Format</item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
index 41885c684c..012d7051eb 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -4,20 +4,21 @@
<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
- <year>2004</year><year>2014</year>
+ <year>2004</year><year>2015</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
@@ -29,6 +30,394 @@
<file>notes.xml</file>
</header>
+<section><title>Ssh 4.1.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add a 1024 group to the list of key group-exchange groups</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13046</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Ssh 4.1.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option <c>max_channels</c> limits the number of
+ channels with active server-side subsystems that are
+ accepted.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13036</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Ssh 4.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Send an understandable disconnect message when the key
+ exchange phase can't find a common algorithm. There are
+ also some test cases added.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-11531</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The third parameter in <c>ssh_sftp:write_file</c> is now
+ accepting iolists again. Unicode handling adjusted.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12853 Aux Id: seq12891 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ First part of ssh test suite re-organization and
+ extension.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12230</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The key exchange algorithms 'ecdh-sha2-nistp256',
+ 'ecdh-sha2-nistp384' and 'ecdh-sha2-nistp521' are
+ implemented. See RFC 5656.</p>
+ <p>
+ This raises the security level considerably.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12622 Aux Id: OTP-12671, OTP-12672 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The key exchange algorithm 'diffie-hellman-group14-sha1'
+ is implemented. See RFC 4253.</p>
+ <p>
+ This raises the security level.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12671 Aux Id: OTP-12672, OTP-12622 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The key exchange algorithms
+ 'diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1' and
+ 'diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256' are implemented.
+ See RFC 4419.</p>
+ <p>
+ This raises the security level.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12672 Aux Id: OTP-12671, OTP-12622 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Adding random length extra padding as recommended in RFC
+ 4253 section 6.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12831</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ New test library for low-level protocol testing. There is
+ also a test suite using it for some preliminary tests.
+ The intention is to build on that for more testing of
+ individual ssh messages. See
+ <c>lib/ssh/test/ssh_trpt_test_lib.erl</c> and
+ <c>ssh_protocol_SUITE.erl</c> in the same directory.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12858</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Increased default values for
+ diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha* to Min = 1024, N =
+ 6144, Max = 8192.</p>
+ <p>
+ Added 6144 and 8192 bit default gex groups.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12937</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The mac algorithm 'hmac-sha2-512' is implemented. See RFC
+ 6668.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12938</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Ssh 4.0</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Ssh crashed if a message was sent on a channel with
+ packet_size = 0.</p>
+ <p>
+ A new option for ssh:daemon is also introduced:
+ <c>minimal_remote_max_packet_size</c>. This option sets
+ the least max packet size declaration that the daemon
+ will accept from a client. The default value is 0 to
+ maintain compatibility with OpenSSH and the rfc:s.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12645 Aux Id: seq12816 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Included test of the 'e' and 'f' parameters in
+ diffie-hellman key exchange as specified in rfc 4253
+ section 8.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12649</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fixes the bug that once the <c>rekey_limit</c> bytes (by
+ default, 1GB) had been transmitted the connection was
+ rekeyed every minute, not after the next transferred
+ 'rekey_limit' chunk.</p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks to Simon Cornish for the report and the fix!</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12692</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fixes a bug that causes an SFTP connection to always fail
+ when {timeout, Timeout} option is used with
+ ssh_sftp:start_channel.</p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks to Simon Cornish</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12708</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix various ssh key exchange problems.</p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks to Simon Cornish</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12760 Aux Id: <url
+ href="https://github.com/erlang/otp/pull/715">pull req
+ 715</url> </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The options <c>system_dir</c> and <c>user_dir</c> assumes
+ that the value is a path to a directory which is
+ readable. This is now checked early, so <c>ssh:daemon</c>
+ and <c>ssh:connect</c> will fail with an error message
+ immediately.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12788</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A daemon now checks that a client doesn't try to
+ authorize with methods not in the option auth_methods.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12790</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Disconnectfun now should trigger on all disconnects.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12811</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Better usage of binary matching in ssh_auth.erl and
+ ssh_message.erl</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-11697</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option 'preferred_algorithms' is available for
+ <c>ssh:daemon</c> and <c>ssh:connect</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ This option defines the algorithms presented to the peer
+ in the algorithm negotiation phase of the ssh protocol. </p>
+ <p>
+ The default list can be obtained from the new function
+ <c>ssh:default_algorithms/0</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ *** INCOMPATIBILITY with removed undocumented options
+ 'role' and 'compression' ***</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12029</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The internal group to user_drv protocol has been changed
+ to be synchronous in order to guarantee that output sent
+ to a process implementing the user_drv protocol is
+ printed before replying. This protocol is used by the
+ standard_output device and the ssh application when
+ acting as a client. </p>
+ <p>
+ This change changes the previous unlimited buffer when
+ printing to standard_io and other devices that end up in
+ user_drv to 1KB.</p>
+ <p>
+ *** POTENTIAL INCOMPATIBILITY ***</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12240</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ If ssh_connection:subsystem/4 fails we do not want to
+ crash but rather terminate gracefully.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12648 Aux Id: seq12834 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ New option <c>id_string</c> for <c>ssh:daemon</c> and
+ <c>ssh:connect</c> for limiting banner grabbing attempts.</p>
+ <p>
+ The possible values are: <c>{id_string,string()}</c> and
+ <c>{id_string,random}</c>. The latter will make ssh
+ generate a random nonsence id-string for each new
+ connection.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12659</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ To enable the ssh daemon to run in a virtualized
+ environment, where there can be more that one server that
+ has the same ip-address and port, we add a new option
+ profile.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12675</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Upgrade test suite added.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12676</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option for handling the SSH_MSG_DEBUG message's
+ printouts. A fun could be given in the options that will
+ be called whenever the SSH_MSG_DEBUG message arrives.
+ This enables the user to format the printout or just
+ discard it.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12738 Aux Id: seq12860 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Testcase improvements and corrections:</p>
+ <p>
+ * Add testcases for the <c>disconnectfun</c> option on
+ both server and client sides</p>
+ <p>
+ * Timeout testcases adjusted for slow machines where they
+ sometimes failed</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12786</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The option <c>disconnectfun</c> can now be used both on
+ the client and server side.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12789</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option unknown_msgfun/2 for ssh:connect and
+ ssh:daemon for handling unknown messages. With the option
+ it is possible to intercept before an INFO log message is
+ generated.</p>
+ <p>
+ One usage is to filter out messages that are not wanted
+ in the error logger as info reports. An example of such a
+ message is the 'etimedout' tcp error message that will be
+ received if a connection has keep_alive and the peer is
+ restarted.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12813 Aux Id: seq12881 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Ssh 3.2.4</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Gracefully terminate if sockets is unexpectedly closed.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12782</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Made Codenomicon Defensics test suite pass:</p> <list>
+ <item>limit number of algorithms in kexinit
+ message</item> <item>check 'e' and 'f' parameters in
+ kexdh</item> <item>implement 'keyboard-interactive' user
+ authentication on server side</item> <item> return plain
+ text message to bad version exchange message</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12784</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Ssh 3.2.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option for handling the SSH_MSG_DEBUG message's
+ printouts. A fun could be given in the options that will
+ be called whenever the SSH_MSG_DEBUG message arrives.
+ This enables the user to format the printout or just
+ discard it.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-12738 Aux Id: seq12860 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Ssh 3.2.2</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/part_notes.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/part_notes.xml
index c5cc163717..664cadce57 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/part_notes.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/part_notes.xml
@@ -8,16 +8,17 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ref_man.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ref_man.xml
index 55339298e8..4a2f043948 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ref_man.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ref_man.xml
@@ -8,16 +8,17 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
@@ -28,8 +29,8 @@
<file>ref_man.xml</file>
</header>
<description>
- <p>The SSH application is an erlang implementation of the
- secure shell protocol (SSH) as defined by RFC 4250 - 4254</p>
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application is an Erlang implementation of the
+ Secure Shell Protocol (SSH) as defined by RFC 4250 - 4254.</p>
</description>
<xi:include href="ssh_app.xml"/>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh.xml
index 72dafc0c09..1e9acf4a99 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh.xml
@@ -8,68 +8,105 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
<date>2007-10-06</date>
+ <rev></rev>
</header>
<module>ssh</module>
- <modulesummary>Main API of the SSH application</modulesummary>
+ <modulesummary>Main API of the ssh application</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p>Interface module for the SSH application. </p>
+ <p>Interface module for the <c>ssh</c> application.</p>
+ <p>See <seealso marker="ssh:SSH_app#supported">ssh(6)</seealso> for details of supported version,
+ algorithms and unicode support.</p>
</description>
- <section>
- <title>SSH</title>
-
- <list type="bulleted">
- <item>SSH requires the crypto and public_key applications.</item>
- <item>Supported SSH version is 2.0 </item>
- <item>Supported MAC algorithms: hmac-sha2-256 and hmac-sha1</item>
- <item>Supported encryption algorithms: aes128-ctr, aes128-cb and 3des-cbc</item>
- <item>Supports unicode filenames if the emulator and the underlaying OS supports it. See the DESCRIPTION section in <seealso marker="kernel:file">file</seealso> for information about this subject</item>
- <item>Supports unicode in shell and cli</item>
- </list>
-
+ <section>
+ <title>OPTIONS</title>
+ <p>The exact behaviour of some functions can be adjusted with the use of options which are documented together
+ with the functions. Generally could each option be used at most one time in each function call. If given two or more
+ times, the effect is not predictable unless explicitly documented.</p>
+ <p>The options are of different kinds:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>Limits</tag>
+ <item><p>which alters limits in the system, for example number of simultaneous login attempts.</p></item>
+
+ <tag>Timeouts</tag>
+ <item><p>which give some defined behaviour if too long time elapses before a given event or action,
+ for example time to wait for an answer.</p></item>
+
+ <tag>Callbacks</tag>
+ <item><p>which gives the caller of the function the possibility to execute own code on some events,
+ for example calling an own logging function or to perform an own login function</p></item>
+
+ <tag>Behaviour</tag>
+ <item><p>which changes the systems behaviour.</p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
-
+
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
<p>Type definitions that are used more than once in
- this module and/or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
- type:</p>
- <p><c>boolean() = true | false </c></p>
- <p><c>string() = [byte()]</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_daemon_ref() - opaque to the user
- returned by ssh:daemon/[1,2,3]</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_connection_ref() - opaque to the user
- returned by ssh:connect/3</c></p>
- <p><c>ip_address() - inet::ip_address()</c></p>
- <p><c>subsystem_spec() = {subsystem_name(),
- {channel_callback(), channel_init_args()}} </c></p>
- <p><c>subsystem_name() = string() </c></p>
- <p><c>channel_callback() = atom() - Name of the erlang module
- implementing the subsystem using the ssh_channel behavior see</c>
- <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel(3)</seealso></p>
- <p><c>channel_init_args() = list()</c></p>
- </section>
+ this module, or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
+ type, or both:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>boolean() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>true | false</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>string() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>[byte()]</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_daemon_ref() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>opaque() -
+ as returned by <c>ssh:daemon/[1,2,3]</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_connection_ref() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>opaque() - as returned by <c>ssh:connect/3</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ip_address() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>inet::ip_address</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>subsystem_spec() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>{subsystem_name(),
+ {channel_callback(), channel_init_args()}}</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>subsystem_name() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>string()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>channel_callback() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>atom()</c> - Name of the Erlang module
+ implementing the subsystem using the <c>ssh_channel</c> behavior, see
+ <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel(3)</seealso></p></item>
+ <tag><c>channel_init_args() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>list()</c></p></item>
+
+ <tag><c>algs_list() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>list( alg_entry() )</c></p></item>
+
+ <tag><c>alg_entry() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>{kex, simple_algs()} | {public_key, simple_algs()} | {cipher, double_algs()} | {mac, double_algs()} | {compression, double_algs()}</c></p></item>
+
+ <tag><c>simple_algs() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>list( atom() )</c></p></item>
+
+ <tag><c>double_algs() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>[{client2serverlist,simple_algs()},{server2client,simple_algs()}] | simple_algs()</c></p></item>
+ </taglist>
+</section>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>close(ConnectionRef) -> ok </name>
- <fsummary>Closes an SSH connection</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Closes an SSH connection.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
</type>
@@ -81,104 +118,170 @@
<name>connect(Host, Port, Options) -> </name>
<name>connect(Host, Port, Options, Timeout) -> {ok,
ssh_connection_ref()} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Connect to an ssh server.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Connects to an SSH server.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Host = string()</v>
<v>Port = integer()</v>
- <d>The default is <c><![CDATA[22]]></c>, the assigned well known port
+ <d><c><![CDATA[22]]></c> is default, the assigned well-known port
number for SSH.</d>
<v>Options = [{Option, Value}]</v>
- <v>Timeout = infinity | integer(milliseconds)</v>
- <d>Negotiation timeout, for connection timeout use the option <c>{connect_timeout, timeout()}</c>.</d>
+ <v>Timeout = infinity | integer()</v>
+ <d>Negotiation time-out in milli-seconds. The default value is <c>infinity</c>.
+ For connection time-out, use option <c>{connect_timeout, timeout()}</c>.</d>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Connects to an SSH server. No channel is started. This is done
by calling
- <seealso marker="ssh_connection#session_channel/2">ssh_connection:session_channel/[2, 4]</seealso>.</p>
- <p>Options are:</p>
+ <seealso marker="ssh_connection#session_channel/2">
+ ssh_connection:session_channel/[2, 4]</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Options:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{inet, inet | inet6}]]></c></tag>
- <item> IP version to use.</item>
+ <item>
+ <p>IP version to use.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{user_dir, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the user directory i.e. the directory containing
- ssh configuration files for the user such as
+ <p>Sets the user directory, that is, the directory containing
+ <c>ssh</c> configuration files for the user, such as
<c><![CDATA[known_hosts]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[id_rsa,
- id_dsa]]></c> and
+ id_dsa]]></c>, and
<c><![CDATA[authorized_key]]></c>. Defaults to the
directory normally referred to as
- <c><![CDATA[~/.ssh]]></c> </p>
+ <c><![CDATA[~/.ssh]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{dsa_pass_phrase, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If the user dsa key is protected by a passphrase it can be
+ <p>If the user DSA key is protected by a passphrase, it can be
supplied with this option.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{rsa_pass_phrase, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If the user rsa key is protected by a passphrase it can be
+ <p>If the user RSA key is protected by a passphrase, it can be
supplied with this option.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{silently_accept_hosts, boolean()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>When true hosts are added to the
+ <p>When <c>true</c>, hosts are added to the
file <c><![CDATA[known_hosts]]></c> without asking the user.
- Defaults to false.
+ Defaults to <c>false</c>.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{user_interaction, boolean()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If false disables the client to connect to the server
- if any user interaction is needed such as accepting that
- the server will be added to the <c>known_hosts</c> file or
- supplying a password. Defaults to true.
+ <p>If <c>false</c>, disables the client to connect to the server
+ if any user interaction is needed, such as accepting
+ the server to be added to the <c>known_hosts</c> file, or
+ supplying a password. Defaults to <c>true</c>.
Even if user interaction is allowed it can be
- suppressed by other options such as silently_accept_hosts and
- password. Do note that it may not always be desirable to use
- those options from a security point of view.</p>
+ suppressed by other options, such as <c>silently_accept_hosts</c>
+ and <c>password</c>. However, those optins are not always desirable
+ to use from a security point of view.</p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{disconnectfun, fun(Reason:term()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging when a server disconnects the client.</p>
</item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{unexpectedfun, fun(Message:term(), Peer) -> report | skip }]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging or other action when an unexpected message arrives.
+ If the fun returns <c>report</c> the usual info report is issued but if <c>skip</c> is returned no
+ report is generated.</p>
+ <p><c>Peer</c> is in the format of <c>{Host,Port}</c>.</p>
+ </item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{public_key_alg, 'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss'}]]></c></tag>
<item>
+ <note>
+ <p>This option is kept for compatibility. It is ignored if the <c>preferred_algorithms</c>
+ option is used. The equivalence of <c>{public_key_alg,'ssh-dss'}</c> is
+ <c>{preferred_algorithms, [{public_key,['ssh-dss','ssh-rsa']}]}</c>.</p>
+ </note>
<p>Sets the preferred public key algorithm to use for user
- authentication. If the the preferred algorithm fails for
- some reason, the other algorithm is tried. The default is
+ authentication. If the preferred algorithm fails,
+ the other algorithm is tried. The default is
to try <c><![CDATA['ssh-rsa']]></c> first.</p>
</item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{pref_public_key_algs, list()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>List of public key algorithms to try to use, 'ssh-rsa' and 'ssh-dss' available.
- Will override <c><![CDATA[{public_key_alg, 'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss'}]]></c></p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This option is kept for compatibility. It is ignored if the <c>preferred_algorithms</c>
+ option is used. The equivalence of <c>{pref_public_key_algs,['ssh-dss']}</c> is
+ <c>{preferred_algorithms, [{public_key,['ssh-dss']}]}</c>.</p>
+ </note>
+ <p>List of public key algorithms to try to use.
+ <c>'ssh-rsa'</c> and <c>'ssh-dss'</c> are available.
+ Overrides <c><![CDATA[{public_key_alg, 'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss'}]]></c></p>
</item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{preferred_algorithms, algs_list()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>List of algorithms to use in the algorithm negotiation. The default <c>algs_list()</c> can
+ be obtained from <seealso marker="#default_algorithms/0">default_algorithms/0</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Here is an example of this option:</p>
+ <code>
+{preferred_algorithms,
+ [{public_key,['ssh-rsa','ssh-dss']},
+ {cipher,[{client2server,['aes128-ctr']},
+ {server2client,['aes128-cbc','3des-cbc']}]},
+ {mac,['hmac-sha2-256','hmac-sha1']},
+ {compression,[none,zlib]}
+}
+</code>
+ <p>The example specifies different algorithms in the two directions (client2server and server2client), for cipher but specifies the same
+algorithms for mac and compression in both directions. The kex (key exchange) and public key algorithms are set to their default values,
+kex is implicit but public_key is set explicitly.</p>
+
+ <warning>
+ <p>Changing the values can make a connection less secure. Do not change unless you
+ know exactly what you are doing. If you do not understand the values then you
+ are not supposed to change them.</p>
+ </warning>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{dh_gex_limits,{Min=integer(),I=integer(),Max=integer()}}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the three diffie-hellman-group-exchange parameters that guides the connected server in choosing a group.
+ See RFC 4419 for the function of thoose. The default value is <c>{1024, 6144, 8192}</c>.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{connect_timeout, timeout()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets a timeout on the transport layer
- connection. Defaults to <c>infinity</c>.</p>
+ <p>Sets a time-out on the transport layer
+ connection. For <c>gen_tcp</c> the time is in milli-seconds and the default value is
+ <c>infinity</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{user, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provides a user name. If this option is not given, ssh
+ <p>Provides a username. If this option is not given, <c>ssh</c>
reads from the environment (<c><![CDATA[LOGNAME]]></c> or
- <c><![CDATA[USER]]></c> on unix,
+ <c><![CDATA[USER]]></c> on UNIX,
<c><![CDATA[USERNAME]]></c> on Windows).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{password, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a password for password authentication. If
- this option is not given, the user will be asked for a
- password if the password authentication method is
+ <p>Provides a password for password authentication.
+ If this option is not given, the user is asked for a
+ password, if the password authentication method is
attempted.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{key_cb, atom()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Module implementing the behaviour <seealso marker="ssh_client_key_api">ssh_client_key_api</seealso>.
+ <p>Module implementing the behaviour
+ <seealso marker="ssh_client_key_api">ssh_client_key_api</seealso>.
Can be used to customize the handling of public keys.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{quiet_mode, atom() = boolean()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If true, the client will not print out anything on authorization.</p>
+ <p>If <c>true</c>, the client does not print anything on authorization.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{id_string, random | string()}]]></c></tag>
@@ -191,34 +294,41 @@
<tag><c><![CDATA[{fd, file_descriptor()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Allow an existing file descriptor to be used
- (simply passed on to the transport protocol).</p></item>
+ <p>Allows an existing file descriptor to be used
+ (by passing it on to the transport protocol).</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{rekey_limit, integer()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide, in bytes, when rekeying should be initiated,
- defaults to one time each GB and one time per hour.</p>
+ <p>Provides, in bytes, when rekeying is to be initiated.
+ Defaults to once per each GB and once per hour.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{idle_time, integer()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets a timeout on connection when no channels are active, default is infinity</p></item>
+ <p>Sets a time-out on a connection when no channels are active.
+ Defaults to <c>infinity</c>.</p></item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{ssh_msg_debug_fun, fun(ConnectionRef::ssh_connection_ref(), AlwaysDisplay::boolean(), Msg::binary(), LanguageTag::binary()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provide a fun to implement your own logging of the SSH message SSH_MSG_DEBUG. The last three parameters are from the message, see RFC4253, section 11.3. The <c>ConnectionRef</c> is the reference to the connection on which the message arrived. The return value from the fun is not checked.</p>
+ <p>The default behaviour is ignore the message.
+ To get a printout for each message with <c>AlwaysDisplay = true</c>, use for example <c>{ssh_msg_debug_fun, fun(_,true,M,_)-> io:format("DEBUG: ~p~n", [M]) end}</c></p>
+ </item>
+
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>connection_info(ConnectionRef, [Option]) ->[{Option,
- Value}] </name>
- <fsummary> Retrieves information about a connection. </fsummary>
+ Value}]</name>
+ <fsummary>Retrieves information about a connection.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Option = client_version | server_version | user | peer | sockname </v>
<v>Value = [option_value()] </v>
- <v>option_value() = {{Major::integer(), Minor::integer()}, VersionString::string()} | User::string() |
- Peer::{inet:hostname(), {inet::ip_adress(), inet::port_number()}} |
- Sockname::{inet::ip_adress(), inet::port_number()} () </v>
+ <v>option_value() = {{Major::integer(), Minor::integer()}, VersionString::string()} |
+ User::string() | Peer::{inet:hostname(), {inet::ip_adress(), inet::port_number()}} |
+ Sockname::{inet::ip_adress(), inet::port_number()}</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Retrieves information about a connection.
- </p>
+ <p>Retrieves information about a connection.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -239,111 +349,247 @@
<desc>
<p>Starts a server listening for SSH connections on the given
port.</p>
- <p>Options are:</p>
+ <p>Options:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{inet, inet | inet6}]]></c></tag>
- <item> IP version to use when the host address is specified as <c>any</c>. </item>
+ <item><p>IP version to use when the host address is specified as <c>any</c>.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{subsystems, [subsystem_spec()]}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- Provides specifications for handling of subsystems. The
- "sftp" subsystem spec can be retrieved by calling
- ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec/1. If the subsystems option is
- not present the value of
- <c>[ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec([])]</c> will be used. It is
- of course possible to set the option to the empty list if
- you do not want the daemon to run any subsystems at all.
+ <p>Provides specifications for handling of subsystems. The
+ "sftp" subsystem specification is retrieved by calling
+ <c>ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec/1</c>. If the subsystems option is
+ not present, the value of
+ <c>[ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec([])]</c> is used.
+ The option can be set to the empty list if
+ you do not want the daemon to run any subsystems.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{shell, {Module, Function, Args} |
fun(string() = User) - > pid() | fun(string() = User,
ip_address() = PeerAddr) -> pid()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- Defines the read-eval-print loop used when a shell is
- requested by the client. Default is to use the erlang shell:
- <c><![CDATA[{shell, start, []}]]></c>
+ <p>Defines the read-eval-print loop used when a shell is
+ requested by the client. The default is to use the Erlang shell:
+ <c><![CDATA[{shell, start, []}]]></c></p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{ssh_cli, {channel_callback(),
channel_init_args()} | no_cli}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- Provides your own CLI implementation, i.e. a channel callback
- module that implements a shell and command execution. Note
- that you may customize the shell read-eval-print loop using the
- option <c>shell</c> which is much less work than implementing
- your own CLI channel. If set to <c>no_cli</c> you will disable
- CLI channels and only subsystem channels will be allowed.
+ <p>Provides your own CLI implementation, that is, a channel callback
+ module that implements a shell and command execution. The shell
+ read-eval-print loop can be customized, using the
+ option <c>shell</c>. This means less work than implementing
+ an own CLI channel. If set to <c>no_cli</c>, the CLI channels
+ are disabled and only subsystem channels are allowed.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{user_dir, String}]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{user_dir, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the user directory i.e. the directory containing
- ssh configuration files for the user such as
+ <p>Sets the user directory. That is, the directory containing
+ <c>ssh</c> configuration files for the user, such as
<c><![CDATA[known_hosts]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[id_rsa,
- id_dsa]]></c> and
+ id_dsa]]></c>, and
<c><![CDATA[authorized_key]]></c>. Defaults to the
directory normally referred to as
- <c><![CDATA[~/.ssh]]></c> </p>
+ <c><![CDATA[~/.ssh]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{system_dir, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Sets the system directory, containing the host key files
- that identifies the host keys for ssh. The default is
- <c><![CDATA[/etc/ssh]]></c>, note that for security reasons
- this directory is normally only accessible by the root user.</p>
+ that identify the host keys for <c>ssh</c>. Defaults to
+ <c><![CDATA[/etc/ssh]]></c>. For security reasons,
+ this directory is normally accessible only to the root user.</p>
</item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{auth_methods, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Comma separated string that determines which
- authentication methodes that the server should support and
- in what order they will be tried. Defaults to
+ <p>Comma-separated string that determines which
+ authentication methods that the server is to support and
+ in what order they are tried. Defaults to
<c><![CDATA["publickey,keyboard-interactive,password"]]></c></p>
</item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{auth_method_kb_interactive_data, PromptTexts}]]>
+ <br/>where:
+ <br/>PromptTexts = kb_int_tuple() | fun(Peer::{IP::tuple(),Port::integer()}, User::string(), Service::string()) -> kb_int_tuple()
+ <br/>kb_int_tuple() = {Name::string(), Instruction::string(), Prompt::string(), Echo::boolean()}</c>
+ </tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the text strings that the daemon sends to the client for presentation to the user when using <c>keyboar-interactive</c> authentication. If the fun/3 is used, it is called when the actual authentication occurs and may therefore return dynamic data like time, remote ip etc.</p>
+ <p>The parameter <c>Echo</c> guides the client about need to hide the password.</p>
+ <p>The default value is:
+ <c>{auth_method_kb_interactive_data, {"SSH server", "Enter password for \""++User++"\"", "password: ", false}></c></p>
+ </item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{user_passwords, [{string() = User,
string() = Password}]}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide passwords for password authentication.They will
- be used when someone tries to connect to the server and
- public key user authentication fails. The option provides
- a list of valid user names and the corresponding password.
+ <p>Provides passwords for password authentication. The passwords
+ are used when someone tries to connect to the server and
+ public key user-authentication fails. The option provides
+ a list of valid usernames and the corresponding passwords.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{password, string()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a global password that will authenticate any
+ <p>Provides a global password that authenticates any
user. From a security perspective this option makes
the server very vulnerable.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{pwdfun, fun(User::string(), password::string()) -> boolean()}]]></c></tag>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{preferred_algorithms, algs_list()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a function for password validation. This is called
- with user and password as strings, and should return
+ <p>List of algorithms to use in the algorithm negotiation. The default <c>algs_list()</c> can
+ be obtained from <seealso marker="#default_algorithms/0">default_algorithms/0</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Here is an example of this option:</p>
+ <code>
+{preferred_algorithms,
+ [{public_key,['ssh-rsa','ssh-dss']},
+ {cipher,[{client2server,['aes128-ctr']},
+ {server2client,['aes128-cbc','3des-cbc']}]},
+ {mac,['hmac-sha2-256','hmac-sha1']},
+ {compression,[none,zlib]}
+}
+</code>
+ <p>The example specifies different algorithms in the two directions (client2server and server2client), for cipher but specifies the same
+algorithms for mac and compression in both directions. The kex (key exchange) and public key algorithms are set to their default values,
+kex is implicit but public_key is set explicitly.</p>
+
+ <warning>
+ <p>Changing the values can make a connection less secure. Do not change unless you
+ know exactly what you are doing. If you do not understand the values then you
+ are not supposed to change them.</p>
+ </warning>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{dh_gex_groups, [{Size=integer(),G=integer(),P=integer()}] | {file,filename()} {ssh_moduli_file,filename()} }]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Defines the groups the server may choose among when diffie-hellman-group-exchange is negotiated.
+ See RFC 4419 for details. The three variants of this option are:
+ </p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>{Size=integer(),G=integer(),P=integer()}</c></tag>
+ <item>The groups are given explicitly in this list. There may be several elements with the same <c>Size</c>.
+ In such a case, the server will choose one randomly in the negotiated Size.
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>{file,filename()}</c></tag>
+ <item>The file must have one or more three-tuples <c>{Size=integer(),G=integer(),P=integer()}</c>
+ terminated by a dot. The file is read when the daemon starts.
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>{ssh_moduli_file,filename()}</c></tag>
+ <item>The file must be in
+ <seealso marker="public_key:public_key#dh_gex_group/4">ssh-keygen moduli file format</seealso>.
+ The file is read when the daemon starts.
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>The default list is fetched from the
+ <seealso marker="public_key:public_key#dh_gex_group/4">public_key</seealso> application.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{dh_gex_limits,{Min=integer(),Max=integer()}}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Limits what a client can ask for in diffie-hellman-group-exchange.
+ The limits will be
+ <c>{MaxUsed = min(MaxClient,Max), MinUsed = max(MinClient,Min)}</c> where <c>MaxClient</c> and
+ <c>MinClient</c> are the values proposed by a connecting client.
+ </p>
+ <p>The default value is <c>{0,infinity}</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>If <c>MaxUsed &lt; MinUsed</c> in a key exchange, it will fail with a disconnect.
+ </p>
+ <p>See RFC 4419 for the function of the Max and Min values.</p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{pwdfun, fun(User::string(), Password::string(), PeerAddress::{ip_adress(),port_number()}, State::any()) -> boolean() | disconnect | {boolean(),any()} }]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provides a function for password validation. This could used for calling an external system or if
+ passwords should be stored as a hash. The fun returns:
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>true</c> if the user and password is valid and</item>
+ <item><c>false</c> otherwise.</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ <p>This fun can also be used to make delays in authentication tries for example by calling
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:timer#sleep/1">timer:sleep/1</seealso>. To facilitate counting of failed tries
+ the <c>State</c> variable could be used. This state is per connection only. The first time the pwdfun
+ is called for a connection, the <c>State</c> variable has the value <c>undefined</c>.
+ The pwdfun can return - in addition to the values above - a new state
+ as:
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>{true, NewState:any()}</c> if the user and password is valid or</item>
+ <item><c>{false, NewState:any()}</c> if the user or password is invalid</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ <p>A third usage is to block login attempts from a missbehaving peer. The <c>State</c> described above
+ can be used for this. In addition to the responses above, the following return value is introduced:
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>disconnect</c> if the connection should be closed immediately after sending a SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT
+ message.</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{pwdfun, fun(User::string(), Password::string()) -> boolean()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provides a function for password validation. This function is called
+ with user and password as strings, and returns
<c><![CDATA[true]]></c> if the password is valid and
<c><![CDATA[false]]></c> otherwise.</p>
+ <p>This option (<c>{pwdfun,fun/2}</c>) is the same as a subset of the previous
+ (<c>{pwdfun,fun/4}</c>). It is kept for compatibility.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{negotiation_timeout, integer()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Max time in milliseconds for the authentication negotiation. The default value is 2 minutes. If the client fails to login within this time, the connection is closed.
+ <p>Maximum time in milliseconds for the authentication negotiation.
+ Defaults to 120000 (2 minutes). If the client fails to log in within this time,
+ the connection is closed.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{max_sessions, pos_integer()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The maximum number of simultaneous sessions that are accepted at any time for this daemon. This includes sessions that are being authorized. So if set to <c>N</c>, and <c>N</c> clients have connected but not started the login process, the <c>N+1</c> connection attempt will be aborted. If <c>N</c> connections are authenticated and still logged in, no more loggins will be accepted until one of the existing ones log out.
+ <p>The maximum number of simultaneous sessions that are accepted at any time
+ for this daemon. This includes sessions that are being authorized.
+ Thus, if set to <c>N</c>, and <c>N</c> clients have connected but not started
+ the login process, connection attempt <c>N+1</c> is aborted.
+ If <c>N</c> connections are authenticated and still logged in, no more logins
+ are accepted until one of the existing ones log out.
+ </p>
+ <p>The counter is per listening port. Thus, if two daemons are started, one with
+ <c>{max_sessions,N}</c> and the other with <c>{max_sessions,M}</c>, in total
+ <c>N+M</c> connections are accepted for the whole <c>ssh</c> application.
</p>
- <p>The counter is per listening port, so if two daemons are started, one with <c>{max_sessions,N}</c> and the other with <c>{max_sessions,M}</c> there will be in total <c>N+M</c> connections accepted for the whole ssh application.
+ <p>Notice that if <c>parallel_login</c> is <c>false</c>, only one client
+ at a time can be in the authentication phase.
</p>
- <p>Note that if <c>parallel_login</c> is <c>false</c>, only one client at a time may be in the authentication phase.
+ <p>By default, this option is not set. This means that the number is not limited.
</p>
- <p>As default, the option is not set. This means that the number is not limited.
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{max_channels, pos_integer()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>The maximum number of channels with active remote subsystem that are accepted for
+ each connection to this daemon</p>
+ <p>By default, this option is not set. This means that the number is not limited.
</p>
</item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{parallel_login, boolean()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If set to false (the default value), only one login is handled a time. If set to true, an unlimited number of login attempts will be allowed simultanously.
+ <p>If set to false (the default value), only one login is handled at a time.
+ If set to true, an unlimited number of login attempts are allowed simultaneously.
</p>
- <p>If the <c>max_sessions</c> option is set to <c>N</c> and <c>parallel_login</c> is set to <c>true</c>, the max number of simultaneous login attempts at any time is limited to <c>N-K</c> where <c>K</c> is the number of authenticated connections present at this daemon.
+ <p>If the <c>max_sessions</c> option is set to <c>N</c> and <c>parallel_login</c>
+ is set to <c>true</c>, the maximum number of simultaneous login attempts at any time is
+ limited to <c>N-K</c>, where <c>K</c> is the number of authenticated connections present
+ at this daemon.
</p>
<warning>
- <p>Do not enable <c>parallel_logins</c> without protecting the server by other means, for example the <c>max_sessions</c> option or a firewall configuration. If set to <c>true</c>, there is no protection against DOS attacks.</p>
+ <p>Do not enable <c>parallel_logins</c> without protecting the server by other means,
+ for example, by the <c>max_sessions</c> option or a firewall configuration. If set to
+ <c>true</c>, there is no protection against DOS attacks.</p>
</warning>
</item>
@@ -363,45 +609,97 @@
<tag><c><![CDATA[{key_cb, atom()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Module implementing the behaviour <seealso marker="ssh_server_key_api">ssh_server_key_api</seealso>.
+ <p>Module implementing the behaviour
+ <seealso marker="ssh_server_key_api">ssh_server_key_api</seealso>.
Can be used to customize the handling of public keys.
</p>
</item>
+
+ <tag><c>{profile, atom()}</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Used together with <c>ip-address</c> and <c>port</c> to
+ uniquely identify a ssh daemon. This can be useful in a
+ virtualized environment, where there can be more that one
+ server that has the same <c>ip-address</c> and
+ <c>port</c>. If this property is not explicitly set, it is
+ assumed that the the <c>ip-address</c> and <c>port</c>
+ uniquely identifies the SSH daemon.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
<tag><c><![CDATA[{fd, file_descriptor()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Allow an existing file-descriptor to be used
- (simply passed on to the transport protocol).</p></item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{failfun, fun(User::string(), PeerAddress::ip_address(), Reason::term()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
+ <p>Allows an existing file-descriptor to be used
+ (passed on to the transport protocol).</p></item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{failfun, fun(User::string(),
+ PeerAddress::ip_address(), Reason::term()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a fun to implement your own logging when a user fails to authenticate.</p>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging when a user fails to authenticate.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{connectfun, fun(User::string(), PeerAddress::ip_address(), Method::string()) ->_}]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{connectfun, fun(User::string(), PeerAddress::ip_address(),
+ Method::string()) ->_}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a fun to implement your own logging when a user authenticates to the server.</p>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging when a user authenticates to the server.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{disconnectfun, fun(Reason:term()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Provide a fun to implement your own logging when a user disconnects from the server.</p>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging when a user disconnects from the server.</p>
</item>
- </taglist>
- </desc>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{unexpectedfun, fun(Message:term(), Peer) -> report | skip }]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provides a fun to implement your own logging or other action when an unexpected message arrives.
+ If the fun returns <c>report</c> the usual info report is issued but if <c>skip</c> is returned no
+ report is generated.</p>
+ <p><c>Peer</c> is in the format of <c>{Host,Port}</c>.</p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{ssh_msg_debug_fun, fun(ConnectionRef::ssh_connection_ref(), AlwaysDisplay::boolean(), Msg::binary(), LanguageTag::binary()) -> _}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Provide a fun to implement your own logging of the SSH message SSH_MSG_DEBUG. The last three parameters are from the message, see RFC4253, section 11.3. The <c>ConnectionRef</c> is the reference to the connection on which the message arrived. The return value from the fun is not checked.</p>
+ <p>The default behaviour is ignore the message.
+ To get a printout for each message with <c>AlwaysDisplay = true</c>, use for example <c>{ssh_msg_debug_fun, fun(_,true,M,_)-> io:format("DEBUG: ~p~n", [M]) end}</c></p>
+ </item>
+
+ </taglist>
+ </desc>
</func>
+ <func>
+ <name>default_algorithms() -> algs_list()</name>
+ <fsummary>Get a list declaring the supported algorithms</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns a key-value list, where the keys are the different types of algorithms and the values are the
+ algorithms themselves. An example:</p>
+ <code>
+20> ssh:default_algorithms().
+[{kex,['diffie-hellman-group1-sha1']},
+ {public_key,['ssh-rsa','ssh-dss']},
+ {cipher,[{client2server,['aes128-ctr','aes128-cbc','3des-cbc']},
+ {server2client,['aes128-ctr','aes128-cbc','3des-cbc']}]},
+ {mac,[{client2server,['hmac-sha2-256','hmac-sha1']},
+ {server2client,['hmac-sha2-256','hmac-sha1']}]},
+ {compression,[{client2server,[none,zlib]},
+ {server2client,[none,zlib]}]}]
+21>
+</code>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
<func>
<name>shell(Host) -> </name>
<name>shell(Host, Option) -> </name>
<name>shell(Host, Port, Option) -> _</name>
- <fsummary> </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Starts an interactive shell over an SSH server.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> Host = string()</v>
- <v> Port = integer()</v>
- <v> Options - see ssh:connect/3</v>
+ <v>Host = string()</v>
+ <v>Port = integer()</v>
+ <v>Options - see ssh:connect/3</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Starts an interactive shell via an SSH server on the
+ <p>Starts an interactive shell over an SSH server on the
given <c>Host</c>. The function waits for user input,
- and will not return until the remote shell is ended (i.e.
+ and does not return until the remote shell is ended (that is,
exit from the shell).
</p>
</desc>
@@ -410,28 +708,29 @@
<func>
<name>start() -> </name>
<name>start(Type) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Starts the SSH application. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Starts the SSH application.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Type = permanent | transient | temporary</v>
<v>Reason = term() </v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Utility function that starts crypto, public_key and the SSH
- application. Defult type is temporary.
- See also <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>
- </p>
+ <p>Utility function that starts the applications <c>crypto</c>, <c>public_key</c>,
+ and <c>ssh</c>. Default type is <c>temporary</c>.
+ For more information, see the <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>
+ manual page in <c>kernel</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>stop() -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Stops the SSH application.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Stops the <c>ssh</c> application.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Stops the SSH application. See also
- <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso></p>
+ <p>Stops the <c>ssh</c> application.
+ For more information, see the <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>
+ manual page in <c>kernel</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -455,7 +754,7 @@
<name>stop_listener(DaemonRef) -> </name>
<name>stop_listener(Address, Port) -> ok </name>
<fsummary>Stops the listener, but leaves existing connections started
- by the listener up and running.</fsummary>
+ by the listener operational.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>DaemonRef = ssh_daemon_ref()</v>
<v>Address = ip_address()</v>
@@ -463,7 +762,7 @@
</type>
<desc>
<p>Stops the listener, but leaves existing connections started
- by the listener up and running.</p>
+ by the listener operational.</p>
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_app.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_app.xml
index a1d2402790..79dd1e210e 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_app.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_app.xml
@@ -8,93 +8,311 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>SSH</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <checked></checked>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>ssh_app.xml</file>
</header>
<app>SSH</app>
- <appsummary>The ssh application implements the SSH (Secure Shell) protocol and
- provides an SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) client and server. </appsummary>
+ <appsummary>The ssh application implements the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol and
+ provides an SSH File Transfer Protocol (SFTP) client and server.</appsummary>
+ <description>
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application is an implementation of the SSH protocol in Erlang.
+ <c>ssh</c> offers API functions to write customized SSH clients and servers as well as
+ making the Erlang shell available over SSH. An SFTP client, <c>ssh_sftp</c>, and server,
+ <c>ssh_sftpd</c>, are also included.</p>
+ </description>
- <section>
+ <section>
<title>DEPENDENCIES</title>
- <p>The ssh application uses the Erlang applications public_key and
- crypto to handle public keys and encryption, hence these
- applications needs to be loaded for the ssh application to work. In
- an embedded environment that means they need to be started with
- application:start/[1,2] before the ssh application is started.
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application uses the applications
+ <seealso marker="public_key:public_key">public_key</seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="crypto:crypto">crypto</seealso>
+ to handle public keys and encryption. Hence, these
+ applications must be loaded for the <c>ssh</c> application to work. In
+ an embedded environment this means that they must be started with
+ <seealso marker="kernel:application#start/1">application:start/1,2</seealso> before the
+ <c>ssh</c> application is started.
</p>
</section>
- <section>
+ <section>
<title>CONFIGURATION</title>
- <p>The ssh application does not currently have an application
- specific configuration file as described in application(3),
- however it will by default use the following configuration files
- from openssh: known_hosts, authorized_keys, authorized_keys2,
- id_dsa and id_rsa, ssh_host_dsa_key and ssh_host_rsa_key. By
- default Erlang SSH will look for id_dsa, id_rsa, known_hosts
- and authorized_keys in ~/.ssh, and the host key files in /etc/ssh
- . These locations may be changed by the options user_dir and
- system_dir. Public key handling may also be customized by
- providing a callback module implementing the behaviors
- <seealso marker="ssh_client_key_api">ssh_client_key_api</seealso> and
- <seealso marker="ssh_server_key_api">ssh_server_key_api</seealso>.
- </p>
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application does not have an application-
+ specific configuration file, as described in <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>.
+ However, by default it use the following configuration files
+ from OpenSSH:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>known_hosts</c></item>
+ <item><c>authorized_keys</c></item>
+ <item><c>authorized_keys2</c></item>
+ <item><c>id_dsa</c></item>
+ <item><c>id_rsa</c></item>
+ <item><c>id_ecdsa</c></item>
+ <item><c>ssh_host_dsa_key</c></item>
+ <item><c>ssh_host_rsa_key</c></item>
+ <item><c>ssh_host_ecdsa_key</c></item>
+ </list>
+ <p>By default, <c>ssh</c> looks for <c>id_dsa</c>, <c>id_rsa</c>,
+ <c>id_ecdsa_key</c>,
+ <c>known_hosts</c>, and <c>authorized_keys</c> in ~/.ssh,
+ and for the host key files in <c>/etc/ssh</c>. These locations can be changed
+ by the options <c>user_dir</c> and <c>system_dir</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Public key handling can also be customized through a callback module that
+ implements the behaviors
+ <seealso marker="ssh_client_key_api">ssh_client_key_api</seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="ssh_server_key_api">ssh_server_key_api</seealso>.
+ </p>
- <section>
- <title>PUBLIC KEYS</title>
- <p>
- id_dsa and id_rsa are the users private key files, note that
- the public key is part of the private key so the ssh
- application will not use the id_&lt;*>.pub files. These are
- for the users convenience when he/she needs to convey their
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Public Keys</title>
+ <p><c>id_dsa</c>, <c>id_rsa</c> and <c>id_ecdsa</c> are the users private key files.
+ Notice that the public key is part of the private key so the <c>ssh</c>
+ application does not use the <c>id_&lt;*>.pub</c> files. These are
+ for the user's convenience when it is needed to convey the user's
public key.
</p>
- </section>
-
- <section>
- <title>KNOW HOSTS</title>
- <p>The known_hosts file contains a list of approved servers and
- their public keys. Once a server is listed, it can be verified
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Known Hosts</title>
+ <p>The <c>known_hosts</c> file contains a list of approved servers and
+ their public keys. Once a server is listed, it can be verified
without user interaction.
</p>
- </section>
-
- <section>
- <title>AUTHORIZED KEYS</title>
- <p>The authorized key file keeps track of the user's authorized
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Authorized Keys</title>
+ <p>The <c>authorized_key</c> file keeps track of the user's authorized
public keys. The most common use of this file is to let users
- log in without entering their password which is supported by the
- Erlang SSH daemon.
+ log in without entering their password, which is supported by the
+ Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon.
</p>
- </section>
-
- <section>
- <title>HOST KEYS</title>
- <p>Currently rsa and dsa host keys are supported and are
- expected to be found in files named ssh_host_rsa_key and
- ssh_host_dsa_key.
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Host Keys</title>
+ <p>RSA and DSA host keys are supported and are
+ expected to be found in files named <c>ssh_host_rsa_key</c>,
+ <c>ssh_host_dsa_key</c> and <c>ssh_host_ecdsa_key</c>.
</p>
- </section>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>ERROR LOGGER AND EVENT HANDLERS</title>
+ <p>The <c>ssh</c> application uses the default <seealso marker="kernel:error_logger">OTP error logger</seealso> to log unexpected errors or print information about special events.</p>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <marker id="supported"/>
+ <title>SUPPORTED SPECIFICATIONS AND STANDARDS</title>
+ <p>The supported SSH version is 2.0.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Algorithms</title>
+ <p>The actual set of algorithms may vary depending on which OpenSSL crypto library that is installed on the machine.
+ For the list on a particular installation, use the command
+ <seealso marker="ssh:ssh#default_algorithms/0">ssh:default_algorithms/0</seealso>.
+ The user may override the default algorithm configuration both on the server side and the client side.
+ See the option <c>preferred_algorithms</c> in the <seealso marker="ssh:ssh#daemon/1">ssh:daemon/1,2,3</seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="ssh:ssh#connect/3">ssh:connect/3,4</seealso> functions.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>Supported algorithms are:</p>
+
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>Key exchange algorithms</tag>
+ <item>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>ecdh-sha2-nistp256</item>
+ <item>ecdh-sha2-nistp384</item>
+ <item>ecdh-sha2-nistp521</item>
+ <item>diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1</item>
+ <item>diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256</item>
+ <item>diffie-hellman-group14-sha1</item>
+ <item>diffie-hellman-group1-sha1</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag>Public key algorithms</tag>
+ <item>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>ecdsa-sha2-nistp256</item>
+ <item>ecdsa-sha2-nistp384</item>
+ <item>ecdsa-sha2-nistp521</item>
+ <item>ssh-rsa</item>
+ <item>ssh-dss</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag>MAC algorithms</tag>
+ <item>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>hmac-sha2-256</item>
+ <item>hmac-sha2-512</item>
+ <item>hmac-sha1</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag>Encryption algorithms (ciphers)</tag>
+ <item>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>[email protected] (AEAD_AES_128_GCM)</item>
+ <item>[email protected] (AEAD_AES_256_GCM)</item>
+ <item>aes128-ctr</item>
+ <item>aes192-ctr</item>
+ <item>aes256-ctr</item>
+ <item>aes128-cbc</item>
+ <item>3des-cbc</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>Following the internet de-facto standard, the cipher and mac algorithm AEAD_AES_128_GCM is selected when the
+ cipher [email protected] is negotiated. The cipher and mac algorithm AEAD_AES_256_GCM is selected when the
+ cipher [email protected] is negotiated.
+ </p>
+ <p>See the text at the description of <seealso marker="#rfc5647_note">the rfc 5647 further down</seealso>
+ for more information.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag>Compression algorithms</tag>
+ <item>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>none</item>
+ <item>[email protected]</item>
+ <item>zlib</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Unicode support</title>
+ <p>Unicode filenames are supported if the emulator and the underlaying OS support it. See section DESCRIPTION in the
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file">file</seealso> manual page in <c>kernel</c> for information about this subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>The shell and the cli both support unicode.
+ </p>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Rfcs</title>
+ <p>The following rfc:s are supported:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4251">RFC 4251</url>, The Secure Shell (SSH) Protocol Architecture.
+ <p>Except
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>9.4.6 Host-Based Authentication</item>
+ <item>9.5.2 Proxy Forwarding</item>
+ <item>9.5.3 X11 Forwarding</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4252">RFC 4252</url>, The Secure Shell (SSH) Authentication Protocol.
+ <p>Except
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>9. Host-Based Authentication: "hostbased"</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4253">RFC 4253</url>, The Secure Shell (SSH) Transport Layer Protocol.
+ <p></p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4254">RFC 4254</url>, The Secure Shell (SSH) Connection Protocol.
+ <p>Except
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>6.3. X11 Forwarding</item>
+ <item>7. TCP/IP Port Forwarding</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4256">RFC 4256</url>, Generic Message Exchange Authentication for
+ the Secure Shell Protocol (SSH).
+ <p>Except
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>num-prompts > 1</c></item>
+ <item>password changing</item>
+ <item>other identification methods than userid-password</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4419">RFC 4419</url>, Diffie-Hellman Group Exchange for
+ the Secure Shell (SSH) Transport Layer Protocol.
+ <p></p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4716">RFC 4716</url>, The Secure Shell (SSH) Public Key File Format.
+ <p></p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5647">RFC 5647</url>, AES Galois Counter Mode for
+ the Secure Shell Transport Layer Protocol.
+ <p><marker id="rfc5647_note"/>There is an ambiguity in the synchronized selection of cipher and mac algorithm.
+ This is resolved by OpenSSH in the ciphers [email protected] and [email protected] which are implemented.
+ If the explicit ciphers and macs AEAD_AES_128_GCM or AEAD_AES_256_GCM are needed,
+ they could be enabled with the option preferred_algorithms.
+ <warning>
+ If the client or the server is not Erlang/OTP, it is the users responsibility to check that
+ other implementation has the same interpretation of AEAD_AES_*_GCM as the Erlang/OTP SSH before
+ enabling them. The aes*[email protected] variants are always safe to use since they lack the
+ ambiguity.
+ </warning>
+ </p>
+ <p>The second paragraph in section 5.1 is resolved as:
+ <list type="ordered">
+ <item>If the negotiated cipher is AEAD_AES_128_GCM, the mac algorithm is set to AEAD_AES_128_GCM.</item>
+ <item>If the negotiated cipher is AEAD_AES_256_GCM, the mac algorithm is set to AEAD_AES_256_GCM.</item>
+ <item>If the mac algorithm is AEAD_AES_128_GCM, the cipher is set to AEAD_AES_128_GCM.</item>
+ <item>If the mac algorithm is AEAD_AES_256_GCM, the cipher is set to AEAD_AES_256_GCM.</item>
+ </list>
+ The first rule that matches when read in order from the top is applied
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5656">RFC 5656</url>, Elliptic Curve Algorithm Integration in
+ the Secure Shell Transport Layer.
+ <p>Except
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>5. ECMQV Key Exchange</item>
+ <item>6.4. ECMQV Key Exchange and Verification Method Name</item>
+ <item>7.2. ECMQV Message Numbers</item>
+ <item>10.2. Recommended Curves</item>
+ </list>
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <item><url href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6668">RFC 6668</url>, SHA-2 Data Integrity Verification for
+ the Secure Shell (SSH) Transport Layer Protocol
+ <p>Comment: Defines hmac-sha2-256 and hmac-sha2-512
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ </list>
+
</section>
<section>
<title>SEE ALSO</title>
- <p>application(3)</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso></p>
</section>
</appref>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_channel.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_channel.xml
index a52a6a115e..abfe590647 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_channel.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_channel.xml
@@ -9,83 +9,99 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB, All Rights Reserved</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Ericsson AB.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_channel</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
</header>
<module>ssh_channel</module>
<modulesummary>-behaviour(ssh_channel).
</modulesummary>
<description>
<p>SSH services (clients and servers) are implemented as channels
- that are multiplexed over an SSH connection and communicates via
+ that are multiplexed over an SSH connection and communicates over
the <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt"> SSH
Connection Protocol</url>. This module provides a callback API
- that takes care of generic channel aspects such as flow control
- and close messages and lets the callback functions take care of
+ that takes care of generic channel aspects, such as flow control
+ and close messages. It lets the callback functions take care of
the service (application) specific parts. This behavior also ensures
that the channel process honors the principal of an OTP-process so
that it can be part of a supervisor tree. This is a requirement of
channel processes implementing a subsystem that will be added to
- the SSH applications supervisor tree.
+ the <c>ssh</c> applications supervisor tree.
</p>
- <note> <p>When implementing a SSH subsystem use the
- <c>-behaviour(ssh_daemon_channel).</c> instead of <c>-behaviour(ssh_channel).</c>
- as the only relevant callback functions for subsystems are
- init/1, handle_ssh_msg/2, handle_msg/2 and terminate/2, so the ssh_daemon_channel
- behaviour is limited version of the ssh_channel behaviour.
- </p> </note>
+ <note><p>When implementing an <c>ssh</c> subsystem, use
+ <c>-behaviour(ssh_daemon_channel)</c> instead of <c>-behaviour(ssh_channel)</c>.
+ The reason is that the only relevant callback functions for subsystems are
+ <c>init/1</c>, <c>handle_ssh_msg/2</c>, <c>handle_msg/2</c>, and <c>terminate/2</c>.
+ So, the <c>ssh_daemon_channel</c> behaviour is a limited version of the
+ <c>ssh_channel</c> behaviour.
+ </p></note>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
- <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module
- and/or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
- type:</p>
+ <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module,
+ or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
+ type, or both:</p>
- <p><c>boolean() = true | false </c></p>
- <p><c>string() = list of ASCII characters</c></p>
- <p><c>timeout() = infinity | integer() - in milliseconds.</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_connection_ref() - opaque to the user returned by
- ssh:connect/3 or sent to an SSH channel process</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_channel_id() = integer() </c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_data_type_code() = 1 ("stderr") | 0 ("normal") are
- currently valid values see <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254 </url> section 5.2.</c></p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>boolean() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>true | false</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>string() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>list of ASCII characters</p></item>
+ <tag><c>timeout() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>infinity | integer()</c> in milliseconds</p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_connection_ref() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>opaque() -as returned by
+ <c>ssh:connect/3</c> or sent to an SSH channel process</p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_channel_id() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>integer()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_data_type_code() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>1</c> ("stderr") | <c>0</c> ("normal") are
+ the valid values,
+ see <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url>
+ Section 5.2</p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>call(ChannelRef, Msg) -></name>
<name>call(ChannelRef, Msg, Timeout) -> Reply | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary> Makes a synchronous call to a channel.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Makes a synchronous call to a channel.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelRef = pid() </v>
- <d>As returned by start_link/4 </d>
- <v>Msg = term() </v>
- <v>Timeout = timeout() </v>
- <v>Reply = term() </v>
- <v>Reason = closed | timeout </v>
+ <d>As returned by <seealso marker = "#start_link-4">ssh_channel:start_link/4</seealso></d>
+ <v>Msg = term()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reply = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = closed | timeout</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Makes a synchronous call to the channel process by sending
- a message and waiting until a reply arrives or a timeout
- occurs. The channel will call <seealso marker =
+ a message and waiting until a reply arrives, or a time-out
+ occurs. The channel calls <seealso marker =
"#Module:handle_call-3">Module:handle_call/3</seealso>
- to handle the message. If the channel process does not exist
+ to handle the message. If the channel process does not exist,
<c>{error, closed}</c> is returned.
</p>
</desc>
@@ -96,14 +112,14 @@
<fsummary>Sends an asynchronous message to the channel
ChannelRef and returns ok.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>ChannelRef = pid() </v>
- <d>As returned by start_link/4 </d>
- <v>Msg = term() </v>
+ <v>ChannelRef = pid()</v>
+ <d>As returned by <seealso marker = "#start_link-4">ssh_channel:start_link/4</seealso></d>
+ <v>Msg = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Sends an asynchronous message to the channel process and
returns ok immediately, ignoring if the destination node or
- channel process does not exist. The channel will call
+ channel process does not exist. The channel calls
<seealso marker = "#Module:handle_cast-2">Module:handle_cast/2</seealso>
to handle the message.
</p>
@@ -112,31 +128,32 @@
<func>
<name>enter_loop(State) -> _ </name>
- <fsummary> Makes an existing process an ssh_channel process. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Makes an existing process an ssh_channel process.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> State = term() - as returned by <seealso marker = "#init-1">ssh_channel:init/1</seealso></v>
+ <v>State = term()</v>
+ <d>as returned by <seealso marker = "#init-1">ssh_channel:init/1</seealso></d>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Makes an existing process an <c>ssh_channel</c>
- process. Does not return, instead the calling process will
- enter the <c>ssh_channel</c> process receive loop and become an
- <c>ssh_channel process.</c> The process must have been started using
- one of the start functions in proc_lib, see <seealso
- marker="stdlib:proc_lib">proc_lib(3)</seealso>. The
- user is responsible for any initialization of the process
- and needs to call <seealso marker = "#init-1">ssh_channel:init/1</seealso>
+ <p>Makes an existing process an <c>ssh_channel</c>
+ process. Does not return, instead the calling process
+ enters the <c>ssh_channel</c> process receive loop and become an
+ <c>ssh_channel process</c>. The process must have been started using
+ one of the start functions in <c>proc_lib</c>, see the <seealso
+ marker="stdlib:proc_lib">proc_lib(3)</seealso> manual page in <c>stdlib</c>.
+ The user is responsible for any initialization of the process
+ and must call <seealso marker = "#init-1">ssh_channel:init/1</seealso>.
</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>init(Options) -> {ok, State} | {ok, State, Timeout} | {stop, Reason} </name>
- <fsummary> Initiates a ssh_channel process.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Initiates an <c>ssh_channel</c> process.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Options = [{Option, Value}]</v>
<v>State = term()</v>
- <v>Timeout = timeout() </v>
- <v>Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>
@@ -144,48 +161,47 @@
</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{channel_cb, atom()}]]></c></tag>
- <item>The module that implements the channel behaviour.</item>
+ <item><p>The module that implements the channel behaviour.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{init_args(), list()}]]></c></tag>
- <item> The list of arguments to the callback module's
- init function.</item>
+ <item><p>The list of arguments to the <c>init</c> function of the callback module.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{cm, connection_ref()}]]></c></tag>
- <item> Reference to the ssh connection as returned by <seealso
- marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/3</seealso></item>
+ <item><p>Reference to the <c>ssh</c> connection as returned by <seealso
+ marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/3</seealso></p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{channel_id, channel_id()}]]></c></tag>
- <item> Id of the SSH channel.</item>
+ <item><p>Id of the <c>ssh</c> channel.</p></item>
</taglist>
<note><p>This function is normally not called by the
- user. The user only needs to call if for some reason the
+ user. The user only needs to call if the
channel process needs to be started with help of
<c>proc_lib</c> instead of calling
<c>ssh_channel:start/4</c> or
- <c>ssh_channel:start_link/4</c> </p>
+ <c>ssh_channel:start_link/4</c>.</p>
</note>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>reply(Client, Reply) -> _</name>
- <fsummary>Send a reply to a client.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Sends a reply to a client.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>Client - opaque to the user, see explanation below</v>
+ <v>Client = opaque()</v>
<v>Reply = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>This function can be used by a channel to explicitly send a
+ <p>This function can be used by a channel to send a
reply to a client that called <c>call/[2,3]</c> when the reply
cannot be defined in the return value of
<seealso marker ="#Module:handle_call-3">Module:handle_call/3</seealso>.</p>
<p><c>Client</c> must be the <c>From</c> argument provided to
the callback function <c>handle_call/3</c>.
<c>Reply</c> is an arbitrary term,
- which will be given back to the client as the return value of
- <seealso marker="#call-2">ssh_channel:call/[2,3].</seealso>></p>
+ which is given back to the client as the return value of
+ <seealso marker="#call-2">ssh_channel:call/[2,3].</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -193,24 +209,25 @@
<name>start(SshConnection, ChannelId, ChannelCb, CbInitArgs) -> </name>
<name>start_link(SshConnection, ChannelId, ChannelCb, CbInitArgs) ->
{ok, ChannelRef} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary> Starts a processes that handles a SSH channel. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Starts a process that handles an SSH channel.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>SshConnection = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
- <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id() </v>
- <d> As returned by cannot be defined in the return value of
- <seealso marker ="ssh_connection#session_channel/2">ssh_connection:session_channel/[2,4]</seealso></d>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <d>As returned by
+ <seealso marker ="ssh_connection#session_channel/2">
+ ssh_connection:session_channel/[2,4]</seealso>.</d>
<v>ChannelCb = atom()</v>
- <d> The name of the module implementing the service specific parts
+ <d>Name of the module implementing the service-specific parts
of the channel.</d>
<v>CbInitArgs = [term()]</v>
- <d>Argument list for the init function in the callback module. </d>
+ <d>Argument list for the <c>init</c> function in the callback module.</d>
<v>ChannelRef = pid()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Starts a processes that handles an SSH channel. It will be
- called internally by the SSH daemon or explicitly by the SSH
- client implementations. The behavior will set the
- <c>trap_exit</c> flag to true.
+ <p>Starts a process that handles an SSH channel. It is
+ called internally, by the <c>ssh</c> daemon, or explicitly by the <c>ssh</c>
+ client implementations. The behavior sets the
+ <c>trap_exit</c> flag to <c>true</c>.
</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -219,19 +236,19 @@
<section>
<marker id="cb_timeouts"></marker>
- <title> CALLBACK TIMEOUTS</title>
+ <title>CALLBACK TIME-OUTS</title>
- <p>The timeout values that may be returned by the callback functions
- has the same semantics as in a <seealso marker="stdlib:gen_server">gen_server</seealso>
- If the timeout occurs <seealso marker="#Module:handle_msg-2">handle_msg/2</seealso>
- will be called as <c>handle_msg(timeout, State). </c></p>
+ <p>The time-out values that can be returned by the callback functions
+ have the same semantics as in a <seealso marker="stdlib:gen_server">gen_server</seealso>.
+ If the time-out occurs, <seealso marker="#Module:handle_msg-2">handle_msg/2</seealso>
+ is called as <c>handle_msg(timeout, State)</c>.</p>
</section>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>Module:code_change(OldVsn, State, Extra) -> {ok,
NewState}</name>
- <fsummary> Converts process state when code is changed.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Converts process state when code is changed.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>OldVsn = term()</v>
<d>In the case of an upgrade, <c>OldVsn</c> is <c>Vsn</c>, and
@@ -241,31 +258,31 @@
<c>Module</c>. If no such attribute is defined, the version is
the checksum of the BEAM file.</d>
<v>State = term()</v>
- <d>The internal state of the channel.</d>
+ <d>Internal state of the channel.</d>
<v>Extra = term()</v>
- <d>Passed as-is from the <c>{advanced,Extra}</c>
+ <d>Passed "as-is" from the <c>{advanced,Extra}</c>
part of the update instruction.</d>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Converts process state when code is changed.</p>
+ <p>Converts process state when code is changed.</p>
- <p>This function is called by a client side channel when it
- should update its internal state during a release
- upgrade/downgrade, i.e. when the instruction
- <c>{update,Module,Change,...}</c> where
- <c>Change={advanced,Extra}</c> is given in the <c>appup</c>
- file. See <seealso marker="doc/design_principles:release_handling#instr">OTP
- Design Principles</seealso> for more information.
+ <p>This function is called by a client-side channel when it
+ is to update its internal state during a release
+ upgrade or downgrade, that is, when the instruction
+ <c>{update,Module,Change,...}</c>, where
+ <c>Change={advanced,Extra}</c>, is given in the <c>appup</c>
+ file. For more information, refer to Section 9.11.6
+ Release Handling Instructions in the
+ <seealso marker="doc/design_principles:release_handling#instr">System Documentation</seealso>.
</p>
<note><p>Soft upgrade according to the OTP release concept
is not straight forward for the server side, as subsystem
- channel processes are spawned by the SSH application and
- hence added to its supervisor tree. It could be possible to
- upgrade the subsystem channels, when upgrading the user
- application, if the callback functions can handle two
- versions of the state, but this function can not be used in
- the normal way.</p>
+ channel processes are spawned by the <c>ssh</c> application and
+ hence added to its supervisor tree. The subsystem channels can
+ be upgraded when upgrading the user application, if the callback
+ functions can handle two versions of the state, but this function
+ cannot be used in the normal way.</p>
</note>
</desc>
@@ -274,36 +291,38 @@
<func>
<name>Module:init(Args) -> {ok, State} | {ok, State, timeout()} |
{stop, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary> Makes necessary initializations and returns the
+ <fsummary>Makes necessary initializations and returns the
initial channel state if the initializations succeed.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> Args = term() </v>
- <d> Last argument to ssh_channel:start_link/4.</d>
- <v> State = term() </v>
- <v> Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>Args = term()</v>
+ <d>Last argument to <c>ssh_channel:start_link/4</c>.</d>
+ <v>State = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Makes necessary initializations and returns the initial channel
+ <p>Makes necessary initializations and returns the initial channel
state if the initializations succeed.
</p>
- <p>For more detailed information on timeouts see the section
- <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIMEOUTS</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>For more detailed information on time-outs, see Section
+ <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIME-OUTS</seealso>. </p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:handle_call(Msg, From, State) -> Result</name>
- <fsummary> Handles messages sent by calling
- <c>ssh_channel:call/[2,3]</c></fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Handles messages sent by calling
+ <c>ssh_channel:call/[2,3]</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Msg = term()</v>
- <v>From = opaque to the user should be used as argument to
- ssh_channel:reply/2</v>
+ <v>From = opaque()</v>
+ <d>Is to be used as argument to
+ <seealso marker="#reply-2">ssh_channel:reply/2</seealso></d>
<v>State = term()</v>
<v>Result = {reply, Reply, NewState} | {reply, Reply, NewState, timeout()}
| {noreply, NewState} | {noreply , NewState, timeout()}
| {stop, Reason, Reply, NewState} | {stop, Reason, NewState} </v>
- <v>Reply = term() - will be the return value of ssh_channel:call/[2,3]</v>
+ <v>Reply = term()</v>
+ <d>Will be the return value of <seealso marker="#call-2">ssh_channel:call/[2,3]</seealso></d>
<v>NewState = term()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
@@ -311,15 +330,15 @@
<p>Handles messages sent by calling
<seealso marker="#call-2">ssh_channel:call/[2,3]</seealso>
</p>
- <p>For more detailed information on timeouts see the section
- <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIMEOUTS</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>For more detailed information on time-outs,, see Section
+ <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIME-OUTS</seealso>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:handle_cast(Msg, State) -> Result</name>
- <fsummary> Handles messages sent by calling
- <c>ssh_channel:cact/2</c></fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Handles messages sent by calling
+ <c>ssh_channel:cact/2</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Msg = term()</v>
<v>State = term()</v>
@@ -329,11 +348,11 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Handles messages sent by calling
- <c>ssh_channel:cast/2</c>
+ <p>Handles messages sent by calling
+ <c>ssh_channel:cast/2</c>.
</p>
- <p>For more detailed information on timeouts see the section
- <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIMEOUTS</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>For more detailed information on time-outs, see Section
+ <seealso marker="#cb_timeouts">CALLBACK TIME-OUTS</seealso>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -341,33 +360,33 @@
<name>Module:handle_msg(Msg, State) -> {ok, State} |
{stop, ChannelId, State}</name>
- <fsummary> Handle other messages than SSH connection protocol,
- call or cast messages sent to the channel.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Handles other messages than SSH connection protocol,
+ call, or cast messages sent to the channel.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Msg = timeout | term()</v>
<v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
<v>State = term() </v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Handle other messages than ssh connection protocol, call or
+ <p>Handles other messages than SSH Connection Protocol, call, or
cast messages sent to the channel.
</p>
- <p> Possible erlang 'EXIT'-messages should be handled by this
- function and all channels should handle the following message.</p>
+ <p>Possible Erlang 'EXIT' messages is to be handled by this
+ function and all channels are to handle the following message.</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{ssh_channel_up, ssh_channel_id(),
ssh_connection_ref()}]]></c></tag>
- <item>This is the first messages that will be received by
- the channel, it is sent just before the <seealso
+ <item><p>This is the first message that the channel receives.
+ It is sent just before the <seealso
marker="#init-1">ssh_channel:init/1</seealso> function
- returns successfully. This is especially useful if the
+ returns successfully. This is especially useful if the
server wants to send a message to the client without first
receiving a message from it. If the message is not
- useful for your particular scenario just ignore it by
- immediately returning {ok, State}.
- </item>
+ useful for your particular scenario, ignore it by
+ immediately returning <c>{ok, State}</c>.
+ </p></item>
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -375,42 +394,44 @@
<func>
<name>Module:handle_ssh_msg(Msg, State) -> {ok, State} | {stop,
ChannelId, State}</name>
- <fsummary> Handles ssh connection protocol messages. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Handles <c>ssh</c> connection protocol messages.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>Msg = <seealso marker="ssh_connection"> ssh_connection:event() </seealso> </v>
+ <v>Msg = ssh_connection:event()</v>
<v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
<v>State = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Handles SSH connection protocol messages that may need
- service specific attention.
+ <p>Handles SSH Connection Protocol messages that may need
+ service-specific attention. For details,
+ see <seealso marker="ssh_connection"> ssh_connection:event()</seealso>.
</p>
- <p> The following message is completely taken care of by the
- SSH channel behavior</p>
+ <p>The following message is taken care of by the
+ <c>ssh_channel</c> behavior.</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{closed, ssh_channel_id()}]]></c></tag>
- <item> The channel behavior will send a close message to the
- other side if such a message has not already been sent and
- then terminate the channel with reason normal.</item>
+ <item><p>The channel behavior sends a close message to the
+ other side, if such a message has not already been sent.
+ Then it terminates the channel with reason <c>normal</c>.</p></item>
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:terminate(Reason, State) -> _</name>
- <fsummary> </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Does cleaning up before channel process termination.
+ </fsummary>
<type>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
<v>State = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>This function is called by a channel process when it is
- about to terminate. Before this function is called <seealso
+ about to terminate. Before this function is called, <seealso
marker="ssh_connection#close-2"> ssh_connection:close/2
- </seealso> will be called if it has not been called earlier.
- This function should do any necessary cleaning
+ </seealso> is called, if it has not been called earlier.
+ This function does any necessary cleaning
up. When it returns, the channel process terminates with
reason <c>Reason</c>. The return value is ignored.
</p>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_client_key_api.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_client_key_api.xml
index f3d05a8980..6b8932e5a7 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_client_key_api.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_client_key_api.xml
@@ -9,116 +9,127 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB, All Rights Reserved</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Ericsson AB.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_client_key_api</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
</header>
<module>ssh_client_key_api</module>
<modulesummary>
-behaviour(ssh_client_key_api).
</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p> Behavior describing the API for an SSH client's public key handling.
- By implementing the callbacks defined.
- in this behavior it is possible to customize the SSH client's public key
- handling. By default the SSH application implements this behavior
- with help of the standard openssh files, see <seealso marker="SSH_app"> ssh(6)</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>Behavior describing the API for public key handling of an SSH client. By implementing
+ the callbacks defined in this behavior, the public key handling of an SSH client can
+ be customized. By default the <c>ssh</c> application implements this behavior
+ with help of the standard OpenSSH files,
+ see the <seealso marker="SSH_app"> ssh(6)</seealso> application manual.</p>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
- <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module
- and/or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
- type. For more details on public key data types
- see the <seealso marker="public_key:public_key_records"> public_key user's guide.</seealso>
+ <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module,
+ or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
+ type, or both. For more details on public key data types,
+ refer to Section 2 Public Key Records in the
+ <seealso marker="public_key:public_key_records"> public_key user's guide:</seealso>
</p>
-
- <p> boolean() = true | false</p>
- <p> string() = [byte()] </p>
- <p> public_key() = #'RSAPublicKey'{}| {integer(), #'Dss-Parms'{}}| term()</p>
- <p> private_key() = #'RSAPrivateKey'{} | #'DSAPrivateKey'{} | term()</p>
- <p> public_key_algorithm() = 'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss' | atom()</p>
-
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>boolean() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>true | false</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>string() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>[byte()]</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>public_key() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>#'RSAPublicKey'{}| {integer(), #'Dss-Parms'{}}| term()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>private_key() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>#'RSAPrivateKey'{} | #'DSAPrivateKey'{} | term()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>public_key_algorithm() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss' | atom()</c></p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>Module:add_host_key(HostNames, Key, ConnectOptions) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Adds a host key to the set of trusted host keys</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Adds a host key to the set of trusted host keys.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>HostNames = string()</v>
- <d>Description of the host that owns the <c>PublicKey</c></d>
+ <d>Description of the host that owns the <c>PublicKey</c>.</d>
- <v>Key = public_key() </v>
- <d> Normally an RSA or DSA public key but handling of other public keys can be added</d>
+ <v>Key = public_key()</v>
+ <d>Normally an RSA or DSA public key, but handling of other public keys can be added.</d>
- <v>ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
- <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso></d>
- <v>Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist()</v>
+ <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso></d>
+ <v>Reason = term().</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Adds a host key to the set of trusted host keys</p>
+ <p>Adds a host key to the set of trusted host keys.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:is_host_key(Key, Host, Algorithm, ConnectOptions) -> Result</name>
- <fsummary>Checks if a host key is trusted</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Checks if a host key is trusted.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Key = public_key() </v>
- <d> Normally an RSA or DSA public key but handling of other public keys can be added</d>
+ <d>Normally an RSA or DSA public key, but handling of other public keys can be added.</d>
<v>Host = string()</v>
- <d>Description of the host</d>
+ <d>Description of the host.</d>
<v>Algorithm = public_key_algorithm()</v>
- <d> Host key algorithm. Should support 'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss' but additional algorithms
+ <d>Host key algorithm. Is to support <c>'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss'</c>, but more algorithms
can be handled.</d>
- <v> ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
- <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso></d>
+ <v>ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
+ <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso>.</d>
- <v> Result = boolean()</v>
+ <v>Result = boolean()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Checks if a host key is trusted</p>
+ <p>Checks if a host key is trusted.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:user_key(Algorithm, ConnectOptions) ->
{ok, PrivateKey} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Fetches the users "public key" matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Fetches the users <em>public key</em> matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Algorithm = public_key_algorithm()</v>
- <d> Host key algorithm. Should support 'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss' but additional algorithms
+ <d>Host key algorithm. Is to support <c>'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss'</c> but more algorithms
can be handled.</d>
- <v> ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
- <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso></d>
+ <v>ConnectOptions = proplists:proplist()</v>
+ <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#connect-3">ssh:connect/[3,4]</seealso></d>
- <v> PrivateKey = private_key()</v>
- <d> The private key of the user matching the <c>Algorithm</c></d>
+ <v>PrivateKey = private_key()</v>
+ <d>Private key of the user matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.</d>
- <v>Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Fetches the users "public key" matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.
- <note><p>The private key contains the public key</p></note>
- </p>
+ <p>Fetches the users <em>public key</em> matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.</p>
+ <note><p>The private key contains the public key.</p></note>
+
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_connection.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_connection.xml
index 5e2926dfa6..064a623eb6 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_connection.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_connection.xml
@@ -9,171 +9,190 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB, All Rights Reserved</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Ericsson AB.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_connection</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
<date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
</header>
<module>ssh_connection</module>
- <modulesummary>This module provides API functions to send <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt"> SSH Connection Protocol </url>
+ <modulesummary>This module provides API functions to send
+ <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt"> SSH Connection Protocol </url>
events to the other side of an SSH channel.
</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p>The SSH Connection Protocol is used by clients and servers
- (i.e. SSH channels) to communicate over the SSH connection. The
- API functions in this module sends SSH Connection Protocol events
- that are received as messages by the remote channel.
- In the case that the receiving channel is an Erlang process the
- message will be on the following format
- <c><![CDATA[{ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), ssh_event_msg()}]]></c>. If the <seealso
- marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel</seealso> behavior is used to
- implement the channel process these will be handled by
- <seealso
- marker="ssh_channel#Module:handle_ssh_msg-2">handle_ssh_msg/2 </seealso>.</p>
+ <p>The SSH Connection Protocol is used by clients and servers,
+ that is, SSH channels, to communicate over the SSH connection. The
+ API functions in this module send SSH Connection Protocol events,
+ which are received as messages by the remote channel.
+ If the receiving channel is an Erlang process, the
+ messages have the format
+ <c><![CDATA[{ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), ssh_event_msg()}]]></c>.
+ If the <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel</seealso> behavior is used to
+ implement the channel process, these messages are handled by
+ <seealso marker="ssh_channel#Module:handle_ssh_msg-2">handle_ssh_msg/2</seealso>.</p>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
-
- <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module and/or
- abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data type:</p>
-
- <p><c>boolean() = true | false </c></p>
- <p><c>string() = list of ASCII characters</c></p>
- <p><c>timeout() = infinity | integer() - in milliseconds.</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_connection_ref() - opaque to the user returned by
- ssh:connect/3 or sent to an SSH channel processes</c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_channel_id() = integer() </c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_data_type_code() = 1 ("stderr") | 0 ("normal") are
- currently valid values see</c> <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254 </url> section 5.2.</p>
- <p><c>ssh_request_status() = success | failure</c></p>
- <p><c>event() = {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), ssh_event_msg()} </c></p>
- <p><c>ssh_event_msg() = data_events() | status_events() | terminal_events() </c></p>
- <p><c>reason() = timeout | closed </c></p>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
+
+ <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module,
+ or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
+ type, or both:</p>
+
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>boolean() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>true | false </c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>string() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>list of ASCII characters</p></item>
+ <tag><c>timeout() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>infinity | integer()</c> in milliseconds</p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_connection_ref() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>opaque() -as returned by
+ <c>ssh:connect/3</c> or sent to an SSH channel processes</p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_channel_id() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>integer()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_data_type_code() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>1</c> ("stderr") | <c>0</c> ("normal") are
+ valid values, see
+ <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url> Section 5.2.</p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_request_status() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p> <c>success | failure</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>event() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>{ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), ssh_event_msg()}</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>ssh_event_msg() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>data_events() | status_events() | terminal_events()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>reason() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>timeout | closed</c></p></item>
+ </taglist>
<taglist>
- <tag><b>data_events()</b></tag>
+ <tag><em>data_events()</em></tag>
<item>
<taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{data, ssh_channel_id(), ssh_data_type_code(), binary() = Data}]]></c></tag>
- <item> Data has arrived on the channel. This event is sent as
- result of calling <seealso marker="ssh_connection#send-3"> ssh_connection:send/[3,4,5] </seealso></item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{data, ssh_channel_id(), ssh_data_type_code(), Data :: binary()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>Data has arrived on the channel. This event is sent as a
+ result of calling <seealso marker="ssh_connection#send-3">
+ ssh_connection:send/[3,4,5]</seealso>.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{eof, ssh_channel_id()}]]></c></tag>
- <item>Indicates that the other side will not send any more
- data. This event is sent as result of calling <seealso
- marker="ssh_connection#send_eof-2"> ssh_connection:send_eof/2</seealso>
- </item>
+ <item><p>Indicates that the other side sends no more data.
+ This event is sent as a result of calling <seealso
+ marker="ssh_connection#send_eof-2"> ssh_connection:send_eof/2</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
</taglist>
</item>
- <tag><b>status_events()</b></tag>
+ <tag><em>status_events()</em></tag>
<item>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{signal, ssh_channel_id(), ssh_signal()}]]></c></tag>
- <item>A signal can be delivered to the remote process/service
- using the following message. Some systems will not support
- signals, in which case they should ignore this message. There is
- currently no funtion to generate this event as the signals
- refered to are on OS-level and not something generated by an
- Erlang program.</item>
-
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{exit_signal, ssh_channel_id(), string() = ExitSignal, string() = ErrorMsg,
- string() = LanguageString}]]></c></tag>
-
- <item>A remote execution may terminate violently due to a signal
- then this message may be received. For details on valid string
- values see <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url> section 6.10. Special case of the signals
- mentioned above.</item>
-
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{exit_status, ssh_channel_id(), integer() = ExitStatus}]]></c></tag>
- <item> When the command running at the other end terminates, the
+ <item><p>A signal can be delivered to the remote process/service
+ using the following message. Some systems do not support
+ signals, in which case they are to ignore this message. There is
+ currently no function to generate this event as the signals
+ referred to are on OS-level and not something generated by an
+ Erlang program.</p></item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{exit_signal, ssh_channel_id(), ExitSignal :: string(), ErrorMsg ::string(),
+ LanguageString :: string()}]]></c></tag>
+
+ <item><p>A remote execution can terminate violently because of a signal.
+ Then this message can be received. For details on valid string
+ values, see <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url>
+ Section 6.10, which shows a special case of these signals.</p></item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{exit_status, ssh_channel_id(), ExitStatus :: integer()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>When the command running at the other end terminates, the
following message can be sent to return the exit status of the
- command. A zero 'exit_status' usually means that the command
- terminated successfully. This event is sent as result of calling
+ command. A zero <c>exit_status</c> usually means that the command
+ terminated successfully. This event is sent as a result of calling
<seealso marker="ssh_connection#exit_status-3">
- ssh_connection:exit_status/3</seealso></item>
+ ssh_connection:exit_status/3</seealso>.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{closed, ssh_channel_id()}]]></c></tag>
- <item> This event is sent as result of calling
- <seealso marker="ssh_connection#close-2">ssh_connection:close/2</seealso> Both the handling of this
- event and sending of it will be taken care of by the
- <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel</seealso> behavior.</item>
+ <item><p>This event is sent as a result of calling
+ <seealso marker="ssh_connection#close-2">ssh_connection:close/2</seealso>.
+ Both the handling of this event and sending it are taken care of by the
+ <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel</seealso> behavior.</p></item>
</taglist>
</item>
- <tag><b>terminal_events()</b></tag>
+ <tag><em>terminal_events()</em></tag>
<item>
- <p> Channels implementing a shell and command execution on the
- server side should handle the following messages that may be sent by client channel processes. </p>
+ <p>Channels implementing a shell and command execution on the
+ server side are to handle the following messages that can be sent by client-
+ channel processes.</p>
- <note> <p>Events that includes a <c> WantReply</c> expects the event handling
- process to call <seealso marker="ssh_connection#reply_request-4">ssh_connection:reply_request/4</seealso>
- with the boolean value of <c> WantReply</c> as the second
- argument. </p></note>
+ <p>Events that include a <c>WantReply</c> expect the event handling
+ process to call <seealso marker="ssh_connection#reply_request-4">
+ ssh_connection:reply_request/4</seealso>
+ with the boolean value of <c>WantReply</c> as the second argument.</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{env, ssh_channel_id(), boolean() = WantReply,
- string() = Var, string() = Value}]]></c></tag>
- <item> Environment variables may be passed to the shell/command
- to be started later. This event is sent as result of calling <seealso
- marker="ssh_connection#setenv-5"> ssh_connection:setenv/5</seealso>
- </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{env, ssh_channel_id(), WantReply :: boolean(),
+ Var ::string(), Value :: string()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>Environment variables can be passed to the shell/command
+ to be started later. This event is sent as a result of calling <seealso
+ marker="ssh_connection#setenv-5"> ssh_connection:setenv/5</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{pty, ssh_channel_id(),
- boolean() = WantReply, {string() = Terminal, integer() = CharWidth,
- integer() = RowHeight, integer() = PixelWidth, integer() = PixelHeight,
- [{atom() | integer() = Opcode,
- integer() = Value}] = TerminalModes}}]]></c></tag>
- <item>A pseudo-terminal has been requested for the
- session. Terminal is the value of the TERM environment
- variable value (e.g., vt100). Zero dimension parameters must
- be ignored. The character/row dimensions override the pixel
- dimensions (when nonzero). Pixel dimensions refer to the
- drawable area of the window. The <c>Opcode</c> in the
+ WantReply :: boolean(), {Terminal :: string(), CharWidth :: integer(),
+ RowHeight :: integer(), PixelWidth :: integer(), PixelHeight :: integer(),
+ TerminalModes :: [{Opcode :: atom() | integer(),
+ Value :: integer()}]}}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>A pseudo-terminal has been requested for the
+ session. <c>Terminal</c> is the value of the TERM environment
+ variable value, that is, <c>vt100</c>. Zero dimension parameters must
+ be ignored. The character/row dimensions override the pixel
+ dimensions (when non-zero). Pixel dimensions refer to the
+ drawable area of the window. <c>Opcode</c> in the
<c>TerminalModes</c> list is the mnemonic name, represented
- as an lowercase erlang atom, defined in
- <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254 </url> section 8.
- It may also be an opcode if the mnemonic name is not listed in the
- RFC. Example <c>OP code: 53, mnemonic name ECHO erlang atom:
- echo</c>.This event is sent as result of calling <seealso
- marker="ssh_connection#ptty_alloc/4">ssh_connection:ptty_alloc/4</seealso></item>
-
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{shell, boolean() = WantReply}]]></c></tag>
- <item> This message will request that the user's default shell
- be started at the other end. This event is sent as result of calling <seealso
- marker="ssh_connection#shell-2"> ssh_connection:shell/2</seealso>
- </item>
-
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{window_change, ssh_channel_id(), integer() = CharWidth,
- integer() = RowHeight, integer() = PixWidth, integer() = PixHeight}]]></c></tag>
- <item> When the window (terminal) size changes on the client
- side, it MAY send a message to the server side to inform it of
- the new dimensions. There is currently no API function to generate this
- event.</item>
+ as a lowercase Erlang atom, defined in
+ <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt">RFC 4254</url>, Section 8.
+ It can also be an <c>Opcode</c> if the mnemonic name is not listed in the
+ RFC. Example: <c>OP code: 53, mnemonic name ECHO erlang atom:
+ echo</c>. This event is sent as a result of calling <seealso
+ marker="ssh_connection#ptty_alloc/4">ssh_connection:ptty_alloc/4</seealso>.</p></item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{shell, WantReply :: boolean()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>This message requests that the user default shell
+ is started at the other end. This event is sent as a result of calling
+ <seealso marker="ssh_connection#shell-2"> ssh_connection:shell/2</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{window_change, ssh_channel_id(), CharWidth() :: integer(),
+ RowHeight :: integer(), PixWidth :: integer(), PixHeight :: integer()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>When the window (terminal) size changes on the client
+ side, it <em>can</em> send a message to the server side to inform it of
+ the new dimensions. No API function generates this event.</p></item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{exec, ssh_channel_id(),
- boolean() = WantReply, string() = Cmd}]]></c></tag>
- <item> This message will request that the server starts
- execution of the given command. This event is sent as result of calling <seealso
- marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4 </seealso>
- </item>
+ WantReply :: boolean(), Cmd :: string()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item><p>This message requests that the server starts
+ execution of the given command. This event is sent as a result of calling <seealso
+ marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4 </seealso>.
+ </p></item>
</taglist>
</item>
</taglist>
@@ -183,80 +202,83 @@
<func>
<name>adjust_window(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, NumOfBytes) -> ok</name>
- <fsummary>Adjusts the SSH flowcontrol window. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Adjusts the SSH flow control window.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id() </v>
- <v> NumOfBytes = integer()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>NumOfBytes = integer()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Adjusts the SSH flowcontrol window. This shall be done by both client and server side channel processes.</p>
+ <p>Adjusts the SSH flow control window. This is to be done by both the
+ client- and server-side channel processes.</p>
- <note><p>Channels implemented with the <seealso marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel
- behavior</seealso> will normaly not need to call this function as flow control
- will be handled by the behavior. The behavior will adjust the window every time
+ <note><p>Channels implemented with the <seealso marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel</seealso>
+ behavior do not normally need to call this function as flow control
+ is handled by the behavior. The behavior adjusts the window every time
the callback <seealso marker="ssh_channel#Module:handle_ssh_msg-2">
- handle_ssh_msg/2 </seealso> has returned after processing channel data</p> </note>
+ handle_ssh_msg/2</seealso> returns after processing channel data.</p></note>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>close(ConnectionRef, ChannelId) -> ok</name>
- <fsummary>Sends a close message on the channel <c>ChannelId</c>. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Sends a close message on the channel <c>ChannelId</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>A server or client channel process can choose to close their session by sending a close event.
+ <p>A server- or client-channel process can choose to close their session by
+ sending a close event.
</p>
- <note><p>This function will be called by the ssh_channel
- behavior when the channel is terminated see <seealso
- marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel(3) </seealso> so channels implemented with the
- behavior should not call this function explicitly.</p></note>
+ <note><p>This function is called by the <c>ssh_channel</c>
+ behavior when the channel is terminated, see <seealso
+ marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel(3)</seealso>. Thus, channels implemented
+ with the behavior are not to call this function explicitly.</p></note>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>exec(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Command, TimeOut) -> ssh_request_status() | {error, reason()} </name>
- <fsummary>Request that the server start the execution of the given command. </fsummary>
+ <name>exec(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Command, TimeOut) -> ssh_request_status() |
+ {error, reason()}</name>
+ <fsummary>Requests that the server starts the execution of the given command.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Command = string()</v>
- <v>Timeout = timeout() </v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Command = string()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Should be called by a client channel process to request that the server starts execution of the
- given command, the result will be several messages according to the following pattern. Note
- that the last message will be a channel close message, as the exec request is a one time
- execution that closes the channel when it is done.</p>
+ <p>Is to be called by a client-channel process to request that the server starts
+ executing the given command. The result is several messages according to the
+ following pattern. The last message is a channel close message, as the <c>exec</c>
+ request is a one-time execution that closes the channel when it is done.</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c> N x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(),
- {data, ssh_channel_id(), ssh_data_type_code(), binary() = Data}} </c></tag>
- <item>The result of executing the command may be only one line
- or thousands of lines depending on the command.</item>
+ <tag><c>N x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(),
+ {data, ssh_channel_id(), ssh_data_type_code(), Data :: binary()}}</c></tag>
+ <item><p>The result of executing the command can be only one line
+ or thousands of lines depending on the command.</p></item>
<tag><c>0 or 1 x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), {eof, ssh_channel_id()}}</c></tag>
- <item>Indicates that no more data will be sent.</item>
+ <item><p>Indicates that no more data is to be sent.</p></item>
<tag><c>0 or 1 x {ssh_cm,
ssh_connection_ref(), {exit_signal,
- ssh_channel_id(), string() = ExitSignal, string() = ErrorMsg, string() = LanguageString}}</c></tag>
- <item>Not all systems send signals. For details on valid string
- values see RFC 4254 section 6.10 </item>
+ ssh_channel_id(), ExitSignal :: string(), ErrorMsg :: string(), LanguageString :: string()}}</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Not all systems send signals. For details on valid string
+ values, see RFC 4254, Section 6.10</p></item>
<tag><c>0 or 1 x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(), {exit_status,
- ssh_channel_id(), integer() = ExitStatus}}</c></tag>
- <item>It is recommended by the <c>ssh connection protocol</c> that this
- message shall be sent, but that may not always be the case.</item>
+ ssh_channel_id(), ExitStatus :: integer()}}</c></tag>
+ <item><p>It is recommended by the SSH Connection Protocol to send this
+ message, but that is not always the case.</p></item>
- <tag><c> 1 x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(),
+ <tag><c>1 x {ssh_cm, ssh_connection_ref(),
{closed, ssh_channel_id()}}</c></tag>
- <item>Indicates that the ssh channel started for the
- execution of the command has now been shutdown.</item>
+ <item><p>Indicates that the <c>ssh_channel</c> started for the
+ execution of the command has now been shut down.</p></item>
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -265,78 +287,72 @@
<name>exit_status(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Status) -> ok</name>
<fsummary>Sends the exit status of a command to the client.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Status = integer()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Status = integer()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Should be called by a server channel process to sends the exit status of a command to the client.</p>
+ <p>Is to be called by a server-channel process to send the exit status of a command
+ to the client.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>ptty_alloc(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Options) -> </name>
- <name>ptty_alloc(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Options, Timeout) -> > ssh_request_status() | {error, reason()} </name>
- <fsummary>Send status replies to requests that want such replies. </fsummary>
+ <name>ptty_alloc(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Options) -></name>
+ <name>ptty_alloc(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Options, Timeout) -> > ssh_request_status() |
+ {error, reason()}</name>
+ <fsummary>Sends an SSH Connection Protocol <c>pty_req</c>,
+ to allocate a pseudo-terminal.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Options = proplists:proplist()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Options = proplists:proplist()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Sends a SSH Connection Protocol pty_req, to allocate a pseudo tty.
- Should be called by a SSH client process.
- Options are:
- </p>
+ <p>Sends an SSH Connection Protocol <c>pty_req</c>, to allocate a pseudo-terminal.
+ Is to be called by an SSH client process.</p>
+ <p>Options:</p>
<taglist>
<tag>{term, string()}</tag>
- <item>
- Defaults to os:getenv("TERM") or "vt100" if it is undefined.
- </item>
+ <item><p>Defaults to <em>os:getenv("TERM")</em> or <em>vt100</em>
+ if it is undefined.</p></item>
+
<tag>{width, integer()}</tag>
- <item>
- Defaults to 80 if pixel_width is not defined.
- </item>
+ <item><p>Defaults to 80 if <c>pixel_width</c> is not defined.</p></item>
+
<tag>{height, integer()}</tag>
- <item>
- Defaults to 24 if pixel_height is not defined.
- </item>
+ <item><p>Defaults to 24 if <c>pixel_height</c> is not defined.</p></item>
+
<tag>{pixel_width, integer()}</tag>
- <item>
- Is disregarded if width is defined.
- </item>
+ <item><p>Is disregarded if <c>width</c> is defined.</p></item>
+
<tag>{pixel_height, integer()}</tag>
- <item>
- Is disregarded if height is defined.
- </item>
+ <item><p>Is disregarded if <c>height</c> is defined.</p></item>
+
<tag>{pty_opts, [{posix_atom(), integer()}]}</tag>
- <item>
- Option may be an empty list, otherwise
- see possible POSIX names in section 8 in <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt"> RFC 4254</url>.
+ <item><p>Option can be an empty list. Otherwise, see possible <em>POSIX</em> names
+ in Section 8 in <url href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4254.txt"> RFC 4254</url>.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
-
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
+ <func>
<name>reply_request(ConnectionRef, WantReply, Status, ChannelId) -> ok</name>
- <fsummary>Send status replies to requests that want such replies. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Sends status replies to requests that want such replies.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> WantReply = boolean()</v>
- <v> Status = ssh_request_status() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>WantReply = boolean()</v>
+ <v>Status = ssh_request_status()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Sends status replies to requests where the requester has
- stated that they want a status report e.i .<c> WantReply = true</c>,
- if <c> WantReply</c> is false calling this function will be a
- "noop". Should be called while handling an ssh connection
- protocol message containing a <c>WantReply</c> boolean
- value.
- </p>
+ stated that it wants a status report, that is, <c>WantReply = true</c>.
+ If <c>WantReply</c> is <c>false</c>, calling this function becomes a
+ "noop". Is to be called while handling an SSH Connection
+ Protocol message containing a <c>WantReply</c> boolean value.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -346,98 +362,103 @@
<name>send(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Type, Data) -></name>
<name>send(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Type, Data, TimeOut) ->
ok | {error, timeout} | {error, closed}</name>
- <fsummary>Sends channel data </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Sends channel data.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Data = binary()</v>
- <v> Type = ssh_data_type_code()</v>
- <v> Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Data = binary()</v>
+ <v>Type = ssh_data_type_code()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Should be called by client- and server channel processes to send data to each other.
+ <p>Is to be called by client- and server-channel processes to send data to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>The function <seealso marker="ssh:ssh_connection#subsystem/4">subsystem/4</seealso> and subsequent
+ calls of <c>send/3,4,5</c> must be executed in the same process.
</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>send_eof(ConnectionRef, ChannelId) -> ok | {error, closed}</name>
- <fsummary>Sends eof on the channel <c>ChannelId</c>. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Sends EOF on channel <c>ChannelId</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Sends eof on the channel <c>ChannelId</c>.
- </p>
+ <p>Sends EOF on channel <c>ChannelId</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>session_channel(ConnectionRef, Timeout) -> </name>
+ <name>session_channel(ConnectionRef, Timeout) -></name>
<name>session_channel(ConnectionRef, InitialWindowSize,
MaxPacketSize, Timeout) -> {ok, ssh_channel_id()} | {error, reason()}</name>
- <fsummary>Opens a channel for a ssh session. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Opens a channel for an SSH session.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
- <v> InitialWindowSize = integer() </v>
- <v> MaxPacketSize = integer() </v>
- <v> Timeout = timeout()</v>
- <v> Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>InitialWindowSize = integer()</v>
+ <v>MaxPacketSize = integer()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Opens a channel for an SSH session. The channel id returned from this function
- is the id used as input to the other funtions in this module.
- </p>
+ is the id used as input to the other functions in this module.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>setenv(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Var, Value, TimeOut) -> ssh_request_status() | {error, reason()} </name>
- <fsummary> Environment variables may be passed to the
+ <name>setenv(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Var, Value, TimeOut) -> ssh_request_status() |
+ {error, reason()}</name>
+ <fsummary>Environment variables can be passed to the
shell/command to be started later.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Var = string()</v>
- <v> Value = string()</v>
- <v> Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Var = string()</v>
+ <v>Value = string()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Environment variables may be passed before starting the
- shell/command. Should be called by a client channel processes.
- </p>
+ <p>Environment variables can be passed before starting the
+ shell/command. Is to be called by a client channel processes.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>shell(ConnectionRef, ChannelId) -> ssh_request_status() | {error, closed}
</name>
- <fsummary> Requests that the user's default shell (typically
- defined in /etc/passwd in UNIX systems) shall be executed at the server
- end. </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Requests that the user default shell (typically defined in
+ /etc/passwd in Unix systems) is to be executed at the server end.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Should be called by a client channel process to request that the user's default shell (typically
- defined in /etc/passwd in UNIX systems) shall be executed at the server end.
- </p>
+ <p>Is to be called by a client channel process to request that the user default
+ shell (typically defined in /etc/passwd in Unix systems) is executed
+ at the server end.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>subsystem(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Subsystem, Timeout) -> ssh_request_status() | {error, reason()} </name>
- <fsummary> </fsummary>
+ <name>subsystem(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, Subsystem, Timeout) -> ssh_request_status() |
+ {error, reason()}</name>
+ <fsummary>Requests to execute a predefined subsystem on the server.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref() </v>
- <v> ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
- <v> Subsystem = string()</v>
- <v> Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>ChannelId = ssh_channel_id()</v>
+ <v>Subsystem = string()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Should be called by a client channel process for requesting to execute a predefined subsystem on the server.
+ <p>Is to be called by a client-channel process for requesting to execute a predefined
+ subsystem on the server.
+ </p>
+ <p>The function <c>subsystem/4</c> and subsequent calls of
+ <seealso marker="ssh:ssh_connection#send/3">send/3,4,5</seealso> must be executed in the same process.
</p>
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_server_key_api.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_server_key_api.xml
index f7133e4ba5..efb2c436e8 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_server_key_api.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_server_key_api.xml
@@ -9,82 +9,96 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB, All Rights Reserved</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Ericsson AB.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_server_key_api</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
</header>
<module>ssh_server_key_api</module>
<modulesummary>
-behaviour(ssh_server_key_api).
</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p> Behaviour describing the API for an SSH server's public key handling. By implementing the callbacks defined
- in this behavior it is possible to customize the SSH server's public key
- handling. By default the SSH application implements this behavior
- with help of the standard openssh files, see <seealso marker="SSH_app"> ssh(6)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Behaviour describing the API for public key handling of an SSH server. By implementing
+ the callbacks defined in this behavior, the public key handling of an SSH server can
+ be customized. By default the SSH application implements this behavior
+ with help of the standard OpenSSH files,
+ see the <seealso marker="SSH_app"> ssh(6)</seealso> application manual.</p>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
- <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module
- and/or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
- type. For more details on public key data types
- see the <seealso marker="public_key:public_key_records"> public_key user's guide.</seealso>
+ <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module,
+ or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data
+ type, or both. For more details on public key data types,
+ refer to Section 2 Public Key Records in the
+ <seealso marker="public_key:public_key_records"> public_key user's guide</seealso>.
</p>
- <p> boolean() = true | false</p>
- <p> string() = [byte()]</p>
- <p> public_key() = #'RSAPublicKey'{} | {integer(), #'Dss-Parms'{}} | term()</p>
- <p> private_key() = #'RSAPrivateKey'{} | #'DSAPrivateKey'{} | term()</p>
- <p> public_key_algorithm() = 'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss' | atom()</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>boolean() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>true | false</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>string() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>[byte()]</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>public_key() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>#'RSAPublicKey'{}| {integer(), #'Dss-Parms'{}}| term()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>private_key() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>#'RSAPrivateKey'{} | #'DSAPrivateKey'{} | term()</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>public_key_algorithm() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>'ssh-rsa'| 'ssh-dss' | atom()</c></p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
-
+
<funcs>
<func>
<name>Module:host_key(Algorithm, DaemonOptions) ->
{ok, Key} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Fetches the hosts private key </fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Fetches the host’s private key.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Algorithm = public_key_algorithm()</v>
- <d> Host key algorithm. Should support 'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss' but additional algorithms
+ <d>Host key algorithm. Is to support <c>'ssh-rsa' | 'ssh-dss'</c>, but more algorithms
can be handled.</d>
- <v> DaemonOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
- <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#daemon-2">ssh:daemon/[2,3]</seealso></d>
- <v> Key = private_key()</v>
- <d> The private key of the host matching the <c>Algorithm</c></d>
- <v>Reason = term() </v>
+ <v>DaemonOptions = proplists:proplist()</v>
+ <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#daemon-2">ssh:daemon/[2,3]</seealso>.</d>
+ <v>Key = private_key()</v>
+ <d>Private key of the host matching the <c>Algorithm</c>.</d>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Fetches the hosts private key</p>
+ <p>Fetches the private key of the host.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>Module:is_auth_key(Key, User, DaemonOptions) -> Result</name>
- <fsummary> Checks if the user key is authorized</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Checks if the user key is authorized.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v> Key = public_key() </v>
- <d> Normally an RSA or DSA public key but handling of other public keys can be added</d>
- <v> User = string()</v>
- <d> The user owning the public key</d>
- <v> DaemonOptions = proplists:proplist() </v>
- <d> Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#daemon-2">ssh:daemon/[2,3]</seealso></d>
- <v> Result = boolean()</v>
+ <v>Key = public_key()</v>
+ <d>Normally an RSA or DSA public key, but handling of other public keys can be added</d>
+ <v>User = string()</v>
+ <d>User owning the public key.</d>
+ <v>DaemonOptions = proplists:proplist()</v>
+ <d>Options provided to <seealso marker="ssh#daemon-2">ssh:daemon/[2,3]</seealso>.</d>
+ <v>Result = boolean()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p> Checks if the user key is authorized </p>
+ <p>Checks if the user key is authorized.</p>
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftp.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftp.xml
index ab111562f9..17800fac5d 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftp.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftp.xml
@@ -8,146 +8,189 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_sftp</title>
<prepared>OTP</prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
<date>2005-09-22</date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>ssh_sftp.sgml</file>
</header>
<module>ssh_sftp</module>
<modulesummary>SFTP client.</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p>This module implements an SFTP (SSH FTP) client. SFTP is a
+ <p>This module implements an SSH FTP (SFTP) client. SFTP is a
secure, encrypted file transfer service available for
SSH.</p>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
- <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module
- and/or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data type:
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
+ <p>Type definitions that are used more than once in this module,
+ or abstractions to indicate the intended use of the data type, or both:
</p>
- <p><c>ssh_connection_ref() - opaque to the user
- returned by ssh:connect/3</c></p>
- <p><c>timeout() = infinity | integer() - in milliseconds.</c></p>
+
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>ssh_connection_ref() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p>opaque() - as returned by <c>ssh:connect/3</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>timeout()</c></tag>
+ <item><p>= <c>infinity | integer() in milliseconds. Default infinity.</c></p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
<section>
- <title>TIMEOUTS </title>
- <p>If the request functions for the SFTP channel return {error, timeout}
- it does not guarantee that the request did not reach the server and was
- not performed, it only means that we did not receive an answer from the
- server within the time that was expected.</p>
+ <title>Time-outs</title>
+ <p>If the request functions for the SFTP channel return <c>{error, timeout}</c>,
+ it does not guarantee that the request never reached the server and was
+ not performed. It only means that no answer was received from the
+ server within the expected time.</p>
</section>
<funcs>
+ <func>
+ <name>apread(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Len) -> {async, N} | {error, Error}</name>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Position = integer()</v>
+ <v>Len = integer()</v>
+ <v>N = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
+
+ <desc><p>The <c><![CDATA[apread]]></c> function reads from a specified position,
+ combining the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[aread]]></c> functions.</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="#apread-4">ssh_sftp:apread/4</seealso></p> </desc>
+ </func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>apwrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Data) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Writes asynchronously to an open file.</fsummary>
+ <type>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Position = integer()</v>
+ <v>Len = integer()</v>
+ <v>Data = binary()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ </type>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[apwrite]]></c> writes on a specified position, combining
+ the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[awrite]]></c> operations.</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="#awrite-3">ssh_sftp:awrite/3</seealso> </p></desc>
+ </func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>aread(ChannelPid, Handle, Len) -> {async, N} | {error, Error}</name>
+ <fsummary>Reads asynchronously from an open file.</fsummary>
+ <type>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Position = integer()</v>
+ <v>Len = integer()</v>
+ <v>N = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ </type>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Reads from an open file, without waiting for the result. If the
+ handle is valid, the function returns <c><![CDATA[{async, N}]]></c>, where <c>N</c>
+ is a term guaranteed to be unique between calls of <c><![CDATA[aread]]></c>.
+ The actual data is sent as a message to the calling process. This
+ message has the form <c><![CDATA[{async_reply, N, Result}]]></c>, where
+ <c><![CDATA[Result]]></c> is the result from the read, either <c><![CDATA[{ok, Data}]]></c>,
+ <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>, or <c><![CDATA[{error, Error}]]></c>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
+
+
<func>
- <name>start_channel(ConnectionRef) -> </name>
- <name>start_channel(ConnectionRef, Options) -> </name>
- <name>start_channel(Host, Options) -></name>
- <name>start_channel(Host, Port, Options) -> {ok, Pid} | {ok, Pid, ConnectionRef} |
- {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Starts a SFTP client</fsummary>
+ <name>awrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Data) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Writes asynchronously to an open file.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>Host = string()</v>
- <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
- <v>Port = integer()</v>
- <v>Options = [{Option, Value}]</v>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Position = integer()</v>
+ <v>Len = integer()</v>
+ <v>Data = binary()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>If no connection reference is provided, a connection is set
- up and the new connection is returned. An SSH channel process
- is started to handle the communication with the SFTP server.
- The returned pid for this process should be used as input to
- all other API functions in this module.</p>
-
- <p>Options are:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{timeout, timeout()}]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The timeout is passed to the ssh_channel start function,
- and defaults to infinity.</p>
- </item>
- <tag>
- <p><c><![CDATA[{sftp_vsn, integer()}]]></c></p>
- </tag>
- <item>
- <p>
- Desired SFTP protocol version.
- The actual version will be the minimum of
- the desired version and the maximum supported
- versions by the SFTP server.
- </p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
- <p>All other options are directly passed to
- <seealso marker="ssh">ssh:connect/3</seealso> or ignored if a
- connection is already provided. </p>
+ <p>Writes to an open file, without waiting for the result. If the
+ handle is valid, the function returns <c><![CDATA[{async, N}]]></c>, where <c>N</c>
+ is a term guaranteed to be unique between calls of
+ <c><![CDATA[awrite]]></c>. The result of the <c><![CDATA[write]]></c> operation is sent
+ as a message to the calling process. This message has the form
+ <c><![CDATA[{async_reply, N, Result}]]></c>, where <c><![CDATA[Result]]></c> is the result
+ from the write, either <c><![CDATA[ok]]></c>, or <c><![CDATA[{error, Error}]]></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>stop_channel(ChannelPid) -> ok</name>
- <fsummary>Stops the SFTP client channel.</fsummary>
+ <name>close(ChannelPid, Handle) -></name>
+ <name>close(ChannelPid, Handle, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Closes an open handle.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Stops an SFTP channel. Does not close the SSH connetion.
- Use <seealso marker="ssh">ssh:close/1</seealso> to close it.</p>
+ <p>Closes a handle to an open file or directory on the server.</p>
</desc>
</func>
-
+
<func>
- <name>read_file(ChannelPid, File) -> </name>
- <name>read_file(ChannelPid, File, Timeout) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Read a file</fsummary>
+ <name>delete(ChannelPid, Name) -></name>
+ <name>delete(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Deletes a file.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>File = string()</v>
- <v>Data = binary()</v>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Name = string()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Reads a file from the server, and returns the data in a binary,
- like <c><![CDATA[file:read_file/1]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Deletes the file specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#delete-1">file:delete/1</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>write_file(ChannelPid, File, Iolist) -> </name>
- <name>write_file(ChannelPid, File, Iolist, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Write a file</fsummary>
+ <name>del_dir(ChannelPid, Name) -></name>
+ <name>del_dir(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Deletes an empty directory.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>File = string()</v>
- <v>Iolist = iolist()</v>
+ <v>Name = string()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Writes a file to the server, like
- <c><![CDATA[file:write_file/2]]></c>. The file is created if
- it does not exist or is owerwritten if it does.</p>
+ <p>Deletes a directory specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>.
+ The directory must be empty before it can be successfully deleted.
+ </p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>list_dir(ChannelPid, Path) -> </name>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>list_dir(ChannelPid, Path) -></name>
<name>list_dir(ChannelPid, Path, Timeout) -> {ok, Filenames} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>List directory</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Lists the directory.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Path = string()</v>
@@ -161,10 +204,45 @@
filenames as a list of strings.</p>
</desc>
</func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>make_dir(ChannelPid, Name) -></name>
+ <name>make_dir(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Creates a directory.</fsummary>
+ <type>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Name = string()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ </type>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Creates a directory specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>. <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>
+ must be a full path to a new directory. The directory can only be
+ created in an existing directory.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
<func>
- <name>open(ChannelPid, File, Mode) -> </name>
+ <name>make_symlink(ChannelPid, Name, Target) -></name>
+ <name>make_symlink(ChannelPid, Name, Target, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Creates a symbolic link.</fsummary>
+ <type>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>Name = string()</v>
+ <v>Target = string()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ </type>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Creates a symbolic link pointing to <c><![CDATA[Target]]></c> with the
+ name <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#make_symlink-2">file:make_symlink/2</seealso></p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>open(ChannelPid, File, Mode) -></name>
<name>open(ChannelPid, File, Mode, Timeout) -> {ok, Handle} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Open a file and return a handle</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Opens a file and returns a handle.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>File = string()</v>
@@ -175,14 +253,14 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Opens a file on the server, and returns a handle that
+ <p>Opens a file on the server and returns a handle, which
can be used for reading or writing.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>opendir(ChannelPid, Path) -> </name>
+ <name>opendir(ChannelPid, Path) -></name>
<name>opendir(ChannelPid, Path, Timeout) -> {ok, Handle} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Open a directory and return a handle</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Opens a directory and returns a handle.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Path = string()</v>
@@ -190,7 +268,7 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Opens a handle to a directory on the server, the handle
+ <p>Opens a handle to a directory on the server. The handle
can be used for reading directory contents.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -198,14 +276,15 @@
<func>
<name>open_tar(ChannelPid, Path, Mode) -></name>
<name>open_tar(ChannelPid, Path, Mode, Timeout) -> {ok, Handle} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Opens a tar file on the server to which <v>ChannelPid</v> is connected and returns a handle</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Opens a tar file on the server to which <c>ChannelPid</c>
+ is connected and returns a handle.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Path = string()</v>
- <v>Mode = [read] | [write] | [read,EncryptOpt] | [write,DecryptOpt] </v>
+ <v>Mode = [read] | [write] | [read,EncryptOpt] | [write,DecryptOpt]</v>
<v>EncryptOpt = {crypto,{InitFun,EncryptFun,CloseFun}}</v>
<v>DecryptOpt = {crypto,{InitFun,DecryptFun}}</v>
- <v>InitFun = (fun() -> {ok,CryptoState}) | (fun() -> {ok,CryptoState,ChunkSize}) </v>
+ <v>InitFun = (fun() -> {ok,CryptoState}) | (fun() -> {ok,CryptoState,ChunkSize})</v>
<v>CryptoState = any()</v>
<v>ChunkSize = undefined | pos_integer()</v>
<v>EncryptFun = (fun(PlainBin,CryptoState) -> EncryptResult)</v>
@@ -219,113 +298,86 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Opens a handle to a tar file on the server associated with <c>ChannelPid</c>. The handle
- can be used for remote tar creation and extraction as defined by the
- <seealso marker="stdlib:erl_tar#init/3">erl_tar:init/3</seealso> function.
+ <p>Opens a handle to a tar file on the server, associated with <c>ChannelPid</c>.
+ The handle can be used for remote tar creation and extraction, as defined by the
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:erl_tar#init-3">erl_tar:init/3</seealso> function.
</p>
- <p>An example of writing and then reading a tar file:</p>
- <code type="none">
- {ok,HandleWrite} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [write]),
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ...
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ok = erl_tar:close(HandleWrite),
-
- %% And for reading
- {ok,HandleRead} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [read]),
- {ok,NameValueList} = erl_tar:extract(HandleRead,[memory]),
- ok = erl_tar:close(HandleRead),
- </code>
-
- <p>The <c>crypto</c> mode option is applied to the generated stream of bytes just prior to sending
- them to the sftp server. This is intended for encryption but could of course be used for other
+
+ <p> For code exampel see Section
+ <seealso marker="using_ssh">SFTP Client with TAR Compression and Encryption</seealso> in
+ the ssh Users Guide. </p>
+
+ <p>The <c>crypto</c> mode option is applied to the generated stream of bytes prior to sending
+ them to the SFTP server. This is intended for encryption but can be used for other
purposes.
</p>
<p>The <c>InitFun</c> is applied once
- prior to any other crypto operation. The returned <c>CryptoState</c> is then folded into
- repeated applications of the <c>EncryptFun</c> or <c>DecryptFun</c>. The binary returned
- from those Funs are sent further to the remote sftp server. Finally - if doing encryption
- - the <c>CloseFun</c> is applied to the last piece of data. The <c>CloseFun</c> is
+ prior to any other <c>crypto</c> operation. The returned <c>CryptoState</c> is then folded into
+ repeated applications of the <c>EncryptFun</c> or <c>DecryptFun</c>. The binary returned
+ from those funs are sent further to the remote SFTP server. Finally, if doing encryption,
+ the <c>CloseFun</c> is applied to the last piece of data. The <c>CloseFun</c> is
responsible for padding (if needed) and encryption of that last piece.
</p>
<p>The <c>ChunkSize</c> defines the size of the <c>PlainBin</c>s that <c>EncodeFun</c> is applied
- to. If the <c>ChunkSize</c> is <c>undefined</c> the size of the <c>PlainBin</c>s varies because
- this is inteded for stream crypto while a fixed <c>ChunkSize</c> is intended for block crypto. It
- is possible to change the <c>ChunkSize</c>s in the return from the <c>EncryptFun</c> or
- <c>DecryptFun</c>. It is in fact possible to change the value between <c>pos_integer()</c> and
- <c>undefined</c>.
+ to. If the <c>ChunkSize</c> is <c>undefined</c>, the size of the <c>PlainBin</c>s varies,
+ because this is intended for stream crypto, whereas a fixed <c>ChunkSize</c> is intended for block crypto.
+ <c>ChunkSize</c>s can be changed in the return from the <c>EncryptFun</c> or
+ <c>DecryptFun</c>. The value can be changed between <c>pos_integer()</c> and <c>undefined</c>.
</p>
- <p>The write and read example above can be extended with encryption and decryption:</p>
- <code type="none">
- %% First three parameters depending on which crypto type we select:
- Key = &lt;&lt;"This is a 256 bit key. abcdefghi">>,
- Ivec0 = crypto:rand_bytes(16),
- DataSize = 1024, % DataSize rem 16 = 0 for aes_cbc
-
- %% Initialization of the CryptoState, in this case it is the Ivector.
- InitFun = fun() -> {ok, Ivec0, DataSize} end,
-
- %% How to encrypt:
- EncryptFun =
- fun(PlainBin,Ivec) ->
- EncryptedBin = crypto:block_encrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec, PlainBin),
- {ok, EncryptedBin, crypto:next_iv(aes_cbc,EncryptedBin)}
- end,
-
- %% What to do with the very last block:
- CloseFun =
- fun(PlainBin, Ivec) ->
- EncryptedBin = crypto:block_encrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec,
- pad(16,PlainBin) %% Last chunk
- ),
- {ok, EncryptedBin}
- end,
-
- Cw = {InitFun,EncryptFun,CloseFun},
- {ok,HandleWrite} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [write,{crypto,Cw}]),
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ...
- ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
- ok = erl_tar:close(HandleWrite),
-
- %% And for decryption (in this crypto example we could use the same InitFun
- %% as for encryption):
- DecryptFun =
- fun(EncryptedBin,Ivec) ->
- PlainBin = crypto:block_decrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec, EncryptedBin),
- {ok, PlainBin, crypto:next_iv(aes_cbc,EncryptedBin)}
- end,
-
- Cr = {InitFun,DecryptFun},
- {ok,HandleRead} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [read,{crypto,Cw}]),
- {ok,NameValueList} = erl_tar:extract(HandleRead,[memory]),
- ok = erl_tar:close(HandleRead),
- </code>
+
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>close(ChannelPid, Handle) -> </name>
- <name>close(ChannelPid, Handle, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Close an open handle</fsummary>
+ <name>position(ChannelPid, Handle, Location) -></name>
+ <name>position(ChannelPid, Handle, Location, Timeout) -> {ok, NewPosition | {error, Error}</name>
+ <fsummary>Sets the file position of a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Location = Offset
+ | {bof, Offset} | {cur, Offset} | {eof, Offset} | bof | cur | eof</v>
+ <v>Offset = integer()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>NewPosition = integer()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Closes a handle to an open file or directory on the server.</p>
+ <p>Sets the file position of the file referenced by <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>.
+ Returns <c><![CDATA[{ok, NewPosition}]]></c> (as an absolute offset) if
+ successful, otherwise <c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>. <c><![CDATA[Location]]></c> is
+ one of the following:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[Offset]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>The same as <c><![CDATA[{bof, Offset}]]></c>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{bof, Offset}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Absolute offset.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{cur, Offset}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Offset from the current position.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{eof, Offset}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Offset from the end of file.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[bof | cur | eof]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>The same as eariler with <c><![CDATA[Offset]]></c> 0,
+ that is, <c><![CDATA[{bof, 0} | {cur, 0} | {eof, 0}]]></c>.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>read(ChannelPid, Handle, Len) -> </name>
- <name>read(ChannelPid, Handle, Len, Timeout) -> {ok, Data} | eof | {error, Error}</name>
- <name>pread(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Len) -> </name>
+ <name>pread(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Len) -></name>
<name>pread(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Len, Timeout) -> {ok, Data} | eof | {error, Error}</name>
- <fsummary>Read from an open file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Reads from an open file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Handle = term()</v>
@@ -336,47 +388,16 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Reads <c><![CDATA[Len]]></c> bytes from the file referenced by
- <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>. Returns <c><![CDATA[{ok, Data}]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>, or
- <c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>. If the file is opened with <c><![CDATA[binary]]></c>,
- <c><![CDATA[Data]]></c> is a binary, otherwise it is a string.</p>
- <p>If the file is read past eof, only the remaining bytes
- will be read and returned. If no bytes are read, <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>
- is returned.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[pread]]></c> function reads from a specified position,
- combining the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[read]]></c> functions.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
- <func>
- <name>aread(ChannelPid, Handle, Len) -> {async, N} | {error, Error}</name>
- <name>apread(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Len) -> {async, N} | {error, Error}</name>
- <fsummary>Read asynchronously from an open file</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Handle = term()</v>
- <v>Position = integer()</v>
- <v>Len = integer()</v>
- <v>N = term()</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Reads from an open file, without waiting for the result. If the
- handle is valid, the function returns <c><![CDATA[{async, N}]]></c>, where N
- is a term guaranteed to be unique between calls of <c><![CDATA[aread]]></c>.
- The actual data is sent as a message to the calling process. This
- message has the form <c><![CDATA[{async_reply, N, Result}]]></c>, where
- <c><![CDATA[Result]]></c> is the result from the read, either <c><![CDATA[{ok, Data}]]></c>,
- or <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>, or <c><![CDATA[{error, Error}]]></c>.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[apread]]></c> function reads from a specified position,
- combining the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[aread]]></c> functions.</p>
+ <p>The <c><![CDATA[pread]]></c> function reads from a specified position,
+ combining the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[read]]></c> functions.</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="#read-4">ssh_sftp:read/4</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>write(ChannelPid, Handle, Data) -></name>
- <name>write(ChannelPid, Handle, Data, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Error}</name>
- <name>pwrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Data) -> ok </name>
+ <name>pwrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Data) -> ok</name>
<name>pwrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Data, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Error}</name>
- <fsummary>Write to an open file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Writes to an open file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Handle = term()</v>
@@ -386,94 +407,59 @@
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Writes<c><![CDATA[data]]></c> to the file referenced by <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>.
- The file should be opened with <c><![CDATA[write]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[append]]></c>
- flag. Returns <c><![CDATA[ok]]></c> if successful or S<c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>
- otherwise.</p>
- <p>Typical error reasons are:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[ebadf]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The file is not opened for writing.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[enospc]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>There is a no space left on the device.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
+ <p>The <c><![CDATA[pread]]></c> function writes to a specified position,
+ combining the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[write]]></c> functions.</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="#write-3">ssh_sftp:write/3</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>awrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Data) -> ok | {error, Reason} </name>
- <name>apwrite(ChannelPid, Handle, Position, Data) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Write asynchronously to an open file</fsummary>
+
+
+ <func>
+ <name>read(ChannelPid, Handle, Len) -></name>
+ <name>read(ChannelPid, Handle, Len, Timeout) -> {ok, Data} | eof | {error, Error}</name>
+ <fsummary>Reads from an open file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Handle = term()</v>
<v>Position = integer()</v>
<v>Len = integer()</v>
- <v>Data = binary()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>Data = string() | binary()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Writes to an open file, without waiting for the result. If the
- handle is valid, the function returns <c><![CDATA[{async, N}]]></c>, where N
- is a term guaranteed to be unique between calls of
- <c><![CDATA[awrite]]></c>. The result of the <c><![CDATA[write]]></c> operation is sent
- as a message to the calling process. This message has the form
- <c><![CDATA[{async_reply, N, Result}]]></c>, where <c><![CDATA[Result]]></c> is the result
- from the write, either <c><![CDATA[ok]]></c>, or <c><![CDATA[{error, Error}]]></c>.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[apwrite]]></c> writes on a specified position, combining
- the <c><![CDATA[position]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[awrite]]></c> operations.</p>
+ <p>Reads <c><![CDATA[Len]]></c> bytes from the file referenced by
+ <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>. Returns <c><![CDATA[{ok, Data}]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>, or
+ <c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>. If the file is opened with <c><![CDATA[binary]]></c>,
+ <c><![CDATA[Data]]></c> is a binary, otherwise it is a string.</p>
+ <p>If the file is read past <c>eof</c>, only the remaining bytes
+ are read and returned. If no bytes are read, <c><![CDATA[eof]]></c>
+ is returned.</p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>position(ChannelPid, Handle, Location) -> </name>
- <name>position(ChannelPid, Handle, Location, Timeout) -> {ok, NewPosition | {error, Error}</name>
- <fsummary>Seek position in open file</fsummary>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>read_file(ChannelPid, File) -></name>
+ <name>read_file(ChannelPid, File, Timeout) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Reads a file.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Handle = term()</v>
- <v>Location = Offset | {bof, Offset} | {cur, Offset} | {eof, Offset} | bof | cur | eof</v>
- <v>Offset = integer()</v>
+ <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
+ <v>File = string()</v>
+ <v>Data = binary()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
- <v>NewPosition = integer()</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
+ <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Sets the file position of the file referenced by <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>.
- Returns <c><![CDATA[{ok, NewPosition}]]></c> (as an absolute offset) if
- successful, otherwise <c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>. <c><![CDATA[Location]]></c> is
- one of the following:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[Offset]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The same as <c><![CDATA[{bof, Offset}]]></c>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{bof, Offset}]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Absolute offset.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{cur, Offset}]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Offset from the current position.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[{eof, Offset}]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Offset from the end of file.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[bof | cur | eof]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The same as above with <c><![CDATA[Offset]]></c> 0.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
+ <p>Reads a file from the server, and returns the data in a binary,
+ like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#read_file-1">file:read_file/1</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>read_file_info(ChannelPid, Name) -> </name>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>read_file_info(ChannelPid, Name) -></name>
<name>read_file_info(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> {ok, FileInfo} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Get information about a file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Gets information about a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Name = string()</v>
@@ -484,138 +470,191 @@
</type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a <c><![CDATA[file_info]]></c> record from the file specified by
- <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>, like <c><![CDATA[file:read_file_info/2]]></c>.</p>
+ <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>,
+ like <seealso marker="kernel:file#read_file_info-2">file:read_file_info/2</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>read_link_info(ChannelPid, Name) -> {ok, FileInfo} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <name>read_link_info(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> {ok, FileInfo} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Get information about a symbolic link</fsummary>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>read_link(ChannelPid, Name) -></name>
+ <name>read_link(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> {ok, Target} | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Reads symbolic link.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Name = string()</v>
- <v>Handle = term()</v>
- <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
- <v>FileInfo = record()</v>
+ <v>Target = string()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a <c><![CDATA[file_info]]></c> record from the symbolic
- link specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>, like
- <c><![CDATA[file:read_link_info/2]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Reads the link target from the symbolic link specified
+ by <c><![CDATA[name]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#read_link-1">file:read_link/1</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>write_file_info(ChannelPid, Name, Info) -> </name>
- <name>write_file_info(ChannelPid, Name, Info, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Write information for a file</fsummary>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>read_link_info(ChannelPid, Name) -> {ok, FileInfo} | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <name>read_link_info(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> {ok, FileInfo} | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Gets information about a symbolic link.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Name = string()</v>
- <v>Info = record()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
+ <v>FileInfo = record()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Writes file information from a <c><![CDATA[file_info]]></c> record to the
- file specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like <c><![CDATA[file:write_file_info]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns a <c><![CDATA[file_info]]></c> record from the symbolic
+ link specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#read_link_info-2">file:read_link_info/2</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>read_link(ChannelPid, Name) -> </name>
- <name>read_link(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> {ok, Target} | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Read symbolic link</fsummary>
+ <name>rename(ChannelPid, OldName, NewName) -> </name>
+ <name>rename(ChannelPid, OldName, NewName, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Renames a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Name = string()</v>
- <v>Target = string()</v>
+ <v>OldName = string()</v>
+ <v>NewName = string()</v>
+ <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Reads the link target from the symbolic link specified
- by <c><![CDATA[name]]></c>, like <c><![CDATA[file:read_link/1]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Renames a file named <c><![CDATA[OldName]]></c> and gives it the name
+ <c><![CDATA[NewName]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#rename-2">file:rename/2</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>make_symlink(ChannelPid, Name, Target) -> </name>
- <name>make_symlink(ChannelPid, Name, Target, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Create symbolic link</fsummary>
+ <name>start_channel(ConnectionRef) -></name>
+ <name>start_channel(ConnectionRef, Options) -></name>
+ <name>start_channel(Host, Options) -></name>
+ <name>start_channel(Host, Port, Options) -> {ok, Pid} | {ok, Pid, ConnectionRef} |
+ {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Starts an SFTP client.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Name = string()</v>
- <v>Target = string()</v>
+ <v>Host = string()</v>
+ <v>ConnectionRef = ssh_connection_ref()</v>
+ <v>Port = integer()</v>
+ <v>Options = [{Option, Value}]</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Creates a symbolic link pointing to <c><![CDATA[Target]]></c> with the
- name <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like <c><![CDATA[file:make_symlink/2]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>If no connection reference is provided, a connection is set
+ up, and the new connection is returned. An SSH channel process
+ is started to handle the communication with the SFTP server.
+ The returned <c>pid</c> for this process is to be used as input to
+ all other API functions in this module.</p>
+
+ <p>Options:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[{timeout, timeout()}]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>The time-out is passed to the <c>ssh_channel</c> start function,
+ and defaults to <c>infinity</c>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag>
+ <c><![CDATA[{sftp_vsn, integer()}]]></c>
+ </tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Desired SFTP protocol version.
+ The actual version is the minimum of
+ the desired version and the maximum supported
+ versions by the SFTP server.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>All other options are directly passed to
+ <seealso marker="ssh">ssh:connect/3</seealso> or ignored if a
+ connection is already provided.</p>
</desc>
</func>
- <func>
- <name>rename(ChannelPid, OldName, NewName) -> </name>
- <name>rename(ChannelPid, OldName, NewName, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Rename a file</fsummary>
+
+ <func>
+ <name>stop_channel(ChannelPid) -> ok</name>
+ <fsummary>Stops the SFTP client channel.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>OldName = string()</v>
- <v>NewName = string()</v>
- <v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Renames a file named <c><![CDATA[OldName]]></c>, and gives it the name
- <c><![CDATA[NewName]]></c>, like <c><![CDATA[file:rename/2]]></c></p>
+ <p>Stops an SFTP channel. Does not close the SSH connection.
+ Use <seealso marker="ssh#close-1">ssh:close/1</seealso> to close it.</p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>delete(ChannelPid, Name) -> </name>
- <name>delete(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Delete a file</fsummary>
+ <name>write(ChannelPid, Handle, Data) -></name>
+ <name>write(ChannelPid, Handle, Data, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Error}</name>
+ <fsummary>Writes to an open file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Name = string()</v>
+ <v>Handle = term()</v>
+ <v>Position = integer()</v>
+ <v>Data = iolist()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Deletes the file specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like
- <c><![CDATA[file:delete/1]]></c></p>
+ <p>Writes <c><![CDATA[data]]></c> to the file referenced by <c><![CDATA[Handle]]></c>.
+ The file is to be opened with <c><![CDATA[write]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[append]]></c>
+ flag. Returns <c><![CDATA[ok]]></c> if successful or <c><![CDATA[{error, Reason}]]></c>
+ otherwise.</p>
+ <p>Typical error reasons:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[ebadf]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>File is not opened for writing.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[enospc]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>No space is left on the device.</p>
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>make_dir(ChannelPid, Name) -> </name>
- <name>make_dir(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Create a directory</fsummary>
+ <name>write_file(ChannelPid, File, Iolist) -></name>
+ <name>write_file(ChannelPid, File, Iolist, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Writes a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Name = string()</v>
+ <v>File = string()</v>
+ <v>Iolist = iolist()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Creates a directory specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>. <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c> should
- be a full path to a new directory. The directory can only be
- created in an existing directory.</p>
+ <p>Writes a file to the server, like <seealso
+ marker="kernel:file#write_file-2">file:write_file/2</seealso> The
+ file is created if it does not exist. The file is overwritten
+ if it exists.</p>
</desc>
</func>
+
<func>
- <name>del_dir(ChannelPid, Name) -> </name>
- <name>del_dir(ChannelPid, Name, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
- <fsummary>Delete an empty directory</fsummary>
+ <name>write_file_info(ChannelPid, Name, Info) -></name>
+ <name>write_file_info(ChannelPid, Name, Info, Timeout) -> ok | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <fsummary>Writes information for a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ChannelPid = pid()</v>
<v>Name = string()</v>
+ <v>Info = record()</v>
<v>Timeout = timeout()</v>
<v>Reason = term()</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Deletes a directory specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>.
- Note that the directory must be empty before it can be successfully deleted
- </p>
+ <p>Writes file information from a <c><![CDATA[file_info]]></c> record to the
+ file specified by <c><![CDATA[Name]]></c>, like
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file#write_file_info-2">file:write_file_info/[2,3]</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
-
</funcs>
-
+
</erlref>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftpd.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftpd.xml
index 81c2acc575..cf50fb1b23 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftpd.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/ssh_sftpd.xml
@@ -8,81 +8,88 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>ssh_sftpd</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
<date>2005-09-22</date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>ssh_sftpd.sgml</file>
</header>
<module>ssh_sftpd</module>
- <modulesummary>Specifies the channel process to handle an sftp subsystem.</modulesummary>
+ <modulesummary>Specifies the channel process to handle an SFTP subsystem.</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p>Specifies a channel process to handle a sftp subsystem.</p>
+ <p>Specifies a channel process to handle an SFTP subsystem.</p>
</description>
<section>
- <title>DATA TYPES </title>
- <p><c>subsystem_spec() = {subsystem_name(), {channel_callback(), channel_init_args()}} </c></p>
- <p><c>subsystem_name() = "sftp"</c></p>
- <p><c>channel_callback() = atom()</c> - Name of the erlang module implementing the
- subsystem using the ssh_channel behavior see
- <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel(3)</seealso></p>
- <p><c> channel_init_args() = list() - The one given as argument to function
- subsystem_spec/1.</c></p>
+ <title>DATA TYPES</title>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>subsystem_spec() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>{subsystem_name(), {channel_callback(), channel_init_args()}}</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>subsystem_name() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>"sftp"</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>channel_callback() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>atom()</c> - Name of the Erlang module implementing the subsystem using the
+ <c>ssh_channel</c> behavior, see the
+ <seealso marker="ssh_channel">ssh_channel(3)</seealso> manual page.</p></item>
+ <tag><c>channel_init_args() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p><c>list()</c> - The one given as argument to function <c>subsystem_spec/1</c>.</p></item>
+ </taglist>
</section>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>subsystem_spec(Options) -> subsystem_spec()</name>
- <fsummary>Returns the subsystem specification that allows an ssh daemon to handle the subsystem "sftp".</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Returns the subsystem specification that allows an SSH daemon to handle the subsystem "sftp".</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Options = [{Option, Value}]</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Should be used together with ssh:daemon/[1,2,3]</p>
- <p>Options are:</p>
+ <p>Is to be used together with <c>ssh:daemon/[1,2,3]</c></p>
+ <p>Options:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{cwd, String}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the initial current working directory for the
- server.</p>
+ <p>Sets the initial current working directory for the server.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{file_handler, CallbackModule}]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Determines which module to call for accessing
- the file server. The default value is <c>ssh_sftpd_file</c> that uses the
- <seealso marker="kernel:file">file</seealso> and <seealso marker="stdlib:filelib">filelib</seealso> API:s to access the standard OTP file
- server. This option may be used to plug in
+ the file server. The default value is <c>ssh_sftpd_file</c>, which uses the
+ <seealso marker="kernel:file">file</seealso> and <seealso marker="stdlib:filelib">filelib</seealso>
+ APIs to access the standard OTP file server. This option can be used to plug in
other file servers.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{max_files, Integer}]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>The default value is <c>0</c>, which means that there is no upper limit.
- If supplied, the number of filenames returned to the sftp client per <c>READDIR</c>
+ If supplied, the number of filenames returned to the SFTP client per <c>READDIR</c>
request is limited to at most the given value.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{root, String}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the sftp root directory. The user will then not be
- able to see any files above this root. If for instance
- the root is set to <c>/tmp</c> the user will see this
- directory as <c>/</c> and if the user does cd <c>/etc</c>
- the user will end up in <c>/tmp/etc</c>.
+ <p>Sets the SFTP root directory. Then the user cannot see any files
+ above this root. If, for example, the root directory is set to <c>/tmp</c>,
+ then the user sees this directory as <c>/</c>. If the user then writes
+ <c>cd /etc</c>, the user moves to <c>/tmp/etc</c>.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[{sftpd_vsn, integer()}]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the sftp version to use, defaults to 5. Version 6 is under
+ <p>Sets the SFTP version to use. Defaults to 5. Version 6 is under
development and limited.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/usersguide.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/usersguide.xml
index 8ab14c2945..7c925a3762 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/usersguide.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/usersguide.xml
@@ -8,30 +8,32 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>SSH User's Guide</title>
<prepared>OTP Team</prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
<date>2012-10-11</date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>usersguide.xml</file>
</header>
<description>
- <p>The <em>SSH</em> application implements the SSH (Secure Shell) protocol and
- provides an SFTP (Secret File Transfer Protocol) client and server.
+ <p>The Erlang Secure Shell (SSH) application, <c>ssh</c>, implements the SSH Transport Layer Protocol and
+ provides SSH File Transfer Protocol (SFTP) clients and servers.
</p>
</description>
<xi:include href="introduction.xml"/>
- <xi:include href="ssh_protocol.xml"/>
<xi:include href="using_ssh.xml"/>
</part>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/using_ssh.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/using_ssh.xml
index 46178d4018..6826f20fb3 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/using_ssh.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/using_ssh.xml
@@ -9,77 +9,84 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
- <title>Getting started</title>
+ <title>Getting Started</title>
+ <prepared></prepared>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <approved></approved>
+ <date></date>
+ <rev></rev>
<file>using_ssh.xml</file>
</header>
<section>
- <title> General information</title>
- <p>The examples in the following sections use the utility function
- <seealso marker="ssh#start-0"> ssh:start/0 </seealso> that starts
- all needed applications (crypto, public_key and ssh). All examples
- are run in an Erlang shell, or in a bash shell using openssh to
- illustrate how the erlang ssh application can be used. The
- examples are run as the user otptest on a local network where the
- user is authorized to login in over ssh to the host "tarlop". If
- nothing else is stated it is persumed that the otptest user has an
- entry in tarlop's authorized_keys file (may log in via ssh without
- entering a password). Also tarlop is a known host in the user
- otptest's known_hosts file so that host verification can be done
- without user interaction.
+ <title>General Information</title>
+ <p>The following examples use the utility function
+ <seealso marker="ssh#start-0"> ssh:start/0</seealso> to start
+ all needed applications (<c>crypto</c>, <c>public_key</c>, and <c>ssh</c>).
+ All examples are run in an Erlang shell, or in a bash shell, using <em>openssh</em>
+ to illustrate how the <c>ssh</c> application can be used. The
+ examples are run as the user <c>otptest</c> on a local network where the
+ user is authorized to log in over <c>ssh</c> to the host <em>tarlop</em>.
+ </p>
+ <p>If nothing else is stated, it is presumed that the <c>otptest</c> user
+ has an entry in the <em>authorized_keys</em> file of <em>tarlop</em>
+ (allowed to log in over <c>ssh</c> without entering a password).
+ Also, <em>tarlop</em> is a known host in the <c>known_hosts</c>
+ file of the user <c>otptest</c>. This means that host-verification
+ can be done without user-interaction.
</p>
</section>
<section>
- <title>Using the Erlang SSH Terminal Client</title>
+ <title>Using the Erlang ssh Terminal Client</title>
- <p>The user otptest, that has bash as default shell, uses the
- ssh:shell/1 client to connect to the openssh daemon running on a
- host called tarlop. Note that currently this client is very simple
- and you should not be expected to be as fancy as the openssh
- client.</p>
+ <p>The user <c>otptest</c>, which has bash as default shell, uses the
+ <c>ssh:shell/1</c> client to connect to the <em>openssh</em> daemon running on a
+ host called <em>tarlop</em>:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> {ok, S} = ssh:shell("tarlop").
- >pwd
+ otptest@tarlop:> pwd
/home/otptest
- >exit
+ otptest@tarlop:> exit
logout
3>
</code>
</section>
<section>
- <title>Running an Erlang SSH Daemon </title>
+ <marker id="Running an Erlang ssh Daemon"></marker>
+ <title>Running an Erlang ssh Daemon</title>
- <p> The option system_dir must be a directory containing a host
- key file and it defaults to /etc/ssh. For details see section
+ <p>The <c>system_dir</c> option must be a directory containing a host
+ key file and it defaults to <c>/etc/ssh</c>. For details, see Section
Configuration Files in <seealso
marker="SSH_app">ssh(6)</seealso>.
</p>
- <note><p>Normally the /etc/ssh directory is only readable by root. </p>
+ <note><p>Normally, the <c>/etc/ssh</c> directory is only readable by root.</p>
</note>
- <p> The option user_dir defaults to the users ~/.ssh directory</p>
+ <p>The option <c>user_dir</c> defaults to directory <c>users ~/.ssh</c>.</p>
- <p>In the following example we generate new keys and host keys as
- to be able to run the example without having root privileges</p>
+ <p><em>Step 1.</em> To run the example without root privileges,
+ generate new keys and host keys:</p>
<code>
$bash> ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /tmp/ssh_daemon/ssh_host_rsa_key
@@ -88,19 +95,22 @@
[...]
</code>
- <p>Create the file /tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/authorized_keys and add the content
- of /tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa.pub Now we can do</p>
+ <p><em>Step 2.</em> Create the file <c>/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/authorized_keys</c>
+ and add the content of <c>/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa.pub</c>.</p>
+
+ <p><em>Step 3.</em> Start the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon:</p>
<code type="erl">
1> ssh:start().
ok
- 2> {ok, Sshd} = ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
- {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}]).
+ 2> {ok, Sshd} = ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
+ {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}]).
{ok,&lt;0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
- <p>Use the openssh client from a shell to connect to the Erlang ssh daemon.</p>
+ <p><em>Step 4.</em> Use the <em>openssh</em> client from a shell to connect
+ to the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon:</p>
<code>
$bash> ssh tarlop -p 8989 -i /tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa\
@@ -113,9 +123,12 @@
1>
</code>
- <p>There are two ways of shutting down an SSH daemon</p>
+ <p>There are two ways of shutting down an <c>ssh</c> daemon,
+ see <em>Step 5a</em> and <em>Step 5b</em>.</p>
- <p>1: Stops the listener, but leaves existing connections started by the listener up and running.</p>
+ <p><em>Step 5a.</em> Shut down the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon so that it
+ stops the listener but leaves existing connections, started by the listener,
+ operational:</p>
<code type="erl">
3> ssh:stop_listener(Sshd).
@@ -123,7 +136,8 @@
4>
</code>
- <p>2: Stops the listener and all connections started by the listener.</p>
+ <p><em>Step 5b.</em> Shut down the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon so that it
+ stops the listener and all connections started by the listener:</p>
<code type="erl">
3> ssh:stop_daemon(Sshd)
@@ -134,17 +148,18 @@
</section>
<section>
- <title>One Time Execution</title>
+ <title>One-Time Execution</title>
- <p>In the following example the Erlang shell is the client process
- that receives the channel replies. </p>
+ <p>In the following example, the Erlang shell is the client process
+ that receives the channel replies.</p>
- <note><p> If you run this example
- in your environment you may get fewer or more messages back as
- this depends on the OS and shell on the machine running the ssh
- daemon. See also <seealso marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4</seealso>
+ <note><p>The number of received messages in this example depends on which OS
+ and which shell that is used on the machine running the <c>ssh</c> daemon.
+ See also <seealso marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4</seealso>.
</p></note>
+ <p>Do a one-time execution of a remote command over <c>ssh</c>:</p>
+
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
@@ -162,7 +177,8 @@
6>
</code>
- <p>Note only the channel is closed the connection is still up and can handle other channels</p>
+ <p>Notice that only the channel is closed. The connection is still up and can
+ handle other channels:</p>
<code type="erl" >
6> {ok, NewChannelId} = ssh_connection:session_channel(ConnectionRef, infinity).
@@ -172,19 +188,22 @@
</section>
<section>
- <title>SFTP (SSH File Transport Protocol) server</title>
+ <title>SFTP Server</title>
+
+ <p>Start the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon with the SFTP subsystem:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
- 2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
- {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"},
- {subsystems, [ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec([{cwd, "/tmp/sftp/example"}])]}]).
+ 2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
+ {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"},
+ {subsystems, [ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec([{cwd, "/tmp/sftp/example"}])
+ ]}]).
{ok,&lt;0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
- <p> Run the openssh sftp client</p>
+ <p>Run the OpenSSH SFTP client:</p>
<code type="erl">
$bash> sftp -oPort=8989 -o IdentityFile=/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa\
@@ -197,7 +216,9 @@
</section>
<section>
- <title>SFTP (SSH File Transport Protocol) client</title>
+ <title>SFTP Client</title>
+
+ <p>Fetch a file with the Erlang SFTP client:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
@@ -210,10 +231,77 @@
</section>
<section>
- <title>Creating a subsystem</title>
+ <title>SFTP Client with TAR Compression and Encryption</title>
+
+ <p>Example of writing and then reading a tar file follows:</p>
+ <code type="erl">
+ {ok,HandleWrite} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [write]),
+ ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+ ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+ ...
+ ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+ ok = erl_tar:close(HandleWrite),
+
+ %% And for reading
+ {ok,HandleRead} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [read]),
+ {ok,NameValueList} = erl_tar:extract(HandleRead,[memory]),
+ ok = erl_tar:close(HandleRead),
+ </code>
+
+ <p>The previous write and read example can be extended with encryption and decryption as follows:</p>
+ <code type="erl">
+%% First three parameters depending on which crypto type we select:
+Key = &lt;&lt;"This is a 256 bit key. abcdefghi">>,
+Ivec0 = crypto:strong_rand_bytes(16),
+DataSize = 1024, % DataSize rem 16 = 0 for aes_cbc
+
+%% Initialization of the CryptoState, in this case it is the Ivector.
+InitFun = fun() -> {ok, Ivec0, DataSize} end,
+
+%% How to encrypt:
+EncryptFun =
+ fun(PlainBin,Ivec) ->
+ EncryptedBin = crypto:block_encrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec, PlainBin),
+ {ok, EncryptedBin, crypto:next_iv(aes_cbc,EncryptedBin)}
+ end,
+
+%% What to do with the very last block:
+CloseFun =
+ fun(PlainBin, Ivec) ->
+ EncryptedBin = crypto:block_encrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec,
+ pad(16,PlainBin) %% Last chunk
+ ),
+ {ok, EncryptedBin}
+ end,
+
+Cw = {InitFun,EncryptFun,CloseFun},
+{ok,HandleWrite} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [write,{crypto,Cw}]),
+ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+...
+ok = erl_tar:add(HandleWrite, .... ),
+ok = erl_tar:close(HandleWrite),
+
+%% And for decryption (in this crypto example we could use the same InitFun
+%% as for encryption):
+DecryptFun =
+ fun(EncryptedBin,Ivec) ->
+ PlainBin = crypto:block_decrypt(aes_cbc256, Key, Ivec, EncryptedBin),
+ {ok, PlainBin, crypto:next_iv(aes_cbc,EncryptedBin)}
+ end,
+
+Cr = {InitFun,DecryptFun},
+{ok,HandleRead} = ssh_sftp:open_tar(ChannelPid, ?tar_file_name, [read,{crypto,Cw}]),
+{ok,NameValueList} = erl_tar:extract(HandleRead,[memory]),
+ok = erl_tar:close(HandleRead),
+ </code>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Creating a Subsystem</title>
- <p>A very small SSH subsystem that echos N bytes could be implemented like this.
- See also <seealso marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel(3)</seealso> </p>
+ <p>A small <c>ssh</c> subsystem that echoes N bytes can be implemented as shown
+ in the following example:</p>
<code type="erl" >
-module(ssh_echo_server).
@@ -267,14 +355,16 @@ terminate(_Reason, _State) ->
ok.
</code>
- <p>And run like this on the host tarlop with the keys generated in section 3.3</p>
+ <p>The subsystem can be run on the host <em>tarlop</em> with the generated keys,
+ as described in Section <seealso marker="#Running an Erlang ssh Daemon">
+ Running an Erlang ssh Daemon</seealso>:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
- 2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
- {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}
- {subsystems, [{"echo_n", {ssh_echo_server, [10]}}]}]).
+ 2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
+ {user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}
+ {subsystems, [{"echo_n", {ssh_echo_server, [10]}}]}]).
{ok,&lt;0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
@@ -293,6 +383,7 @@ terminate(_Reason, _State) ->
{ssh_msg, &lt;0.57.0>, {closed, 0}}
7> {error, closed} = ssh_connection:send(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, "10", infinity).
</code>
+<p>See also <seealso marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel(3)</seealso>.</p>
</section>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.2.ps b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.2.ps
deleted file mode 100644
index d766a933b4..0000000000
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-(Network Working Group T. Ylonen) s
-5 690 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 679 M
-(Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Ed.) s
-5 668 M
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-5 492 M
-( Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months) s
-5 481 M
-( and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any) s
-5 470 M
-( time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference) s
-5 459 M
-( material or to cite them other than as "work in progress.") s
-5 437 M
-( The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://) s
-5 426 M
-( www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.) s
-5 404 M
-( The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at) s
-5 393 M
-( http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.) s
-5 371 M
-( This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.) s
-5 349 M
-(Copyright Notice) s
-5 327 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 305 M
-(Abstract) s
-5 283 M
-( SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network) s
-5 272 M
-( services over an insecure network. This document describes the) s
-5 261 M
-( architecture of the SSH protocol, as well as the notation and) s
-5 250 M
-( terminology used in SSH protocol documents. It also discusses the SSH) s
-5 239 M
-( algorithm naming system that allows local extensions. The SSH) s
-5 228 M
-( protocol consists of three major components: The Transport Layer) s
-5 217 M
-( Protocol provides server authentication, confidentiality, and) s
-5 206 M
-( integrity with perfect forward secrecy. The User Authentication) s
-5 195 M
-( Protocol authenticates the client to the server. The Connection) s
-5 184 M
-( Protocol multiplexes the encrypted tunnel into several logical) s
-5 173 M
-( channels. Details of these protocols are described in separate) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]) s
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-(Table of Contents) s
-5 646 M
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-5 635 M
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-5 613 M
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-5 602 M
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-5 591 M
-( 4.2 Extensibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
-5 580 M
-( 4.3 Policy Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
-5 569 M
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-5 558 M
-( 4.5 Packet Size and Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6) s
-5 547 M
-( 4.6 Localization and Character Set Support . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 536 M
-( 5. Data Type Representations Used in the SSH Protocols . . . . 8) s
-5 525 M
-( 6. Algorithm Naming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 514 M
-( 7. Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 503 M
-( 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 492 M
-( 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
-5 481 M
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-5 470 M
-( 9.2 Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
-5 459 M
-( 9.2.1 Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
-5 448 M
-( 9.2.2 Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16) s
-5 437 M
-( 9.2.3 Replay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16) s
-5 426 M
-( 9.2.4 Man-in-the-middle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17) s
-5 415 M
-( 9.2.5 Denial-of-service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
-5 404 M
-( 9.2.6 Covert Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
-5 393 M
-( 9.2.7 Forward Secrecy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20) s
-5 382 M
-( 9.3 Authentication Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20) s
-5 371 M
-( 9.3.1 Weak Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
-5 360 M
-( 9.3.2 Debug messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
-5 349 M
-( 9.3.3 Local security policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
-5 338 M
-( 9.3.4 Public key authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22) s
-5 327 M
-( 9.3.5 Password authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22) s
-5 316 M
-( 9.3.6 Host based authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 305 M
-( 9.4 Connection protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 294 M
-( 9.4.1 End point security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
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-( 9.4.2 Proxy forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 272 M
-( 9.4.3 X11 forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 261 M
-( Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 250 M
-( Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25) s
-5 239 M
-( Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27) s
-5 228 M
-( Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 28) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 2]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(1. Contributors) s
-5 668 M
-( The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,) s
-5 657 M
-( Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen \(all of SSH Communications) s
-5 646 M
-( Security Corp\), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen \(University of) s
-5 635 M
-( Jyvaskyla\)) s
-5 613 M
-( The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this) s
-5 602 M
-( internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,) s
-5 591 M
-( details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html) s
-5 569 M
-(2. Introduction) s
-5 547 M
-( SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network) s
-5 536 M
-( services over an insecure network. It consists of three major) s
-5 525 M
-( components:) s
-5 514 M
-( o The Transport Layer Protocol [SSH-TRANS] provides server) s
-5 503 M
-( authentication, confidentiality, and integrity. It may optionally) s
-5 492 M
-( also provide compression. The transport layer will typically be) s
-5 481 M
-( run over a TCP/IP connection, but might also be used on top of any) s
-5 470 M
-( other reliable data stream.) s
-5 459 M
-( o The User Authentication Protocol [SSH-USERAUTH] authenticates the) s
-5 448 M
-( client-side user to the server. It runs over the transport layer) s
-5 437 M
-( protocol.) s
-5 426 M
-( o The Connection Protocol [SSH-CONNECT] multiplexes the encrypted) s
-5 415 M
-( tunnel into several logical channels. It runs over the user) s
-5 404 M
-( authentication protocol.) s
-5 382 M
-( The client sends a service request once a secure transport layer) s
-5 371 M
-( connection has been established. A second service request is sent) s
-5 360 M
-( after user authentication is complete. This allows new protocols to) s
-5 349 M
-( be defined and coexist with the protocols listed above.) s
-5 327 M
-( The connection protocol provides channels that can be used for a wide) s
-5 316 M
-( range of purposes. Standard methods are provided for setting up) s
-5 305 M
-( secure interactive shell sessions and for forwarding \("tunneling"\)) s
-5 294 M
-( arbitrary TCP/IP ports and X11 connections.) s
-5 272 M
-(3. Specification of Requirements) s
-5 250 M
-( All documents related to the SSH protocols shall use the keywords) s
-5 239 M
-( "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",) s
-5 228 M
-( "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" to describe) s
-5 217 M
-( requirements. They are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].) s
-5 195 M
-(4. Architecture) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 3]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(4.1 Host Keys) s
-5 668 M
-( Each server host SHOULD have a host key. Hosts MAY have multiple) s
-5 657 M
-( host keys using multiple different algorithms. Multiple hosts MAY) s
-5 646 M
-( share the same host key. If a host has keys at all, it MUST have at) s
-5 635 M
-( least one key using each REQUIRED public key algorithm \(DSS) s
-5 624 M
-( [FIPS-186]\).) s
-5 602 M
-( The server host key is used during key exchange to verify that the) s
-5 591 M
-( client is really talking to the correct server. For this to be) s
-5 580 M
-( possible, the client must have a priori knowledge of the server's) s
-5 569 M
-( public host key.) s
-5 547 M
-( Two different trust models can be used:) s
-5 536 M
-( o The client has a local database that associates each host name \(as) s
-5 525 M
-( typed by the user\) with the corresponding public host key. This) s
-5 514 M
-( method requires no centrally administered infrastructure, and no) s
-5 503 M
-( third-party coordination. The downside is that the database of) s
-5 492 M
-( name-to-key associations may become burdensome to maintain.) s
-5 481 M
-( o The host name-to-key association is certified by some trusted) s
-5 470 M
-( certification authority. The client only knows the CA root key,) s
-5 459 M
-( and can verify the validity of all host keys certified by accepted) s
-5 448 M
-( CAs.) s
-5 426 M
-( The second alternative eases the maintenance problem, since) s
-5 415 M
-( ideally only a single CA key needs to be securely stored on the) s
-5 404 M
-( client. On the other hand, each host key must be appropriately) s
-5 393 M
-( certified by a central authority before authorization is possible.) s
-5 382 M
-( Also, a lot of trust is placed on the central infrastructure.) s
-5 360 M
-( The protocol provides the option that the server name - host key) s
-5 349 M
-( association is not checked when connecting to the host for the first) s
-5 338 M
-( time. This allows communication without prior communication of host) s
-5 327 M
-( keys or certification. The connection still provides protection) s
-5 316 M
-( against passive listening; however, it becomes vulnerable to active) s
-5 305 M
-( man-in-the-middle attacks. Implementations SHOULD NOT normally allow) s
-5 294 M
-( such connections by default, as they pose a potential security) s
-5 283 M
-( problem. However, as there is no widely deployed key infrastructure) s
-5 272 M
-( available on the Internet yet, this option makes the protocol much) s
-5 261 M
-( more usable during the transition time until such an infrastructure) s
-5 250 M
-( emerges, while still providing a much higher level of security than) s
-5 239 M
-( that offered by older solutions \(e.g. telnet [RFC-854] and rlogin) s
-5 228 M
-( [RFC-1282]\).) s
-5 206 M
-( Implementations SHOULD try to make the best effort to check host) s
-5 195 M
-( keys. An example of a possible strategy is to only accept a host key) s
-5 184 M
-( without checking the first time a host is connected, save the key in) s
-5 173 M
-( a local database, and compare against that key on all future) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 4]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( connections to that host.) s
-5 668 M
-( Implementations MAY provide additional methods for verifying the) s
-5 657 M
-( correctness of host keys, e.g. a hexadecimal fingerprint derived from) s
-5 646 M
-( the SHA-1 hash of the public key. Such fingerprints can easily be) s
-5 635 M
-( verified by using telephone or other external communication channels.) s
-5 613 M
-( All implementations SHOULD provide an option to not accept host keys) s
-5 602 M
-( that cannot be verified.) s
-5 580 M
-( We believe that ease of use is critical to end-user acceptance of) s
-5 569 M
-( security solutions, and no improvement in security is gained if the) s
-5 558 M
-( new solutions are not used. Thus, providing the option not to check) s
-5 547 M
-( the server host key is believed to improve the overall security of) s
-5 536 M
-( the Internet, even though it reduces the security of the protocol in) s
-5 525 M
-( configurations where it is allowed.) s
-5 503 M
-(4.2 Extensibility) s
-5 481 M
-( We believe that the protocol will evolve over time, and some) s
-5 470 M
-( organizations will want to use their own encryption, authentication) s
-5 459 M
-( and/or key exchange methods. Central registration of all extensions) s
-5 448 M
-( is cumbersome, especially for experimental or classified features.) s
-5 437 M
-( On the other hand, having no central registration leads to conflicts) s
-5 426 M
-( in method identifiers, making interoperability difficult.) s
-5 404 M
-( We have chosen to identify algorithms, methods, formats, and) s
-5 393 M
-( extension protocols with textual names that are of a specific format.) s
-5 382 M
-( DNS names are used to create local namespaces where experimental or) s
-5 371 M
-( classified extensions can be defined without fear of conflicts with) s
-5 360 M
-( other implementations.) s
-5 338 M
-( One design goal has been to keep the base protocol as simple as) s
-5 327 M
-( possible, and to require as few algorithms as possible. However, all) s
-5 316 M
-( implementations MUST support a minimal set of algorithms to ensure) s
-5 305 M
-( interoperability \(this does not imply that the local policy on all) s
-5 294 M
-( hosts would necessary allow these algorithms\). The mandatory) s
-5 283 M
-( algorithms are specified in the relevant protocol documents.) s
-5 261 M
-( Additional algorithms, methods, formats, and extension protocols can) s
-5 250 M
-( be defined in separate drafts. See Section Algorithm Naming \(Section) s
-5 239 M
-( 6\) for more information.) s
-5 217 M
-(4.3 Policy Issues) s
-5 195 M
-( The protocol allows full negotiation of encryption, integrity, key) s
-5 184 M
-( exchange, compression, and public key algorithms and formats.) s
-5 173 M
-( Encryption, integrity, public key, and compression algorithms can be) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 5]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( different for each direction.) s
-5 668 M
-( The following policy issues SHOULD be addressed in the configuration) s
-5 657 M
-( mechanisms of each implementation:) s
-5 646 M
-( o Encryption, integrity, and compression algorithms, separately for) s
-5 635 M
-( each direction. The policy MUST specify which is the preferred) s
-5 624 M
-( algorithm \(e.g. the first algorithm listed in each category\).) s
-5 613 M
-( o Public key algorithms and key exchange method to be used for host) s
-5 602 M
-( authentication. The existence of trusted host keys for different) s
-5 591 M
-( public key algorithms also affects this choice.) s
-5 580 M
-( o The authentication methods that are to be required by the server) s
-5 569 M
-( for each user. The server's policy MAY require multiple) s
-5 558 M
-( authentication for some or all users. The required algorithms MAY) s
-5 547 M
-( depend on the location where the user is trying to log in from.) s
-5 536 M
-( o The operations that the user is allowed to perform using the) s
-5 525 M
-( connection protocol. Some issues are related to security; for) s
-5 514 M
-( example, the policy SHOULD NOT allow the server to start sessions) s
-5 503 M
-( or run commands on the client machine, and MUST NOT allow) s
-5 492 M
-( connections to the authentication agent unless forwarding such) s
-5 481 M
-( connections has been requested. Other issues, such as which TCP/) s
-5 470 M
-( IP ports can be forwarded and by whom, are clearly issues of local) s
-5 459 M
-( policy. Many of these issues may involve traversing or bypassing) s
-5 448 M
-( firewalls, and are interrelated with the local security policy.) s
-5 426 M
-(4.4 Security Properties) s
-5 404 M
-( The primary goal of the SSH protocol is improved security on the) s
-5 393 M
-( Internet. It attempts to do this in a way that is easy to deploy,) s
-5 382 M
-( even at the cost of absolute security.) s
-5 371 M
-( o All encryption, integrity, and public key algorithms used are) s
-5 360 M
-( well-known, well-established algorithms.) s
-5 349 M
-( o All algorithms are used with cryptographically sound key sizes) s
-5 338 M
-( that are believed to provide protection against even the strongest) s
-5 327 M
-( cryptanalytic attacks for decades.) s
-5 316 M
-( o All algorithms are negotiated, and in case some algorithm is) s
-5 305 M
-( broken, it is easy to switch to some other algorithm without) s
-5 294 M
-( modifying the base protocol.) s
-5 272 M
-( Specific concessions were made to make wide-spread fast deployment) s
-5 261 M
-( easier. The particular case where this comes up is verifying that) s
-5 250 M
-( the server host key really belongs to the desired host; the protocol) s
-5 239 M
-( allows the verification to be left out \(but this is NOT RECOMMENDED\).) s
-5 228 M
-( This is believed to significantly improve usability in the short) s
-5 217 M
-( term, until widespread Internet public key infrastructures emerge.) s
-5 195 M
-(4.5 Packet Size and Overhead) s
-5 173 M
-( Some readers will worry about the increase in packet size due to new) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 6]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( headers, padding, and MAC. The minimum packet size is in the order) s
-5 679 M
-( of 28 bytes \(depending on negotiated algorithms\). The increase is) s
-5 668 M
-( negligible for large packets, but very significant for one-byte) s
-5 657 M
-( packets \(telnet-type sessions\). There are, however, several factors) s
-5 646 M
-( that make this a non-issue in almost all cases:) s
-5 635 M
-( o The minimum size of a TCP/IP header is 32 bytes. Thus, the) s
-5 624 M
-( increase is actually from 33 to 51 bytes \(roughly\).) s
-5 613 M
-( o The minimum size of the data field of an Ethernet packet is 46) s
-5 602 M
-( bytes [RFC-894]. Thus, the increase is no more than 5 bytes. When) s
-5 591 M
-( Ethernet headers are considered, the increase is less than 10) s
-5 580 M
-( percent.) s
-5 569 M
-( o The total fraction of telnet-type data in the Internet is) s
-5 558 M
-( negligible, even with increased packet sizes.) s
-5 536 M
-( The only environment where the packet size increase is likely to have) s
-5 525 M
-( a significant effect is PPP [RFC-1134] over slow modem lines \(PPP) s
-5 514 M
-( compresses the TCP/IP headers, emphasizing the increase in packet) s
-5 503 M
-( size\). However, with modern modems, the time needed to transfer is in) s
-5 492 M
-( the order of 2 milliseconds, which is a lot faster than people can) s
-5 481 M
-( type.) s
-5 459 M
-( There are also issues related to the maximum packet size. To) s
-5 448 M
-( minimize delays in screen updates, one does not want excessively) s
-5 437 M
-( large packets for interactive sessions. The maximum packet size is) s
-5 426 M
-( negotiated separately for each channel.) s
-5 404 M
-(4.6 Localization and Character Set Support) s
-5 382 M
-( For the most part, the SSH protocols do not directly pass text that) s
-5 371 M
-( would be displayed to the user. However, there are some places where) s
-5 360 M
-( such data might be passed. When applicable, the character set for the) s
-5 349 M
-( data MUST be explicitly specified. In most places, ISO 10646 with) s
-5 338 M
-( UTF-8 encoding is used [RFC-2279]. When applicable, a field is also) s
-5 327 M
-( provided for a language tag [RFC-3066].) s
-5 305 M
-( One big issue is the character set of the interactive session. There) s
-5 294 M
-( is no clear solution, as different applications may display data in) s
-5 283 M
-( different formats. Different types of terminal emulation may also be) s
-5 272 M
-( employed in the client, and the character set to be used is) s
-5 261 M
-( effectively determined by the terminal emulation. Thus, no place is) s
-5 250 M
-( provided for directly specifying the character set or encoding for) s
-5 239 M
-( terminal session data. However, the terminal emulation type \(e.g.) s
-5 228 M
-( "vt100"\) is transmitted to the remote site, and it implicitly) s
-5 217 M
-( specifies the character set and encoding. Applications typically use) s
-5 206 M
-( the terminal type to determine what character set they use, or the) s
-5 195 M
-( character set is determined using some external means. The terminal) s
-5 184 M
-( emulation may also allow configuring the default character set. In) s
-5 173 M
-( any case, the character set for the terminal session is considered) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( primarily a client local issue.) s
-5 668 M
-( Internal names used to identify algorithms or protocols are normally) s
-5 657 M
-( never displayed to users, and must be in US-ASCII.) s
-5 635 M
-( The client and server user names are inherently constrained by what) s
-5 624 M
-( the server is prepared to accept. They might, however, occasionally) s
-5 613 M
-( be displayed in logs, reports, etc. They MUST be encoded using ISO) s
-5 602 M
-( 10646 UTF-8, but other encodings may be required in some cases. It) s
-5 591 M
-( is up to the server to decide how to map user names to accepted user) s
-5 580 M
-( names. Straight bit-wise binary comparison is RECOMMENDED.) s
-5 558 M
-( For localization purposes, the protocol attempts to minimize the) s
-5 547 M
-( number of textual messages transmitted. When present, such messages) s
-5 536 M
-( typically relate to errors, debugging information, or some externally) s
-5 525 M
-( configured data. For data that is normally displayed, it SHOULD be) s
-5 514 M
-( possible to fetch a localized message instead of the transmitted) s
-5 503 M
-( message by using a numerical code. The remaining messages SHOULD be) s
-5 492 M
-( configurable.) s
-5 470 M
-(5. Data Type Representations Used in the SSH Protocols) s
-5 459 M
-( byte) s
-5 437 M
-( A byte represents an arbitrary 8-bit value \(octet\) [RFC-1700].) s
-5 426 M
-( Fixed length data is sometimes represented as an array of bytes,) s
-5 415 M
-( written byte[n], where n is the number of bytes in the array.) s
-5 393 M
-( boolean) s
-5 371 M
-( A boolean value is stored as a single byte. The value 0) s
-5 360 M
-( represents FALSE, and the value 1 represents TRUE. All non-zero) s
-5 349 M
-( values MUST be interpreted as TRUE; however, applications MUST NOT) s
-5 338 M
-( store values other than 0 and 1.) s
-5 316 M
-( uint32) s
-5 294 M
-( Represents a 32-bit unsigned integer. Stored as four bytes in the) s
-5 283 M
-( order of decreasing significance \(network byte order\). For) s
-5 272 M
-( example, the value 699921578 \(0x29b7f4aa\) is stored as 29 b7 f4) s
-5 261 M
-( aa.) s
-5 239 M
-( uint64) s
-5 217 M
-( Represents a 64-bit unsigned integer. Stored as eight bytes in) s
-5 206 M
-( the order of decreasing significance \(network byte order\).) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 8]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( string) s
-5 668 M
-( Arbitrary length binary string. Strings are allowed to contain) s
-5 657 M
-( arbitrary binary data, including null characters and 8-bit) s
-5 646 M
-( characters. They are stored as a uint32 containing its length) s
-5 635 M
-( \(number of bytes that follow\) and zero \(= empty string\) or more) s
-5 624 M
-( bytes that are the value of the string. Terminating null) s
-5 613 M
-( characters are not used.) s
-5 591 M
-( Strings are also used to store text. In that case, US-ASCII is) s
-5 580 M
-( used for internal names, and ISO-10646 UTF-8 for text that might) s
-5 569 M
-( be displayed to the user. The terminating null character SHOULD) s
-5 558 M
-( NOT normally be stored in the string.) s
-5 536 M
-( For example, the US-ASCII string "testing" is represented as 00 00) s
-5 525 M
-( 00 07 t e s t i n g. The UTF8 mapping does not alter the encoding) s
-5 514 M
-( of US-ASCII characters.) s
-5 492 M
-( mpint) s
-5 470 M
-( Represents multiple precision integers in two's complement format,) s
-5 459 M
-( stored as a string, 8 bits per byte, MSB first. Negative numbers) s
-5 448 M
-( have the value 1 as the most significant bit of the first byte of) s
-5 437 M
-( the data partition. If the most significant bit would be set for a) s
-5 426 M
-( positive number, the number MUST be preceded by a zero byte.) s
-5 415 M
-( Unnecessary leading bytes with the value 0 or 255 MUST NOT be) s
-5 404 M
-( included. The value zero MUST be stored as a string with zero) s
-5 393 M
-( bytes of data.) s
-5 371 M
-( By convention, a number that is used in modular computations in) s
-5 360 M
-( Z_n SHOULD be represented in the range 0 <= x < n.) s
-5 338 M
-( Examples:) s
-5 327 M
-( value \(hex\) representation \(hex\)) s
-5 316 M
-( ---------------------------------------------------------------) s
-5 305 M
-( 0 00 00 00 00) s
-5 294 M
-( 9a378f9b2e332a7 00 00 00 08 09 a3 78 f9 b2 e3 32 a7) s
-5 283 M
-( 80 00 00 00 02 00 80) s
-5 272 M
-( -1234 00 00 00 02 ed cc) s
-5 261 M
-( -deadbeef 00 00 00 05 ff 21 52 41 11) s
-5 217 M
-( name-list) s
-5 195 M
-( A string containing a comma separated list of names. A name list) s
-5 184 M
-( is represented as a uint32 containing its length \(number of bytes) s
-5 173 M
-( that follow\) followed by a comma-separated list of zero or more) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 9]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 10 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( names. A name MUST be non-zero length, and it MUST NOT contain a) s
-5 679 M
-( comma \(','\). Context may impose additional restrictions on the) s
-5 668 M
-( names; for example, the names in a list may have to be valid) s
-5 657 M
-( algorithm identifier \(see Algorithm Naming below\), or [RFC-3066]) s
-5 646 M
-( language tags. The order of the names in a list may or may not be) s
-5 635 M
-( significant, also depending on the context where the list is is) s
-5 624 M
-( used. Terminating NUL characters are not used, neither for the) s
-5 613 M
-( individual names, nor for the list as a whole.) s
-5 591 M
-( Examples:) s
-5 580 M
-( value representation \(hex\)) s
-5 569 M
-( ---------------------------------------) s
-5 558 M
-( \(\), the empty list 00 00 00 00) s
-5 547 M
-( \("zlib"\) 00 00 00 04 7a 6c 69 62) s
-5 536 M
-( \("zlib", "none"\) 00 00 00 09 7a 6c 69 62 2c 6e 6f 6e 65) s
-5 481 M
-(6. Algorithm Naming) s
-5 459 M
-( The SSH protocols refer to particular hash, encryption, integrity,) s
-5 448 M
-( compression, and key exchange algorithms or protocols by names.) s
-5 437 M
-( There are some standard algorithms that all implementations MUST) s
-5 426 M
-( support. There are also algorithms that are defined in the protocol) s
-5 415 M
-( specification but are OPTIONAL. Furthermore, it is expected that) s
-5 404 M
-( some organizations will want to use their own algorithms.) s
-5 382 M
-( In this protocol, all algorithm identifiers MUST be printable) s
-5 371 M
-( US-ASCII non-empty strings no longer than 64 characters. Names MUST) s
-5 360 M
-( be case-sensitive.) s
-5 338 M
-( There are two formats for algorithm names:) s
-5 327 M
-( o Names that do not contain an at-sign \(@\) are reserved to be) s
-5 316 M
-( assigned by IETF consensus \(RFCs\). Examples include `3des-cbc',) s
-5 305 M
-( `sha-1', `hmac-sha1', and `zlib' \(the quotes are not part of the) s
-5 294 M
-( name\). Names of this format MUST NOT be used without first) s
-5 283 M
-( registering them. Registered names MUST NOT contain an at-sign) s
-5 272 M
-( \(@\) or a comma \(,\).) s
-5 261 M
-( o Anyone can define additional algorithms by using names in the) s
-5 250 M
-( format name@domainname, e.g. "[email protected]". The) s
-5 239 M
-( format of the part preceding the at sign is not specified; it MUST) s
-5 228 M
-( consist of US-ASCII characters except at-sign and comma. The part) s
-5 217 M
-( following the at-sign MUST be a valid fully qualified internet) s
-5 206 M
-( domain name [RFC-1034] controlled by the person or organization) s
-5 195 M
-( defining the name. It is up to each domain how it manages its) s
-5 184 M
-( local namespace.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 10]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 11 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(7. Message Numbers) s
-5 668 M
-( SSH packets have message numbers in the range 1 to 255. These numbers) s
-5 657 M
-( have been allocated as follows:) s
-5 624 M
-( Transport layer protocol:) s
-5 602 M
-( 1 to 19 Transport layer generic \(e.g. disconnect, ignore, debug,) s
-5 591 M
-( etc.\)) s
-5 580 M
-( 20 to 29 Algorithm negotiation) s
-5 569 M
-( 30 to 49 Key exchange method specific \(numbers can be reused for) s
-5 558 M
-( different authentication methods\)) s
-5 536 M
-( User authentication protocol:) s
-5 514 M
-( 50 to 59 User authentication generic) s
-5 503 M
-( 60 to 79 User authentication method specific \(numbers can be) s
-5 492 M
-( reused for different authentication methods\)) s
-5 470 M
-( Connection protocol:) s
-5 448 M
-( 80 to 89 Connection protocol generic) s
-5 437 M
-( 90 to 127 Channel related messages) s
-5 415 M
-( Reserved for client protocols:) s
-5 393 M
-( 128 to 191 Reserved) s
-5 371 M
-( Local extensions:) s
-5 349 M
-( 192 to 255 Local extensions) s
-5 305 M
-(8. IANA Considerations) s
-5 283 M
-( The initial state of the IANA registry is detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].) s
-5 261 M
-( Allocation of the following types of names in the SSH protocols is) s
-5 250 M
-( assigned by IETF consensus:) s
-5 239 M
-( o SSH encryption algorithm names,) s
-5 228 M
-( o SSH MAC algorithm names,) s
-5 217 M
-( o SSH public key algorithm names \(public key algorithm also implies) s
-5 206 M
-( encoding and signature/encryption capability\),) s
-5 195 M
-( o SSH key exchange method names, and) s
-5 184 M
-( o SSH protocol \(service\) names.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 11]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 12 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( These names MUST be printable US-ASCII strings, and MUST NOT contain) s
-5 679 M
-( the characters at-sign \('@'\), comma \(','\), or whitespace or control) s
-5 668 M
-( characters \(ASCII codes 32 or less\). Names are case-sensitive, and) s
-5 657 M
-( MUST NOT be longer than 64 characters.) s
-5 635 M
-( Names with the at-sign \('@'\) in them are allocated by the owner of) s
-5 624 M
-( DNS name after the at-sign \(hierarchical allocation in [RFC-2343]\),) s
-5 613 M
-( otherwise the same restrictions as above.) s
-5 591 M
-( Each category of names listed above has a separate namespace.) s
-5 580 M
-( However, using the same name in multiple categories SHOULD be avoided) s
-5 569 M
-( to minimize confusion.) s
-5 547 M
-( Message numbers \(see Section Message Numbers \(Section 7\)\) in the) s
-5 536 M
-( range of 0..191 are allocated via IETF consensus; message numbers in) s
-5 525 M
-( the 192..255 range \(the "Local extensions" set\) are reserved for) s
-5 514 M
-( private use.) s
-5 492 M
-(9. Security Considerations) s
-5 470 M
-( In order to make the entire body of Security Considerations more) s
-5 459 M
-( accessible, Security Considerations for the transport,) s
-5 448 M
-( authentication, and connection documents have been gathered here.) s
-5 426 M
-( The transport protocol [1] provides a confidential channel over an) s
-5 415 M
-( insecure network. It performs server host authentication, key) s
-5 404 M
-( exchange, encryption, and integrity protection. It also derives a) s
-5 393 M
-( unique session id that may be used by higher-level protocols.) s
-5 371 M
-( The authentication protocol [2] provides a suite of mechanisms which) s
-5 360 M
-( can be used to authenticate the client user to the server.) s
-5 349 M
-( Individual mechanisms specified in the in authentication protocol use) s
-5 338 M
-( the session id provided by the transport protocol and/or depend on) s
-5 327 M
-( the security and integrity guarantees of the transport protocol.) s
-5 305 M
-( The connection protocol [3] specifies a mechanism to multiplex) s
-5 294 M
-( multiple streams [channels] of data over the confidential and) s
-5 283 M
-( authenticated transport. It also specifies channels for accessing an) s
-5 272 M
-( interactive shell, for 'proxy-forwarding' various external protocols) s
-5 261 M
-( over the secure transport \(including arbitrary TCP/IP protocols\), and) s
-5 250 M
-( for accessing secure 'subsystems' on the server host.) s
-5 228 M
-(9.1 Pseudo-Random Number Generation) s
-5 206 M
-( This protocol binds each session key to the session by including) s
-5 195 M
-( random, session specific data in the hash used to produce session) s
-5 184 M
-( keys. Special care should be taken to ensure that all of the random) s
-5 173 M
-( numbers are of good quality. If the random data here \(e.g., DH) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 12]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 13 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( parameters\) are pseudo-random then the pseudo-random number generator) s
-5 679 M
-( should be cryptographically secure \(i.e., its next output not easily) s
-5 668 M
-( guessed even when knowing all previous outputs\) and, furthermore,) s
-5 657 M
-( proper entropy needs to be added to the pseudo-random number) s
-5 646 M
-( generator. RFC 1750 [1750] offers suggestions for sources of random) s
-5 635 M
-( numbers and entropy. Implementors should note the importance of) s
-5 624 M
-( entropy and the well-meant, anecdotal warning about the difficulty in) s
-5 613 M
-( properly implementing pseudo-random number generating functions.) s
-5 591 M
-( The amount of entropy available to a given client or server may) s
-5 580 M
-( sometimes be less than what is required. In this case one must) s
-5 569 M
-( either resort to pseudo-random number generation regardless of) s
-5 558 M
-( insufficient entropy or refuse to run the protocol. The latter is) s
-5 547 M
-( preferable.) s
-5 525 M
-(9.2 Transport) s
-5 503 M
-(9.2.1 Confidentiality) s
-5 481 M
-( It is beyond the scope of this document and the Secure Shell Working) s
-5 470 M
-( Group to analyze or recommend specific ciphers other than the ones) s
-5 459 M
-( which have been established and accepted within the industry. At the) s
-5 448 M
-( time of this writing, ciphers commonly in use include 3DES, ARCFOUR,) s
-5 437 M
-( twofish, serpent and blowfish. AES has been accepted by The) s
-5 426 M
-( published as a US Federal Information Processing Standards [FIPS-197]) s
-5 415 M
-( and the cryptographic community as being acceptable for this purpose) s
-5 404 M
-( as well has accepted AES. As always, implementors and users should) s
-5 393 M
-( check current literature to ensure that no recent vulnerabilities) s
-5 382 M
-( have been found in ciphers used within products. Implementors should) s
-5 371 M
-( also check to see which ciphers are considered to be relatively) s
-5 360 M
-( stronger than others and should recommend their use to users over) s
-5 349 M
-( relatively weaker ciphers. It would be considered good form for an) s
-5 338 M
-( implementation to politely and unobtrusively notify a user that a) s
-5 327 M
-( stronger cipher is available and should be used when a weaker one is) s
-5 316 M
-( actively chosen.) s
-5 294 M
-( The "none" cipher is provided for debugging and SHOULD NOT be used) s
-5 283 M
-( except for that purpose. It's cryptographic properties are) s
-5 272 M
-( sufficiently described in RFC 2410, which will show that its use does) s
-5 261 M
-( not meet the intent of this protocol.) s
-5 239 M
-( The relative merits of these and other ciphers may also be found in) s
-5 228 M
-( current literature. Two references that may provide information on) s
-5 217 M
-( the subject are [SCHNEIER] and [KAUFMAN,PERLMAN,SPECINER]. Both of) s
-5 206 M
-( these describe the CBC mode of operation of certain ciphers and the) s
-5 195 M
-( weakness of this scheme. Essentially, this mode is theoretically) s
-5 184 M
-( vulnerable to chosen cipher-text attacks because of the high) s
-5 173 M
-( predictability of the start of packet sequence. However, this attack) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 13]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 14 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( is still deemed difficult and not considered fully practicable) s
-5 679 M
-( especially if relatively longer block sizes are used.) s
-5 657 M
-( Additionally, another CBC mode attack may be mitigated through the) s
-5 646 M
-( insertion of packets containing SSH_MSG_IGNORE. Without this) s
-5 635 M
-( technique, a specific attack may be successful. For this attack) s
-5 624 M
-( \(commonly known as the Rogaway attack) s
-5 613 M
-( [ROGAWAY],[DAI],[BELLARE,KOHNO,NAMPREMPRE]\) to work, the attacker) s
-5 602 M
-( would need to know the IV of the next block that is going to be) s
-5 591 M
-( encrypted. In CBC mode that is the output of the encryption of the) s
-5 580 M
-( previous block. If the attacker does not have any way to see the) s
-5 569 M
-( packet yet \(i.e it is in the internal buffers of the ssh) s
-5 558 M
-( implementation or even in the kernel\) then this attack will not work.) s
-5 547 M
-( If the last packet has been sent out to the network \(i.e the attacker) s
-5 536 M
-( has access to it\) then he can use the attack.) s
-5 514 M
-( In the optimal case an implementor would need to add an extra packet) s
-5 503 M
-( only if the packet has been sent out onto the network and there are) s
-5 492 M
-( no other packets waiting for transmission. Implementors may wish to) s
-5 481 M
-( check to see if there are any unsent packets awaiting transmission,) s
-5 470 M
-( but unfortunately it is not normally easy to obtain this information) s
-5 459 M
-( from the kernel or buffers. If there are not, then a packet) s
-5 448 M
-( containing SSH_MSG_IGNORE SHOULD be sent. If a new packet is added) s
-5 437 M
-( to the stream every time the attacker knows the IV that is supposed) s
-5 426 M
-( to be used for the next packet, then the attacker will not be able to) s
-5 415 M
-( guess the correct IV, thus the attack will never be successfull.) s
-5 393 M
-( As an example, consider the following case:) s
-5 360 M
-( Client Server) s
-5 349 M
-( ------ ------) s
-5 338 M
-( TCP\(seq=x, len=500\) ->) s
-5 327 M
-( contains Record 1) s
-5 305 M
-( [500 ms passes, no ACK]) s
-5 283 M
-( TCP\(seq=x, len=1000\) ->) s
-5 272 M
-( contains Records 1,2) s
-5 250 M
-( ACK) s
-5 217 M
-( 1. The Nagle algorithm + TCP retransmits mean that the two records) s
-5 206 M
-( get coalesced into a single TCP segment) s
-5 195 M
-( 2. Record 2 is *not* at the beginning of the TCP segment and never) s
-5 184 M
-( will be, since it gets ACKed.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 14]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 15 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( 3. Yet, the attack is possible because Record 1 has already been) s
-5 679 M
-( seen.) s
-5 657 M
-( As this example indicates, it's totally unsafe to use the existence) s
-5 646 M
-( of unflushed data in the TCP buffers proper as a guide to whether you) s
-5 635 M
-( need an empty packet, since when you do the second write\(\), the) s
-5 624 M
-( buffers will contain the un-ACKed Record 1.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 15]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 16 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( On the other hand, it's perfectly safe to have the following) s
-5 679 M
-( situation:) s
-5 646 M
-( Client Server) s
-5 635 M
-( ------ ------) s
-5 624 M
-( TCP\(seq=x, len=500\) ->) s
-5 613 M
-( contains SSH_MSG_IGNORE) s
-5 591 M
-( TCP\(seq=y, len=500\) ->) s
-5 580 M
-( contains Data) s
-5 558 M
-( Provided that the IV for second SSH Record is fixed after the data for) s
-5 547 M
-( the Data packet is determined -i.e. you do:) s
-5 536 M
-( read from user) s
-5 525 M
-( encrypt null packet) s
-5 514 M
-( encrypt data packet) s
-5 481 M
-(9.2.2 Data Integrity) s
-5 459 M
-( This protocol does allow the Data Integrity mechanism to be disabled.) s
-5 448 M
-( Implementors SHOULD be wary of exposing this feature for any purpose) s
-5 437 M
-( other than debugging. Users and administrators SHOULD be explicitly) s
-5 426 M
-( warned anytime the "none" MAC is enabled.) s
-5 404 M
-( So long as the "none" MAC is not used, this protocol provides data) s
-5 393 M
-( integrity.) s
-5 371 M
-( Because MACs use a 32 bit sequence number, they might start to leak) s
-5 360 M
-( information after 2**32 packets have been sent. However, following) s
-5 349 M
-( the rekeying recommendations should prevent this attack. The) s
-5 338 M
-( transport protocol [1] recommends rekeying after one gigabyte of) s
-5 327 M
-( data, and the smallest possible packet is 16 bytes. Therefore,) s
-5 316 M
-( rekeying SHOULD happen after 2**28 packets at the very most.) s
-5 294 M
-(9.2.3 Replay) s
-5 272 M
-( The use of a MAC other than 'none' provides integrity and) s
-5 261 M
-( authentication. In addition, the transport protocol provides a) s
-5 250 M
-( unique session identifier \(bound in part to pseudo-random data that) s
-5 239 M
-( is part of the algorithm and key exchange process\) that can be used) s
-5 228 M
-( by higher level protocols to bind data to a given session and prevent) s
-5 217 M
-( replay of data from prior sessions. For example, the authentication) s
-5 206 M
-( protocol uses this to prevent replay of signatures from previous) s
-5 195 M
-( sessions. Because public key authentication exchanges are) s
-5 184 M
-( cryptographically bound to the session \(i.e., to the initial key) s
-5 173 M
-( exchange\) they cannot be successfully replayed in other sessions.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 16]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 17 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( Note that the session ID can be made public without harming the) s
-5 679 M
-( security of the protocol.) s
-5 657 M
-( If two session happen to have the same session ID [hash of key) s
-5 646 M
-( exchanges] then packets from one can be replayed against the other.) s
-5 635 M
-( It must be stressed that the chances of such an occurrence are,) s
-5 624 M
-( needless to say, minimal when using modern cryptographic methods.) s
-5 613 M
-( This is all the more so true when specifying larger hash function) s
-5 602 M
-( outputs and DH parameters.) s
-5 580 M
-( Replay detection using monotonically increasing sequence numbers as) s
-5 569 M
-( input to the MAC, or HMAC in some cases, is described in [RFC2085] />) s
-5 558 M
-( [RFC2246], [RFC2743], [RFC1964], [RFC2025], and [RFC1510]. The) s
-5 547 M
-( underlying construct is discussed in [RFC2104]. Essentially a) s
-5 536 M
-( different sequence number in each packet ensures that at least this) s
-5 525 M
-( one input to the MAC function will be unique and will provide a) s
-5 514 M
-( nonrecurring MAC output that is not predictable to an attacker. If) s
-5 503 M
-( the session stays active long enough, however, this sequence number) s
-5 492 M
-( will wrap. This event may provide an attacker an opportunity to) s
-5 481 M
-( replay a previously recorded packet with an identical sequence number) s
-5 470 M
-( but only if the peers have not rekeyed since the transmission of the) s
-5 459 M
-( first packet with that sequence number. If the peers have rekeyed,) s
-5 448 M
-( then the replay will be detected as the MAC check will fail. For) s
-5 437 M
-( this reason, it must be emphasized that peers MUST rekey before a) s
-5 426 M
-( wrap of the sequence numbers. Naturally, if an attacker does attempt) s
-5 415 M
-( to replay a captured packet before the peers have rekeyed, then the) s
-5 404 M
-( receiver of the duplicate packet will not be able to validate the MAC) s
-5 393 M
-( and it will be discarded. The reason that the MAC will fail is) s
-5 382 M
-( because the receiver will formulate a MAC based upon the packet) s
-5 371 M
-( contents, the shared secret, and the expected sequence number. Since) s
-5 360 M
-( the replayed packet will not be using that expected sequence number) s
-5 349 M
-( \(the sequence number of the replayed packet will have already been) s
-5 338 M
-( passed by the receiver\) then the calculated MAC will not match the) s
-5 327 M
-( MAC received with the packet.) s
-5 305 M
-(9.2.4 Man-in-the-middle) s
-5 283 M
-( This protocol makes no assumptions nor provisions for an) s
-5 272 M
-( infrastructure or means for distributing the public keys of hosts. It) s
-5 261 M
-( is expected that this protocol will sometimes be used without first) s
-5 250 M
-( verifying the association between the server host key and the server) s
-5 239 M
-( host name. Such usage is vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks.) s
-5 228 M
-( This section describes this and encourages administrators and users) s
-5 217 M
-( to understand the importance of verifying this association before any) s
-5 206 M
-( session is initiated.) s
-5 184 M
-( There are three cases of man-in-the-middle attacks to consider. The) s
-5 173 M
-( first is where an attacker places a device between the client and the) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 17]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 18 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( server before the session is initiated. In this case, the attack) s
-5 679 M
-( device is trying to mimic the legitimate server and will offer its) s
-5 668 M
-( public key to the client when the client initiates a session. If it) s
-5 657 M
-( were to offer the public key of the server, then it would not be able) s
-5 646 M
-( to decrypt or sign the transmissions between the legitimate server) s
-5 635 M
-( and the client unless it also had access to the private-key of the) s
-5 624 M
-( host. The attack device will also, simultaneously to this, initiate) s
-5 613 M
-( a session to the legitimate server masquerading itself as the client.) s
-5 602 M
-( If the public key of the server had been securely distributed to the) s
-5 591 M
-( client prior to that session initiation, the key offered to the) s
-5 580 M
-( client by the attack device will not match the key stored on the) s
-5 569 M
-( client. In that case, the user SHOULD be given a warning that the) s
-5 558 M
-( offered host key does not match the host key cached on the client.) s
-5 547 M
-( As described in Section 3.1 of [ARCH], the user may be free to accept) s
-5 536 M
-( the new key and continue the session. It is RECOMMENDED that the) s
-5 525 M
-( warning provide sufficient information to the user of the client) s
-5 514 M
-( device so they may make an informed decision. If the user chooses to) s
-5 503 M
-( continue the session with the stored public-key of the server \(not) s
-5 492 M
-( the public-key offered at the start of the session\), then the session) s
-5 481 M
-( specific data between the attacker and server will be different) s
-5 470 M
-( between the client-to-attacker session and the attacker-to-server) s
-5 459 M
-( sessions due to the randomness discussed above. From this, the) s
-5 448 M
-( attacker will not be able to make this attack work since the attacker) s
-5 437 M
-( will not be able to correctly sign packets containing this session) s
-5 426 M
-( specific data from the server since he does not have the private key) s
-5 415 M
-( of that server.) s
-5 393 M
-( The second case that should be considered is similar to the first) s
-5 382 M
-( case in that it also happens at the time of connection but this case) s
-5 371 M
-( points out the need for the secure distribution of server public) s
-5 360 M
-( keys. If the server public keys are not securely distributed then) s
-5 349 M
-( the client cannot know if it is talking to the intended server. An) s
-5 338 M
-( attacker may use social engineering techniques to pass off server) s
-5 327 M
-( keys to unsuspecting users and may then place a man-in-the-middle) s
-5 316 M
-( attack device between the legitimate server and the clients. If this) s
-5 305 M
-( is allowed to happen then the clients will form client-to-attacker) s
-5 294 M
-( sessions and the attacker will form attacker-to-server sessions and) s
-5 283 M
-( will be able to monitor and manipulate all of the traffic between the) s
-5 272 M
-( clients and the legitimate servers. Server administrators are) s
-5 261 M
-( encouraged to make host key fingerprints available for checking by) s
-5 250 M
-( some means whose security does not rely on the integrity of the) s
-5 239 M
-( actual host keys. Possible mechanisms are discussed in Section 3.1) s
-5 228 M
-( of [SSH-ARCH] and may also include secured Web pages, physical pieces) s
-5 217 M
-( of paper, etc. Implementors SHOULD provide recommendations on how) s
-5 206 M
-( best to do this with their implementation. Because the protocol is) s
-5 195 M
-( extensible, future extensions to the protocol may provide better) s
-5 184 M
-( mechanisms for dealing with the need to know the server's host key) s
-5 173 M
-( before connecting. For example, making the host key fingerprint) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 18]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 19 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( available through a secure DNS lookup, or using kerberos over gssapi) s
-5 679 M
-( during key exchange to authenticate the server are possibilities.) s
-5 657 M
-( In the third man-in-the-middle case, attackers may attempt to) s
-5 646 M
-( manipulate packets in transit between peers after the session has) s
-5 635 M
-( been established. As described in the Replay part of this section, a) s
-5 624 M
-( successful attack of this nature is very improbable. As in the) s
-5 613 M
-( Replay section, this reasoning does assume that the MAC is secure and) s
-5 602 M
-( that it is infeasible to construct inputs to a MAC algorithm to give) s
-5 591 M
-( a known output. This is discussed in much greater detail in Section) s
-5 580 M
-( 6 of RFC 2104. If the MAC algorithm has a vulnerability or is weak) s
-5 569 M
-( enough, then the attacker may be able to specify certain inputs to) s
-5 558 M
-( yield a known MAC. With that they may be able to alter the contents) s
-5 547 M
-( of a packet in transit. Alternatively the attacker may be able to) s
-5 536 M
-( exploit the algorithm vulnerability or weakness to find the shared) s
-5 525 M
-( secret by reviewing the MACs from captured packets. In either of) s
-5 514 M
-( those cases, an attacker could construct a packet or packets that) s
-5 503 M
-( could be inserted into an SSH stream. To prevent that, implementors) s
-5 492 M
-( are encouraged to utilize commonly accepted MAC algorithms and) s
-5 481 M
-( administrators are encouraged to watch current literature and) s
-5 470 M
-( discussions of cryptography to ensure that they are not using a MAC) s
-5 459 M
-( algorithm that has a recently found vulnerability or weakness.) s
-5 437 M
-( In summary, the use of this protocol without a reliable association) s
-5 426 M
-( of the binding between a host and its host keys is inherently) s
-5 415 M
-( insecure and is NOT RECOMMENDED. It may however be necessary in) s
-5 404 M
-( non-security critical environments, and will still provide protection) s
-5 393 M
-( against passive attacks. Implementors of protocols and applications) s
-5 382 M
-( running on top of this protocol should keep this possibility in mind.) s
-5 360 M
-(9.2.5 Denial-of-service) s
-5 338 M
-( This protocol is designed to be used over a reliable transport. If) s
-5 327 M
-( transmission errors or message manipulation occur, the connection is) s
-5 316 M
-( closed. The connection SHOULD be re-established if this occurs.) s
-5 305 M
-( Denial of service attacks of this type \("wire cutter"\) are almost) s
-5 294 M
-( impossible to avoid.) s
-5 272 M
-( In addition, this protocol is vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks) s
-5 261 M
-( because an attacker can force the server to go through the CPU and) s
-5 250 M
-( memory intensive tasks of connection setup and key exchange without) s
-5 239 M
-( authenticating. Implementors SHOULD provide features that make this) s
-5 228 M
-( more difficult. For example, only allowing connections from a subset) s
-5 217 M
-( of IPs known to have valid users.) s
-5 195 M
-(9.2.6 Covert Channels) s
-5 173 M
-( The protocol was not designed to eliminate covert channels. For) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 19]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 20 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( example, the padding, SSH_MSG_IGNORE messages, and several other) s
-5 679 M
-( places in the protocol can be used to pass covert information, and) s
-5 668 M
-( the recipient has no reliable way to verify whether such information) s
-5 657 M
-( is being sent.) s
-5 635 M
-(9.2.7 Forward Secrecy) s
-5 613 M
-( It should be noted that the Diffie-Hellman key exchanges may provide) s
-5 602 M
-( perfect forward secrecy \(PFS\). PFS is essentially defined as the) s
-5 591 M
-( cryptographic property of a key-establishment protocol in which the) s
-5 580 M
-( compromise of a session key or long-term private key after a given) s
-5 569 M
-( session does not cause the compromise of any earlier session. [ANSI) s
-5 558 M
-( T1.523-2001] SSHv2 sessions resulting from a key exchange using) s
-5 547 M
-( diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 are secure even if private keying/) s
-5 536 M
-( authentication material is later revealed, but not if the session) s
-5 525 M
-( keys are revealed. So, given this definition of PFS, SSHv2 does have) s
-5 514 M
-( PFS. It is hoped that all other key exchange mechanisms proposed and) s
-5 503 M
-( used in the future will also provide PFS. This property is not) s
-5 492 M
-( commuted to any of the applications or protocols using SSH as a) s
-5 481 M
-( transport however. The transport layer of SSH provides) s
-5 470 M
-( confidentiality for password authentication and other methods that) s
-5 459 M
-( rely on secret data.) s
-5 437 M
-( Of course, if the DH private parameters for the client and server are) s
-5 426 M
-( revealed then the session key is revealed, but these items can be) s
-5 415 M
-( thrown away after the key exchange completes. It's worth pointing) s
-5 404 M
-( out that these items should not be allowed to end up on swap space) s
-5 393 M
-( and that they should be erased from memory as soon as the key) s
-5 382 M
-( exchange completes.) s
-5 360 M
-(9.3 Authentication Protocol) s
-5 338 M
-( The purpose of this protocol is to perform client user) s
-5 327 M
-( authentication. It assumes that this run over a secure transport) s
-5 316 M
-( layer protocol, which has already authenticated the server machine,) s
-5 305 M
-( established an encrypted communications channel, and computed a) s
-5 294 M
-( unique session identifier for this session.) s
-5 272 M
-( Several authentication methods with different security) s
-5 261 M
-( characteristics are allowed. It is up to the server's local policy) s
-5 250 M
-( to decide which methods \(or combinations of methods\) it is willing to) s
-5 239 M
-( accept for each user. Authentication is no stronger than the weakest) s
-5 228 M
-( combination allowed.) s
-5 206 M
-( The server may go into a "sleep" period after repeated unsuccessful) s
-5 195 M
-( authentication attempts to make key search more difficult for) s
-5 184 M
-( attackers. Care should be taken so that this doesn't become a) s
-5 173 M
-( self-denial of service vector.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 20]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 21 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(9.3.1 Weak Transport) s
-5 668 M
-( If the transport layer does not provide confidentiality,) s
-5 657 M
-( authentication methods that rely on secret data SHOULD be disabled.) s
-5 646 M
-( If it does not provide strong integrity protection, requests to) s
-5 635 M
-( change authentication data \(e.g. a password change\) SHOULD be) s
-5 624 M
-( disabled to prevent an attacker from modifying the ciphertext) s
-5 613 M
-( without being noticed, or rendering the new authentication data) s
-5 602 M
-( unusable \(denial of service\).) s
-5 580 M
-( The assumption as stated above that the Authentication Protocol only) s
-5 569 M
-( run over a secure transport that has previously authenticated the) s
-5 558 M
-( server is very important to note. People deploying SSH are reminded) s
-5 547 M
-( of the consequences of man-in-the-middle attacks if the client does) s
-5 536 M
-( not have a very strong a priori association of the server with the) s
-5 525 M
-( host key of that server. Specifically for the case of the) s
-5 514 M
-( Authentication Protocol the client may form a session to a) s
-5 503 M
-( man-in-the-middle attack device and divulge user credentials such as) s
-5 492 M
-( their username and password. Even in the cases of authentication) s
-5 481 M
-( where no user credentials are divulged, an attacker may still gain) s
-5 470 M
-( information they shouldn't have by capturing key-strokes in much the) s
-5 459 M
-( same way that a honeypot works.) s
-5 437 M
-(9.3.2 Debug messages) s
-5 415 M
-( Special care should be taken when designing debug messages. These) s
-5 404 M
-( messages may reveal surprising amounts of information about the host) s
-5 393 M
-( if not properly designed. Debug messages can be disabled \(during) s
-5 382 M
-( user authentication phase\) if high security is required.) s
-5 371 M
-( Administrators of host machines should make all attempts to) s
-5 360 M
-( compartmentalize all event notification messages and protect them) s
-5 349 M
-( from unwarranted observation. Developers should be aware of the) s
-5 338 M
-( sensitive nature of some of the normal event messages and debug) s
-5 327 M
-( messages and may want to provide guidance to administrators on ways) s
-5 316 M
-( to keep this information away from unauthorized people. Developers) s
-5 305 M
-( should consider minimizing the amount of sensitive information) s
-5 294 M
-( obtainable by users during the authentication phase in accordance) s
-5 283 M
-( with the local policies. For this reason, it is RECOMMENDED that) s
-5 272 M
-( debug messages be initially disabled at the time of deployment and) s
-5 261 M
-( require an active decision by an administrator to allow them to be) s
-5 250 M
-( enabled. It is also RECOMMENDED that a message expressing this) s
-5 239 M
-( concern be presented to the administrator of a system when the action) s
-5 228 M
-( is taken to enable debugging messages.) s
-5 206 M
-(9.3.3 Local security policy) s
-5 184 M
-( Implementer MUST ensure that the credentials provided validate the) s
-5 173 M
-( professed user and also MUST ensure that the local policy of the) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 21]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 22 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( server permits the user the access requested. In particular, because) s
-5 679 M
-( of the flexible nature of the SSH connection protocol, it may not be) s
-5 668 M
-( possible to determine the local security policy, if any, that should) s
-5 657 M
-( apply at the time of authentication because the kind of service being) s
-5 646 M
-( requested is not clear at that instant. For example, local policy) s
-5 635 M
-( might allow a user to access files on the server, but not start an) s
-5 624 M
-( interactive shell. However, during the authentication protocol, it is) s
-5 613 M
-( not known whether the user will be accessing files or attempting to) s
-5 602 M
-( use an interactive shell, or even both. In any event, where local) s
-5 591 M
-( security policy for the server host exists, it MUST be applied and) s
-5 580 M
-( enforced correctly.) s
-5 558 M
-( Implementors are encouraged to provide a default local policy and) s
-5 547 M
-( make its parameters known to administrators and users. At the) s
-5 536 M
-( discretion of the implementors, this default policy may be along the) s
-5 525 M
-( lines of 'anything goes' where there are no restrictions placed upon) s
-5 514 M
-( users, or it may be along the lines of 'excessively restrictive' in) s
-5 503 M
-( which case the administrators will have to actively make changes to) s
-5 492 M
-( this policy to meet their needs. Alternatively, it may be some) s
-5 481 M
-( attempt at providing something practical and immediately useful to) s
-5 470 M
-( the administrators of the system so they don't have to put in much) s
-5 459 M
-( effort to get SSH working. Whatever choice is made MUST be applied) s
-5 448 M
-( and enforced as required above.) s
-5 426 M
-(9.3.4 Public key authentication) s
-5 404 M
-( The use of public-key authentication assumes that the client host has) s
-5 393 M
-( not been compromised. It also assumes that the private-key of the) s
-5 382 M
-( server host has not been compromised.) s
-5 360 M
-( This risk can be mitigated by the use of passphrases on private keys;) s
-5 349 M
-( however, this is not an enforceable policy. The use of smartcards,) s
-5 338 M
-( or other technology to make passphrases an enforceable policy is) s
-5 327 M
-( suggested.) s
-5 305 M
-( The server could require both password and public-key authentication,) s
-5 294 M
-( however, this requires the client to expose its password to the) s
-5 283 M
-( server \(see section on password authentication below.\)) s
-5 261 M
-(9.3.5 Password authentication) s
-5 239 M
-( The password mechanism as specified in the authentication protocol) s
-5 228 M
-( assumes that the server has not been compromised. If the server has) s
-5 217 M
-( been compromised, using password authentication will reveal a valid) s
-5 206 M
-( username / password combination to the attacker, which may lead to) s
-5 195 M
-( further compromises.) s
-5 173 M
-( This vulnerability can be mitigated by using an alternative form of) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 22]) s
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 23 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( authentication. For example, public-key authentication makes no) s
-5 679 M
-( assumptions about security on the server.) s
-5 657 M
-(9.3.6 Host based authentication) s
-5 635 M
-( Host based authentication assumes that the client has not been) s
-5 624 M
-( compromised. There are no mitigating strategies, other than to use) s
-5 613 M
-( host based authentication in combination with another authentication) s
-5 602 M
-( method.) s
-5 580 M
-(9.4 Connection protocol) s
-5 558 M
-(9.4.1 End point security) s
-5 536 M
-( End point security is assumed by the connection protocol. If the) s
-5 525 M
-( server has been compromised, any terminal sessions, port forwarding,) s
-5 514 M
-( or systems accessed on the host are compromised. There are no) s
-5 503 M
-( mitigating factors for this.) s
-5 481 M
-( If the client end point has been compromised, and the server fails to) s
-5 470 M
-( stop the attacker at the authentication protocol, all services) s
-5 459 M
-( exposed \(either as subsystems or through forwarding\) will be) s
-5 448 M
-( vulnerable to attack. Implementors SHOULD provide mechanisms for) s
-5 437 M
-( administrators to control which services are exposed to limit the) s
-5 426 M
-( vulnerability of other services.) s
-5 404 M
-( These controls might include controlling which machines and ports can) s
-5 393 M
-( be target in 'port-forwarding' operations, which users are allowed to) s
-5 382 M
-( use interactive shell facilities, or which users are allowed to use) s
-5 371 M
-( exposed subsystems.) s
-5 349 M
-(9.4.2 Proxy forwarding) s
-5 327 M
-( The SSH connection protocol allows for proxy forwarding of other) s
-5 316 M
-( protocols such as SNMP, POP3, and HTTP. This may be a concern for) s
-5 305 M
-( network administrators who wish to control the access of certain) s
-5 294 M
-( applications by users located outside of their physical location.) s
-5 283 M
-( Essentially, the forwarding of these protocols may violate site) s
-5 272 M
-( specific security policies as they may be undetectably tunneled) s
-5 261 M
-( through a firewall. Implementors SHOULD provide an administrative) s
-5 250 M
-( mechanism to control the proxy forwarding functionality so that site) s
-5 239 M
-( specific security policies may be upheld.) s
-5 217 M
-( In addition, a reverse proxy forwarding functionality is available,) s
-5 206 M
-( which again can be used to bypass firewall controls.) s
-5 184 M
-( As indicated above, end-point security is assumed during proxy) s
-5 173 M
-( forwarding operations. Failure of end-point security will compromise) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 23]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 24 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( all data passed over proxy forwarding.) s
-5 668 M
-(9.4.3 X11 forwarding) s
-5 646 M
-( Another form of proxy forwarding provided by the ssh connection) s
-5 635 M
-( protocol is the forwarding of the X11 protocol. If end-point) s
-5 624 M
-( security has been compromised, X11 forwarding may allow attacks) s
-5 613 M
-( against the X11 server. Users and administrators should, as a matter) s
-5 602 M
-( of course, use appropriate X11 security mechanisms to prevent) s
-5 591 M
-( unauthorized use of the X11 server. Implementors, administrators and) s
-5 580 M
-( users who wish to further explore the security mechanisms of X11 are) s
-5 569 M
-( invited to read [SCHEIFLER] and analyze previously reported problems) s
-5 558 M
-( with the interactions between SSH forwarding and X11 in CERT) s
-5 547 M
-( vulnerabilities VU#363181 and VU#118892 [CERT].) s
-5 525 M
-( X11 display forwarding with SSH, by itself, is not sufficient to) s
-5 514 M
-( correct well known problems with X11 security [VENEMA]. However, X11) s
-5 503 M
-( display forwarding in SSHv2 \(or other, secure protocols\), combined) s
-5 492 M
-( with actual and pseudo-displays which accept connections only over) s
-5 481 M
-( local IPC mechanisms authorized by permissions or ACLs, does correct) s
-5 470 M
-( many X11 security problems as long as the "none" MAC is not used. It) s
-5 459 M
-( is RECOMMENDED that X11 display implementations default to allowing) s
-5 448 M
-( display opens only over local IPC. It is RECOMMENDED that SSHv2) s
-5 437 M
-( server implementations that support X11 forwarding default to) s
-5 426 M
-( allowing display opens only over local IPC. On single-user systems) s
-5 415 M
-( it might be reasonable to default to allowing local display opens) s
-5 404 M
-( over TCP/IP.) s
-5 382 M
-( Implementors of the X11 forwarding protocol SHOULD implement the) s
-5 371 M
-( magic cookie access checking spoofing mechanism as described in) s
-5 360 M
-( [ssh-connect] as an additional mechanism to prevent unauthorized use) s
-5 349 M
-( of the proxy.) s
-5 327 M
-(Normative References) s
-5 305 M
-( [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 294 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D) s
-5 283 M
-( draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 261 M
-( [SSH-TRANS]) s
-5 250 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D) s
-5 239 M
-( draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 217 M
-( [SSH-USERAUTH]) s
-5 206 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D) s
-5 195 M
-( draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 173 M
-( [SSH-CONNECT]) s
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-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 24]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D) s
-5 679 M
-( draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 657 M
-( [SSH-NUMBERS]) s
-5 646 M
-( Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned) s
-5 635 M
-( Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct) s
-5 624 M
-( 2003.) s
-5 602 M
-( [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate) s
-5 591 M
-( Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.) s
-5 569 M
-(Informative References) s
-5 547 M
-( [FIPS-186]) s
-5 536 M
-( Federal Information Processing Standards Publication,) s
-5 525 M
-( "FIPS PUB 186, Digital Signature Standard", May 1994.) s
-5 503 M
-( [FIPS-197]) s
-5 492 M
-( National Institue of Standards and Technology, "FIPS 197,) s
-5 481 M
-( Specification for the Advanced Encryption Standard",) s
-5 470 M
-( November 2001.) s
-5 448 M
-( [ANSI T1.523-2001]) s
-5 437 M
-( American National Standards Insitute, Inc., "Telecom) s
-5 426 M
-( Glossary 2000", February 2001.) s
-5 404 M
-( [SCHEIFLER]) s
-5 393 M
-( Scheifler, R., "X Window System : The Complete Reference) s
-5 382 M
-( to Xlib, X Protocol, Icccm, Xlfd, 3rd edition.", Digital) s
-5 371 M
-( Press ISBN 1555580882, Feburary 1992.) s
-5 349 M
-( [RFC0854] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Protocol) s
-5 338 M
-( Specification", STD 8, RFC 854, May 1983.) s
-5 316 M
-( [RFC0894] Hornig, C., "Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams) s
-5 305 M
-( over Ethernet networks", STD 41, RFC 894, April 1984.) s
-5 283 M
-( [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",) s
-5 272 M
-( STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.) s
-5 250 M
-( [RFC1134] Perkins, D., "Point-to-Point Protocol: A proposal for) s
-5 239 M
-( multi-protocol transmission of datagrams over) s
-5 228 M
-( Point-to-Point links", RFC 1134, November 1989.) s
-5 206 M
-( [RFC1282] Kantor, B., "BSD Rlogin", RFC 1282, December 1991.) s
-5 184 M
-( [RFC1510] Kohl, J. and B. Neuman, "The Kerberos Network) s
-5 173 M
-( Authentication Service \(V5\)", RFC 1510, September 1993.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 25]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( [RFC1700] Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", RFC 1700,) s
-5 679 M
-( October 1994.) s
-5 657 M
-( [RFC1750] Eastlake, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller, "Randomness) s
-5 646 M
-( Recommendations for Security", RFC 1750, December 1994.) s
-5 624 M
-( [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of) s
-5 613 M
-( Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.) s
-5 591 M
-( [RFC1964] Linn, J., "The Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API Mechanism", RFC) s
-5 580 M
-( 1964, June 1996.) s
-5 558 M
-( [RFC2025] Adams, C., "The Simple Public-Key GSS-API Mechanism) s
-5 547 M
-( \(SPKM\)", RFC 2025, October 1996.) s
-5 525 M
-( [RFC2085] Oehler, M. and R. Glenn, "HMAC-MD5 IP Authentication with) s
-5 514 M
-( Replay Prevention", RFC 2085, February 1997.) s
-5 492 M
-( [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC:) s
-5 481 M
-( Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,) s
-5 470 M
-( February 1997.) s
-5 448 M
-( [RFC2246] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A.) s
-5 437 M
-( and P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246,) s
-5 426 M
-( January 1999.) s
-5 404 M
-( [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO) s
-5 393 M
-( 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.) s
-5 371 M
-( [RFC2410] Glenn, R. and S. Kent, "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and) s
-5 360 M
-( Its Use With IPsec", RFC 2410, November 1998.) s
-5 338 M
-( [RFC2434] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an) s
-5 327 M
-( IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434,) s
-5 316 M
-( October 1998.) s
-5 294 M
-( [RFC2743] Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program) s
-5 283 M
-( Interface Version 2, Update 1", RFC 2743, January 2000.) s
-5 261 M
-( [SCHNEIER]) s
-5 250 M
-( Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography Second Edition:) s
-5 239 M
-( protocols algorithms and source in code in C", 1996.) s
-5 217 M
-( [KAUFMAN,PERLMAN,SPECINER]) s
-5 206 M
-( Kaufman, C., Perlman, R. and M. Speciner, "Network) s
-5 195 M
-( Security: PRIVATE Communication in a PUBLIC World", 1995.) s
-5 173 M
-( [CERT] CERT Coordination Center, The., "http://www.cert.org/nav/) s
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-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 26]) s
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( index_red.html".) s
-5 668 M
-( [VENEMA] Venema, W., "Murphy's Law and Computer Security",) s
-5 657 M
-( Proceedings of 6th USENIX Security Symposium, San Jose CA) s
-5 646 M
-( http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/) s
-5 635 M
-( sec96/venema.html, July 1996.) s
-5 613 M
-( [ROGAWAY] Rogaway, P., "Problems with Proposed IP Cryptography",) s
-5 602 M
-( Unpublished paper http://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~rogaway/) s
-5 591 M
-( papers/draft-rogaway-ipsec-comments-00.txt, 1996.) s
-5 569 M
-( [DAI] Dai, W., "An attack against SSH2 protocol", Email to the) s
-5 558 M
-( SECSH Working Group [email protected] ftp://) s
-5 547 M
-( ftp.ietf.org/ietf-mail-archive/secsh/2002-02.mail, Feb) s
-5 536 M
-( 2002.) s
-5 514 M
-( [BELLARE,KOHNO,NAMPREMPRE]) s
-5 503 M
-( Bellaire, M., Kohno, T. and C. Namprempre, "Authenticated) s
-5 492 M
-( Encryption in SSH: Fixing the SSH Binary Packet Protocol",) s
-5 481 M
-( , Sept 2002.) s
-5 448 M
-(Authors' Addresses) s
-5 426 M
-( Tatu Ylonen) s
-5 415 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 404 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 393 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 382 M
-( Finland) s
-5 360 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 327 M
-( Darren J. Moffat \(editor\)) s
-5 316 M
-( Sun Microsystems, Inc) s
-5 305 M
-( 17 Network Circle) s
-5 294 M
-( Menlo Park CA 94025) s
-5 283 M
-( USA) s
-5 261 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 27]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(Intellectual Property Statement) s
-5 668 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 657 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
-5 646 M
-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
-5 635 M
-( this document or the extent to which any license under such rights) s
-5 624 M
-( might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it) s
-5 613 M
-( has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the) s
-5 602 M
-( IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and) s
-5 591 M
-( standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of) s
-5 580 M
-( claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of) s
-5 569 M
-( licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to) s
-5 558 M
-( obtain a general license or permission for the use of such) s
-5 547 M
-( proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can) s
-5 536 M
-( be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.) s
-5 514 M
-( The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any) s
-5 503 M
-( copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary) s
-5 492 M
-( rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice) s
-5 481 M
-( this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive) s
-5 470 M
-( Director.) s
-5 448 M
-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
-5 437 M
-( regard to some or all of the specification contained in this) s
-5 426 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 415 M
-( rights.) s
-5 382 M
-(Full Copyright Statement) s
-5 360 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 338 M
-( This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to) s
-5 327 M
-( others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it) s
-5 316 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
-5 305 M
-( and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any) s
-5 294 M
-( kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are) s
-5 283 M
-( included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this) s
-5 272 M
-( document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing) s
-5 261 M
-( the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other) s
-5 250 M
-( Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of) s
-5 239 M
-( developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for) s
-5 228 M
-( copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be) s
-5 217 M
-( followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than) s
-5 206 M
-( English.) s
-5 184 M
-( The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be) s
-5 173 M
-( revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.) s
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-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 29 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( This document and the information contained herein is provided on an) s
-5 679 M
-( "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING) s
-5 668 M
-( TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING) s
-5 657 M
-( BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION) s
-5 646 M
-( HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF) s
-5 635 M
-( MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.) s
-5 602 M
-(Acknowledgment) s
-5 580 M
-( Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the) s
-5 569 M
-( Internet Society.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 29]) s
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-showpage
-PStoPSsaved restore
-%%Trailer
-%%Pages: 29
-%%DocumentNeededResources: font Courier-Bold Courier
-%%EOF
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 18070e8485..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1624 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Network Working Group T. Ylonen
-Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp
-Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Ed.
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- Oct 2003
-
-
- SSH Protocol Architecture
- draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-15.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
- groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network
- services over an insecure network. This document describes the
- architecture of the SSH protocol, as well as the notation and
- terminology used in SSH protocol documents. It also discusses the SSH
- algorithm naming system that allows local extensions. The SSH
- protocol consists of three major components: The Transport Layer
- Protocol provides server authentication, confidentiality, and
- integrity with perfect forward secrecy. The User Authentication
- Protocol authenticates the client to the server. The Connection
- Protocol multiplexes the encrypted tunnel into several logical
- channels. Details of these protocols are described in separate
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
- documents.
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3. Specification of Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 4. Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 4.1 Host Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 4.2 Extensibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 4.3 Policy Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 4.4 Security Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 4.5 Packet Size and Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 4.6 Localization and Character Set Support . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 5. Data Type Representations Used in the SSH Protocols . . . . 8
- 6. Algorithm Naming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 7. Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 9.1 Pseudo-Random Number Generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 9.2 Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 9.2.1 Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 9.2.2 Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 9.2.3 Replay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 9.2.4 Man-in-the-middle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- 9.2.5 Denial-of-service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 9.2.6 Covert Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 9.2.7 Forward Secrecy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 9.3 Authentication Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 9.3.1 Weak Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 9.3.2 Debug messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 9.3.3 Local security policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 9.3.4 Public key authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 9.3.5 Password authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 9.3.6 Host based authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 9.4 Connection protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 9.4.1 End point security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 9.4.2 Proxy forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 9.4.3 X11 forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 28
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
-1. Contributors
-
- The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,
- Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen (all of SSH Communications
- Security Corp), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen (University of
- Jyvaskyla)
-
- The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this
- internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,
- details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html
-
-2. Introduction
-
- SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network
- services over an insecure network. It consists of three major
- components:
- o The Transport Layer Protocol [SSH-TRANS] provides server
- authentication, confidentiality, and integrity. It may optionally
- also provide compression. The transport layer will typically be
- run over a TCP/IP connection, but might also be used on top of any
- other reliable data stream.
- o The User Authentication Protocol [SSH-USERAUTH] authenticates the
- client-side user to the server. It runs over the transport layer
- protocol.
- o The Connection Protocol [SSH-CONNECT] multiplexes the encrypted
- tunnel into several logical channels. It runs over the user
- authentication protocol.
-
- The client sends a service request once a secure transport layer
- connection has been established. A second service request is sent
- after user authentication is complete. This allows new protocols to
- be defined and coexist with the protocols listed above.
-
- The connection protocol provides channels that can be used for a wide
- range of purposes. Standard methods are provided for setting up
- secure interactive shell sessions and for forwarding ("tunneling")
- arbitrary TCP/IP ports and X11 connections.
-
-3. Specification of Requirements
-
- All documents related to the SSH protocols shall use the keywords
- "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
- "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" to describe
- requirements. They are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
-
-4. Architecture
-
-
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-4.1 Host Keys
-
- Each server host SHOULD have a host key. Hosts MAY have multiple
- host keys using multiple different algorithms. Multiple hosts MAY
- share the same host key. If a host has keys at all, it MUST have at
- least one key using each REQUIRED public key algorithm (DSS
- [FIPS-186]).
-
- The server host key is used during key exchange to verify that the
- client is really talking to the correct server. For this to be
- possible, the client must have a priori knowledge of the server's
- public host key.
-
- Two different trust models can be used:
- o The client has a local database that associates each host name (as
- typed by the user) with the corresponding public host key. This
- method requires no centrally administered infrastructure, and no
- third-party coordination. The downside is that the database of
- name-to-key associations may become burdensome to maintain.
- o The host name-to-key association is certified by some trusted
- certification authority. The client only knows the CA root key,
- and can verify the validity of all host keys certified by accepted
- CAs.
-
- The second alternative eases the maintenance problem, since
- ideally only a single CA key needs to be securely stored on the
- client. On the other hand, each host key must be appropriately
- certified by a central authority before authorization is possible.
- Also, a lot of trust is placed on the central infrastructure.
-
- The protocol provides the option that the server name - host key
- association is not checked when connecting to the host for the first
- time. This allows communication without prior communication of host
- keys or certification. The connection still provides protection
- against passive listening; however, it becomes vulnerable to active
- man-in-the-middle attacks. Implementations SHOULD NOT normally allow
- such connections by default, as they pose a potential security
- problem. However, as there is no widely deployed key infrastructure
- available on the Internet yet, this option makes the protocol much
- more usable during the transition time until such an infrastructure
- emerges, while still providing a much higher level of security than
- that offered by older solutions (e.g. telnet [RFC-854] and rlogin
- [RFC-1282]).
-
- Implementations SHOULD try to make the best effort to check host
- keys. An example of a possible strategy is to only accept a host key
- without checking the first time a host is connected, save the key in
- a local database, and compare against that key on all future
-
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- connections to that host.
-
- Implementations MAY provide additional methods for verifying the
- correctness of host keys, e.g. a hexadecimal fingerprint derived from
- the SHA-1 hash of the public key. Such fingerprints can easily be
- verified by using telephone or other external communication channels.
-
- All implementations SHOULD provide an option to not accept host keys
- that cannot be verified.
-
- We believe that ease of use is critical to end-user acceptance of
- security solutions, and no improvement in security is gained if the
- new solutions are not used. Thus, providing the option not to check
- the server host key is believed to improve the overall security of
- the Internet, even though it reduces the security of the protocol in
- configurations where it is allowed.
-
-4.2 Extensibility
-
- We believe that the protocol will evolve over time, and some
- organizations will want to use their own encryption, authentication
- and/or key exchange methods. Central registration of all extensions
- is cumbersome, especially for experimental or classified features.
- On the other hand, having no central registration leads to conflicts
- in method identifiers, making interoperability difficult.
-
- We have chosen to identify algorithms, methods, formats, and
- extension protocols with textual names that are of a specific format.
- DNS names are used to create local namespaces where experimental or
- classified extensions can be defined without fear of conflicts with
- other implementations.
-
- One design goal has been to keep the base protocol as simple as
- possible, and to require as few algorithms as possible. However, all
- implementations MUST support a minimal set of algorithms to ensure
- interoperability (this does not imply that the local policy on all
- hosts would necessary allow these algorithms). The mandatory
- algorithms are specified in the relevant protocol documents.
-
- Additional algorithms, methods, formats, and extension protocols can
- be defined in separate drafts. See Section Algorithm Naming (Section
- 6) for more information.
-
-4.3 Policy Issues
-
- The protocol allows full negotiation of encryption, integrity, key
- exchange, compression, and public key algorithms and formats.
- Encryption, integrity, public key, and compression algorithms can be
-
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- different for each direction.
-
- The following policy issues SHOULD be addressed in the configuration
- mechanisms of each implementation:
- o Encryption, integrity, and compression algorithms, separately for
- each direction. The policy MUST specify which is the preferred
- algorithm (e.g. the first algorithm listed in each category).
- o Public key algorithms and key exchange method to be used for host
- authentication. The existence of trusted host keys for different
- public key algorithms also affects this choice.
- o The authentication methods that are to be required by the server
- for each user. The server's policy MAY require multiple
- authentication for some or all users. The required algorithms MAY
- depend on the location where the user is trying to log in from.
- o The operations that the user is allowed to perform using the
- connection protocol. Some issues are related to security; for
- example, the policy SHOULD NOT allow the server to start sessions
- or run commands on the client machine, and MUST NOT allow
- connections to the authentication agent unless forwarding such
- connections has been requested. Other issues, such as which TCP/
- IP ports can be forwarded and by whom, are clearly issues of local
- policy. Many of these issues may involve traversing or bypassing
- firewalls, and are interrelated with the local security policy.
-
-4.4 Security Properties
-
- The primary goal of the SSH protocol is improved security on the
- Internet. It attempts to do this in a way that is easy to deploy,
- even at the cost of absolute security.
- o All encryption, integrity, and public key algorithms used are
- well-known, well-established algorithms.
- o All algorithms are used with cryptographically sound key sizes
- that are believed to provide protection against even the strongest
- cryptanalytic attacks for decades.
- o All algorithms are negotiated, and in case some algorithm is
- broken, it is easy to switch to some other algorithm without
- modifying the base protocol.
-
- Specific concessions were made to make wide-spread fast deployment
- easier. The particular case where this comes up is verifying that
- the server host key really belongs to the desired host; the protocol
- allows the verification to be left out (but this is NOT RECOMMENDED).
- This is believed to significantly improve usability in the short
- term, until widespread Internet public key infrastructures emerge.
-
-4.5 Packet Size and Overhead
-
- Some readers will worry about the increase in packet size due to new
-
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- headers, padding, and MAC. The minimum packet size is in the order
- of 28 bytes (depending on negotiated algorithms). The increase is
- negligible for large packets, but very significant for one-byte
- packets (telnet-type sessions). There are, however, several factors
- that make this a non-issue in almost all cases:
- o The minimum size of a TCP/IP header is 32 bytes. Thus, the
- increase is actually from 33 to 51 bytes (roughly).
- o The minimum size of the data field of an Ethernet packet is 46
- bytes [RFC-894]. Thus, the increase is no more than 5 bytes. When
- Ethernet headers are considered, the increase is less than 10
- percent.
- o The total fraction of telnet-type data in the Internet is
- negligible, even with increased packet sizes.
-
- The only environment where the packet size increase is likely to have
- a significant effect is PPP [RFC-1134] over slow modem lines (PPP
- compresses the TCP/IP headers, emphasizing the increase in packet
- size). However, with modern modems, the time needed to transfer is in
- the order of 2 milliseconds, which is a lot faster than people can
- type.
-
- There are also issues related to the maximum packet size. To
- minimize delays in screen updates, one does not want excessively
- large packets for interactive sessions. The maximum packet size is
- negotiated separately for each channel.
-
-4.6 Localization and Character Set Support
-
- For the most part, the SSH protocols do not directly pass text that
- would be displayed to the user. However, there are some places where
- such data might be passed. When applicable, the character set for the
- data MUST be explicitly specified. In most places, ISO 10646 with
- UTF-8 encoding is used [RFC-2279]. When applicable, a field is also
- provided for a language tag [RFC-3066].
-
- One big issue is the character set of the interactive session. There
- is no clear solution, as different applications may display data in
- different formats. Different types of terminal emulation may also be
- employed in the client, and the character set to be used is
- effectively determined by the terminal emulation. Thus, no place is
- provided for directly specifying the character set or encoding for
- terminal session data. However, the terminal emulation type (e.g.
- "vt100") is transmitted to the remote site, and it implicitly
- specifies the character set and encoding. Applications typically use
- the terminal type to determine what character set they use, or the
- character set is determined using some external means. The terminal
- emulation may also allow configuring the default character set. In
- any case, the character set for the terminal session is considered
-
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- primarily a client local issue.
-
- Internal names used to identify algorithms or protocols are normally
- never displayed to users, and must be in US-ASCII.
-
- The client and server user names are inherently constrained by what
- the server is prepared to accept. They might, however, occasionally
- be displayed in logs, reports, etc. They MUST be encoded using ISO
- 10646 UTF-8, but other encodings may be required in some cases. It
- is up to the server to decide how to map user names to accepted user
- names. Straight bit-wise binary comparison is RECOMMENDED.
-
- For localization purposes, the protocol attempts to minimize the
- number of textual messages transmitted. When present, such messages
- typically relate to errors, debugging information, or some externally
- configured data. For data that is normally displayed, it SHOULD be
- possible to fetch a localized message instead of the transmitted
- message by using a numerical code. The remaining messages SHOULD be
- configurable.
-
-5. Data Type Representations Used in the SSH Protocols
- byte
-
- A byte represents an arbitrary 8-bit value (octet) [RFC-1700].
- Fixed length data is sometimes represented as an array of bytes,
- written byte[n], where n is the number of bytes in the array.
-
- boolean
-
- A boolean value is stored as a single byte. The value 0
- represents FALSE, and the value 1 represents TRUE. All non-zero
- values MUST be interpreted as TRUE; however, applications MUST NOT
- store values other than 0 and 1.
-
- uint32
-
- Represents a 32-bit unsigned integer. Stored as four bytes in the
- order of decreasing significance (network byte order). For
- example, the value 699921578 (0x29b7f4aa) is stored as 29 b7 f4
- aa.
-
- uint64
-
- Represents a 64-bit unsigned integer. Stored as eight bytes in
- the order of decreasing significance (network byte order).
-
-
-
-
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- string
-
- Arbitrary length binary string. Strings are allowed to contain
- arbitrary binary data, including null characters and 8-bit
- characters. They are stored as a uint32 containing its length
- (number of bytes that follow) and zero (= empty string) or more
- bytes that are the value of the string. Terminating null
- characters are not used.
-
- Strings are also used to store text. In that case, US-ASCII is
- used for internal names, and ISO-10646 UTF-8 for text that might
- be displayed to the user. The terminating null character SHOULD
- NOT normally be stored in the string.
-
- For example, the US-ASCII string "testing" is represented as 00 00
- 00 07 t e s t i n g. The UTF8 mapping does not alter the encoding
- of US-ASCII characters.
-
- mpint
-
- Represents multiple precision integers in two's complement format,
- stored as a string, 8 bits per byte, MSB first. Negative numbers
- have the value 1 as the most significant bit of the first byte of
- the data partition. If the most significant bit would be set for a
- positive number, the number MUST be preceded by a zero byte.
- Unnecessary leading bytes with the value 0 or 255 MUST NOT be
- included. The value zero MUST be stored as a string with zero
- bytes of data.
-
- By convention, a number that is used in modular computations in
- Z_n SHOULD be represented in the range 0 <= x < n.
-
- Examples:
- value (hex) representation (hex)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- 0 00 00 00 00
- 9a378f9b2e332a7 00 00 00 08 09 a3 78 f9 b2 e3 32 a7
- 80 00 00 00 02 00 80
- -1234 00 00 00 02 ed cc
- -deadbeef 00 00 00 05 ff 21 52 41 11
-
-
-
- name-list
-
- A string containing a comma separated list of names. A name list
- is represented as a uint32 containing its length (number of bytes
- that follow) followed by a comma-separated list of zero or more
-
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- names. A name MUST be non-zero length, and it MUST NOT contain a
- comma (','). Context may impose additional restrictions on the
- names; for example, the names in a list may have to be valid
- algorithm identifier (see Algorithm Naming below), or [RFC-3066]
- language tags. The order of the names in a list may or may not be
- significant, also depending on the context where the list is is
- used. Terminating NUL characters are not used, neither for the
- individual names, nor for the list as a whole.
-
- Examples:
- value representation (hex)
- ---------------------------------------
- (), the empty list 00 00 00 00
- ("zlib") 00 00 00 04 7a 6c 69 62
- ("zlib", "none") 00 00 00 09 7a 6c 69 62 2c 6e 6f 6e 65
-
-
-
-
-6. Algorithm Naming
-
- The SSH protocols refer to particular hash, encryption, integrity,
- compression, and key exchange algorithms or protocols by names.
- There are some standard algorithms that all implementations MUST
- support. There are also algorithms that are defined in the protocol
- specification but are OPTIONAL. Furthermore, it is expected that
- some organizations will want to use their own algorithms.
-
- In this protocol, all algorithm identifiers MUST be printable
- US-ASCII non-empty strings no longer than 64 characters. Names MUST
- be case-sensitive.
-
- There are two formats for algorithm names:
- o Names that do not contain an at-sign (@) are reserved to be
- assigned by IETF consensus (RFCs). Examples include `3des-cbc',
- `sha-1', `hmac-sha1', and `zlib' (the quotes are not part of the
- name). Names of this format MUST NOT be used without first
- registering them. Registered names MUST NOT contain an at-sign
- (@) or a comma (,).
- o Anyone can define additional algorithms by using names in the
- format name@domainname, e.g. "[email protected]". The
- format of the part preceding the at sign is not specified; it MUST
- consist of US-ASCII characters except at-sign and comma. The part
- following the at-sign MUST be a valid fully qualified internet
- domain name [RFC-1034] controlled by the person or organization
- defining the name. It is up to each domain how it manages its
- local namespace.
-
-
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-7. Message Numbers
-
- SSH packets have message numbers in the range 1 to 255. These numbers
- have been allocated as follows:
-
-
- Transport layer protocol:
-
- 1 to 19 Transport layer generic (e.g. disconnect, ignore, debug,
- etc.)
- 20 to 29 Algorithm negotiation
- 30 to 49 Key exchange method specific (numbers can be reused for
- different authentication methods)
-
- User authentication protocol:
-
- 50 to 59 User authentication generic
- 60 to 79 User authentication method specific (numbers can be
- reused for different authentication methods)
-
- Connection protocol:
-
- 80 to 89 Connection protocol generic
- 90 to 127 Channel related messages
-
- Reserved for client protocols:
-
- 128 to 191 Reserved
-
- Local extensions:
-
- 192 to 255 Local extensions
-
-
-
-8. IANA Considerations
-
- The initial state of the IANA registry is detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].
-
- Allocation of the following types of names in the SSH protocols is
- assigned by IETF consensus:
- o SSH encryption algorithm names,
- o SSH MAC algorithm names,
- o SSH public key algorithm names (public key algorithm also implies
- encoding and signature/encryption capability),
- o SSH key exchange method names, and
- o SSH protocol (service) names.
-
-
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- These names MUST be printable US-ASCII strings, and MUST NOT contain
- the characters at-sign ('@'), comma (','), or whitespace or control
- characters (ASCII codes 32 or less). Names are case-sensitive, and
- MUST NOT be longer than 64 characters.
-
- Names with the at-sign ('@') in them are allocated by the owner of
- DNS name after the at-sign (hierarchical allocation in [RFC-2343]),
- otherwise the same restrictions as above.
-
- Each category of names listed above has a separate namespace.
- However, using the same name in multiple categories SHOULD be avoided
- to minimize confusion.
-
- Message numbers (see Section Message Numbers (Section 7)) in the
- range of 0..191 are allocated via IETF consensus; message numbers in
- the 192..255 range (the "Local extensions" set) are reserved for
- private use.
-
-9. Security Considerations
-
- In order to make the entire body of Security Considerations more
- accessible, Security Considerations for the transport,
- authentication, and connection documents have been gathered here.
-
- The transport protocol [1] provides a confidential channel over an
- insecure network. It performs server host authentication, key
- exchange, encryption, and integrity protection. It also derives a
- unique session id that may be used by higher-level protocols.
-
- The authentication protocol [2] provides a suite of mechanisms which
- can be used to authenticate the client user to the server.
- Individual mechanisms specified in the in authentication protocol use
- the session id provided by the transport protocol and/or depend on
- the security and integrity guarantees of the transport protocol.
-
- The connection protocol [3] specifies a mechanism to multiplex
- multiple streams [channels] of data over the confidential and
- authenticated transport. It also specifies channels for accessing an
- interactive shell, for 'proxy-forwarding' various external protocols
- over the secure transport (including arbitrary TCP/IP protocols), and
- for accessing secure 'subsystems' on the server host.
-
-9.1 Pseudo-Random Number Generation
-
- This protocol binds each session key to the session by including
- random, session specific data in the hash used to produce session
- keys. Special care should be taken to ensure that all of the random
- numbers are of good quality. If the random data here (e.g., DH
-
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- parameters) are pseudo-random then the pseudo-random number generator
- should be cryptographically secure (i.e., its next output not easily
- guessed even when knowing all previous outputs) and, furthermore,
- proper entropy needs to be added to the pseudo-random number
- generator. RFC 1750 [1750] offers suggestions for sources of random
- numbers and entropy. Implementors should note the importance of
- entropy and the well-meant, anecdotal warning about the difficulty in
- properly implementing pseudo-random number generating functions.
-
- The amount of entropy available to a given client or server may
- sometimes be less than what is required. In this case one must
- either resort to pseudo-random number generation regardless of
- insufficient entropy or refuse to run the protocol. The latter is
- preferable.
-
-9.2 Transport
-
-9.2.1 Confidentiality
-
- It is beyond the scope of this document and the Secure Shell Working
- Group to analyze or recommend specific ciphers other than the ones
- which have been established and accepted within the industry. At the
- time of this writing, ciphers commonly in use include 3DES, ARCFOUR,
- twofish, serpent and blowfish. AES has been accepted by The
- published as a US Federal Information Processing Standards [FIPS-197]
- and the cryptographic community as being acceptable for this purpose
- as well has accepted AES. As always, implementors and users should
- check current literature to ensure that no recent vulnerabilities
- have been found in ciphers used within products. Implementors should
- also check to see which ciphers are considered to be relatively
- stronger than others and should recommend their use to users over
- relatively weaker ciphers. It would be considered good form for an
- implementation to politely and unobtrusively notify a user that a
- stronger cipher is available and should be used when a weaker one is
- actively chosen.
-
- The "none" cipher is provided for debugging and SHOULD NOT be used
- except for that purpose. It's cryptographic properties are
- sufficiently described in RFC 2410, which will show that its use does
- not meet the intent of this protocol.
-
- The relative merits of these and other ciphers may also be found in
- current literature. Two references that may provide information on
- the subject are [SCHNEIER] and [KAUFMAN,PERLMAN,SPECINER]. Both of
- these describe the CBC mode of operation of certain ciphers and the
- weakness of this scheme. Essentially, this mode is theoretically
- vulnerable to chosen cipher-text attacks because of the high
- predictability of the start of packet sequence. However, this attack
-
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- is still deemed difficult and not considered fully practicable
- especially if relatively longer block sizes are used.
-
- Additionally, another CBC mode attack may be mitigated through the
- insertion of packets containing SSH_MSG_IGNORE. Without this
- technique, a specific attack may be successful. For this attack
- (commonly known as the Rogaway attack
- [ROGAWAY],[DAI],[BELLARE,KOHNO,NAMPREMPRE]) to work, the attacker
- would need to know the IV of the next block that is going to be
- encrypted. In CBC mode that is the output of the encryption of the
- previous block. If the attacker does not have any way to see the
- packet yet (i.e it is in the internal buffers of the ssh
- implementation or even in the kernel) then this attack will not work.
- If the last packet has been sent out to the network (i.e the attacker
- has access to it) then he can use the attack.
-
- In the optimal case an implementor would need to add an extra packet
- only if the packet has been sent out onto the network and there are
- no other packets waiting for transmission. Implementors may wish to
- check to see if there are any unsent packets awaiting transmission,
- but unfortunately it is not normally easy to obtain this information
- from the kernel or buffers. If there are not, then a packet
- containing SSH_MSG_IGNORE SHOULD be sent. If a new packet is added
- to the stream every time the attacker knows the IV that is supposed
- to be used for the next packet, then the attacker will not be able to
- guess the correct IV, thus the attack will never be successfull.
-
- As an example, consider the following case:
-
-
- Client Server
- ------ ------
- TCP(seq=x, len=500) ->
- contains Record 1
-
- [500 ms passes, no ACK]
-
- TCP(seq=x, len=1000) ->
- contains Records 1,2
-
- ACK
-
-
- 1. The Nagle algorithm + TCP retransmits mean that the two records
- get coalesced into a single TCP segment
- 2. Record 2 is *not* at the beginning of the TCP segment and never
- will be, since it gets ACKed.
-
-
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- 3. Yet, the attack is possible because Record 1 has already been
- seen.
-
- As this example indicates, it's totally unsafe to use the existence
- of unflushed data in the TCP buffers proper as a guide to whether you
- need an empty packet, since when you do the second write(), the
- buffers will contain the un-ACKed Record 1.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- On the other hand, it's perfectly safe to have the following
- situation:
-
-
- Client Server
- ------ ------
- TCP(seq=x, len=500) ->
- contains SSH_MSG_IGNORE
-
- TCP(seq=y, len=500) ->
- contains Data
-
- Provided that the IV for second SSH Record is fixed after the data for
- the Data packet is determined -i.e. you do:
- read from user
- encrypt null packet
- encrypt data packet
-
-
-9.2.2 Data Integrity
-
- This protocol does allow the Data Integrity mechanism to be disabled.
- Implementors SHOULD be wary of exposing this feature for any purpose
- other than debugging. Users and administrators SHOULD be explicitly
- warned anytime the "none" MAC is enabled.
-
- So long as the "none" MAC is not used, this protocol provides data
- integrity.
-
- Because MACs use a 32 bit sequence number, they might start to leak
- information after 2**32 packets have been sent. However, following
- the rekeying recommendations should prevent this attack. The
- transport protocol [1] recommends rekeying after one gigabyte of
- data, and the smallest possible packet is 16 bytes. Therefore,
- rekeying SHOULD happen after 2**28 packets at the very most.
-
-9.2.3 Replay
-
- The use of a MAC other than 'none' provides integrity and
- authentication. In addition, the transport protocol provides a
- unique session identifier (bound in part to pseudo-random data that
- is part of the algorithm and key exchange process) that can be used
- by higher level protocols to bind data to a given session and prevent
- replay of data from prior sessions. For example, the authentication
- protocol uses this to prevent replay of signatures from previous
- sessions. Because public key authentication exchanges are
- cryptographically bound to the session (i.e., to the initial key
- exchange) they cannot be successfully replayed in other sessions.
-
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- Note that the session ID can be made public without harming the
- security of the protocol.
-
- If two session happen to have the same session ID [hash of key
- exchanges] then packets from one can be replayed against the other.
- It must be stressed that the chances of such an occurrence are,
- needless to say, minimal when using modern cryptographic methods.
- This is all the more so true when specifying larger hash function
- outputs and DH parameters.
-
- Replay detection using monotonically increasing sequence numbers as
- input to the MAC, or HMAC in some cases, is described in [RFC2085] />
- [RFC2246], [RFC2743], [RFC1964], [RFC2025], and [RFC1510]. The
- underlying construct is discussed in [RFC2104]. Essentially a
- different sequence number in each packet ensures that at least this
- one input to the MAC function will be unique and will provide a
- nonrecurring MAC output that is not predictable to an attacker. If
- the session stays active long enough, however, this sequence number
- will wrap. This event may provide an attacker an opportunity to
- replay a previously recorded packet with an identical sequence number
- but only if the peers have not rekeyed since the transmission of the
- first packet with that sequence number. If the peers have rekeyed,
- then the replay will be detected as the MAC check will fail. For
- this reason, it must be emphasized that peers MUST rekey before a
- wrap of the sequence numbers. Naturally, if an attacker does attempt
- to replay a captured packet before the peers have rekeyed, then the
- receiver of the duplicate packet will not be able to validate the MAC
- and it will be discarded. The reason that the MAC will fail is
- because the receiver will formulate a MAC based upon the packet
- contents, the shared secret, and the expected sequence number. Since
- the replayed packet will not be using that expected sequence number
- (the sequence number of the replayed packet will have already been
- passed by the receiver) then the calculated MAC will not match the
- MAC received with the packet.
-
-9.2.4 Man-in-the-middle
-
- This protocol makes no assumptions nor provisions for an
- infrastructure or means for distributing the public keys of hosts. It
- is expected that this protocol will sometimes be used without first
- verifying the association between the server host key and the server
- host name. Such usage is vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks.
- This section describes this and encourages administrators and users
- to understand the importance of verifying this association before any
- session is initiated.
-
- There are three cases of man-in-the-middle attacks to consider. The
- first is where an attacker places a device between the client and the
-
-
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- server before the session is initiated. In this case, the attack
- device is trying to mimic the legitimate server and will offer its
- public key to the client when the client initiates a session. If it
- were to offer the public key of the server, then it would not be able
- to decrypt or sign the transmissions between the legitimate server
- and the client unless it also had access to the private-key of the
- host. The attack device will also, simultaneously to this, initiate
- a session to the legitimate server masquerading itself as the client.
- If the public key of the server had been securely distributed to the
- client prior to that session initiation, the key offered to the
- client by the attack device will not match the key stored on the
- client. In that case, the user SHOULD be given a warning that the
- offered host key does not match the host key cached on the client.
- As described in Section 3.1 of [ARCH], the user may be free to accept
- the new key and continue the session. It is RECOMMENDED that the
- warning provide sufficient information to the user of the client
- device so they may make an informed decision. If the user chooses to
- continue the session with the stored public-key of the server (not
- the public-key offered at the start of the session), then the session
- specific data between the attacker and server will be different
- between the client-to-attacker session and the attacker-to-server
- sessions due to the randomness discussed above. From this, the
- attacker will not be able to make this attack work since the attacker
- will not be able to correctly sign packets containing this session
- specific data from the server since he does not have the private key
- of that server.
-
- The second case that should be considered is similar to the first
- case in that it also happens at the time of connection but this case
- points out the need for the secure distribution of server public
- keys. If the server public keys are not securely distributed then
- the client cannot know if it is talking to the intended server. An
- attacker may use social engineering techniques to pass off server
- keys to unsuspecting users and may then place a man-in-the-middle
- attack device between the legitimate server and the clients. If this
- is allowed to happen then the clients will form client-to-attacker
- sessions and the attacker will form attacker-to-server sessions and
- will be able to monitor and manipulate all of the traffic between the
- clients and the legitimate servers. Server administrators are
- encouraged to make host key fingerprints available for checking by
- some means whose security does not rely on the integrity of the
- actual host keys. Possible mechanisms are discussed in Section 3.1
- of [SSH-ARCH] and may also include secured Web pages, physical pieces
- of paper, etc. Implementors SHOULD provide recommendations on how
- best to do this with their implementation. Because the protocol is
- extensible, future extensions to the protocol may provide better
- mechanisms for dealing with the need to know the server's host key
- before connecting. For example, making the host key fingerprint
-
-
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- available through a secure DNS lookup, or using kerberos over gssapi
- during key exchange to authenticate the server are possibilities.
-
- In the third man-in-the-middle case, attackers may attempt to
- manipulate packets in transit between peers after the session has
- been established. As described in the Replay part of this section, a
- successful attack of this nature is very improbable. As in the
- Replay section, this reasoning does assume that the MAC is secure and
- that it is infeasible to construct inputs to a MAC algorithm to give
- a known output. This is discussed in much greater detail in Section
- 6 of RFC 2104. If the MAC algorithm has a vulnerability or is weak
- enough, then the attacker may be able to specify certain inputs to
- yield a known MAC. With that they may be able to alter the contents
- of a packet in transit. Alternatively the attacker may be able to
- exploit the algorithm vulnerability or weakness to find the shared
- secret by reviewing the MACs from captured packets. In either of
- those cases, an attacker could construct a packet or packets that
- could be inserted into an SSH stream. To prevent that, implementors
- are encouraged to utilize commonly accepted MAC algorithms and
- administrators are encouraged to watch current literature and
- discussions of cryptography to ensure that they are not using a MAC
- algorithm that has a recently found vulnerability or weakness.
-
- In summary, the use of this protocol without a reliable association
- of the binding between a host and its host keys is inherently
- insecure and is NOT RECOMMENDED. It may however be necessary in
- non-security critical environments, and will still provide protection
- against passive attacks. Implementors of protocols and applications
- running on top of this protocol should keep this possibility in mind.
-
-9.2.5 Denial-of-service
-
- This protocol is designed to be used over a reliable transport. If
- transmission errors or message manipulation occur, the connection is
- closed. The connection SHOULD be re-established if this occurs.
- Denial of service attacks of this type ("wire cutter") are almost
- impossible to avoid.
-
- In addition, this protocol is vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks
- because an attacker can force the server to go through the CPU and
- memory intensive tasks of connection setup and key exchange without
- authenticating. Implementors SHOULD provide features that make this
- more difficult. For example, only allowing connections from a subset
- of IPs known to have valid users.
-
-9.2.6 Covert Channels
-
- The protocol was not designed to eliminate covert channels. For
-
-
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- example, the padding, SSH_MSG_IGNORE messages, and several other
- places in the protocol can be used to pass covert information, and
- the recipient has no reliable way to verify whether such information
- is being sent.
-
-9.2.7 Forward Secrecy
-
- It should be noted that the Diffie-Hellman key exchanges may provide
- perfect forward secrecy (PFS). PFS is essentially defined as the
- cryptographic property of a key-establishment protocol in which the
- compromise of a session key or long-term private key after a given
- session does not cause the compromise of any earlier session. [ANSI
- T1.523-2001] SSHv2 sessions resulting from a key exchange using
- diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 are secure even if private keying/
- authentication material is later revealed, but not if the session
- keys are revealed. So, given this definition of PFS, SSHv2 does have
- PFS. It is hoped that all other key exchange mechanisms proposed and
- used in the future will also provide PFS. This property is not
- commuted to any of the applications or protocols using SSH as a
- transport however. The transport layer of SSH provides
- confidentiality for password authentication and other methods that
- rely on secret data.
-
- Of course, if the DH private parameters for the client and server are
- revealed then the session key is revealed, but these items can be
- thrown away after the key exchange completes. It's worth pointing
- out that these items should not be allowed to end up on swap space
- and that they should be erased from memory as soon as the key
- exchange completes.
-
-9.3 Authentication Protocol
-
- The purpose of this protocol is to perform client user
- authentication. It assumes that this run over a secure transport
- layer protocol, which has already authenticated the server machine,
- established an encrypted communications channel, and computed a
- unique session identifier for this session.
-
- Several authentication methods with different security
- characteristics are allowed. It is up to the server's local policy
- to decide which methods (or combinations of methods) it is willing to
- accept for each user. Authentication is no stronger than the weakest
- combination allowed.
-
- The server may go into a "sleep" period after repeated unsuccessful
- authentication attempts to make key search more difficult for
- attackers. Care should be taken so that this doesn't become a
- self-denial of service vector.
-
-
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-
-
-9.3.1 Weak Transport
-
- If the transport layer does not provide confidentiality,
- authentication methods that rely on secret data SHOULD be disabled.
- If it does not provide strong integrity protection, requests to
- change authentication data (e.g. a password change) SHOULD be
- disabled to prevent an attacker from modifying the ciphertext
- without being noticed, or rendering the new authentication data
- unusable (denial of service).
-
- The assumption as stated above that the Authentication Protocol only
- run over a secure transport that has previously authenticated the
- server is very important to note. People deploying SSH are reminded
- of the consequences of man-in-the-middle attacks if the client does
- not have a very strong a priori association of the server with the
- host key of that server. Specifically for the case of the
- Authentication Protocol the client may form a session to a
- man-in-the-middle attack device and divulge user credentials such as
- their username and password. Even in the cases of authentication
- where no user credentials are divulged, an attacker may still gain
- information they shouldn't have by capturing key-strokes in much the
- same way that a honeypot works.
-
-9.3.2 Debug messages
-
- Special care should be taken when designing debug messages. These
- messages may reveal surprising amounts of information about the host
- if not properly designed. Debug messages can be disabled (during
- user authentication phase) if high security is required.
- Administrators of host machines should make all attempts to
- compartmentalize all event notification messages and protect them
- from unwarranted observation. Developers should be aware of the
- sensitive nature of some of the normal event messages and debug
- messages and may want to provide guidance to administrators on ways
- to keep this information away from unauthorized people. Developers
- should consider minimizing the amount of sensitive information
- obtainable by users during the authentication phase in accordance
- with the local policies. For this reason, it is RECOMMENDED that
- debug messages be initially disabled at the time of deployment and
- require an active decision by an administrator to allow them to be
- enabled. It is also RECOMMENDED that a message expressing this
- concern be presented to the administrator of a system when the action
- is taken to enable debugging messages.
-
-9.3.3 Local security policy
-
- Implementer MUST ensure that the credentials provided validate the
- professed user and also MUST ensure that the local policy of the
-
-
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- server permits the user the access requested. In particular, because
- of the flexible nature of the SSH connection protocol, it may not be
- possible to determine the local security policy, if any, that should
- apply at the time of authentication because the kind of service being
- requested is not clear at that instant. For example, local policy
- might allow a user to access files on the server, but not start an
- interactive shell. However, during the authentication protocol, it is
- not known whether the user will be accessing files or attempting to
- use an interactive shell, or even both. In any event, where local
- security policy for the server host exists, it MUST be applied and
- enforced correctly.
-
- Implementors are encouraged to provide a default local policy and
- make its parameters known to administrators and users. At the
- discretion of the implementors, this default policy may be along the
- lines of 'anything goes' where there are no restrictions placed upon
- users, or it may be along the lines of 'excessively restrictive' in
- which case the administrators will have to actively make changes to
- this policy to meet their needs. Alternatively, it may be some
- attempt at providing something practical and immediately useful to
- the administrators of the system so they don't have to put in much
- effort to get SSH working. Whatever choice is made MUST be applied
- and enforced as required above.
-
-9.3.4 Public key authentication
-
- The use of public-key authentication assumes that the client host has
- not been compromised. It also assumes that the private-key of the
- server host has not been compromised.
-
- This risk can be mitigated by the use of passphrases on private keys;
- however, this is not an enforceable policy. The use of smartcards,
- or other technology to make passphrases an enforceable policy is
- suggested.
-
- The server could require both password and public-key authentication,
- however, this requires the client to expose its password to the
- server (see section on password authentication below.)
-
-9.3.5 Password authentication
-
- The password mechanism as specified in the authentication protocol
- assumes that the server has not been compromised. If the server has
- been compromised, using password authentication will reveal a valid
- username / password combination to the attacker, which may lead to
- further compromises.
-
- This vulnerability can be mitigated by using an alternative form of
-
-
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-
-
- authentication. For example, public-key authentication makes no
- assumptions about security on the server.
-
-9.3.6 Host based authentication
-
- Host based authentication assumes that the client has not been
- compromised. There are no mitigating strategies, other than to use
- host based authentication in combination with another authentication
- method.
-
-9.4 Connection protocol
-
-9.4.1 End point security
-
- End point security is assumed by the connection protocol. If the
- server has been compromised, any terminal sessions, port forwarding,
- or systems accessed on the host are compromised. There are no
- mitigating factors for this.
-
- If the client end point has been compromised, and the server fails to
- stop the attacker at the authentication protocol, all services
- exposed (either as subsystems or through forwarding) will be
- vulnerable to attack. Implementors SHOULD provide mechanisms for
- administrators to control which services are exposed to limit the
- vulnerability of other services.
-
- These controls might include controlling which machines and ports can
- be target in 'port-forwarding' operations, which users are allowed to
- use interactive shell facilities, or which users are allowed to use
- exposed subsystems.
-
-9.4.2 Proxy forwarding
-
- The SSH connection protocol allows for proxy forwarding of other
- protocols such as SNMP, POP3, and HTTP. This may be a concern for
- network administrators who wish to control the access of certain
- applications by users located outside of their physical location.
- Essentially, the forwarding of these protocols may violate site
- specific security policies as they may be undetectably tunneled
- through a firewall. Implementors SHOULD provide an administrative
- mechanism to control the proxy forwarding functionality so that site
- specific security policies may be upheld.
-
- In addition, a reverse proxy forwarding functionality is available,
- which again can be used to bypass firewall controls.
-
- As indicated above, end-point security is assumed during proxy
- forwarding operations. Failure of end-point security will compromise
-
-
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-
- all data passed over proxy forwarding.
-
-9.4.3 X11 forwarding
-
- Another form of proxy forwarding provided by the ssh connection
- protocol is the forwarding of the X11 protocol. If end-point
- security has been compromised, X11 forwarding may allow attacks
- against the X11 server. Users and administrators should, as a matter
- of course, use appropriate X11 security mechanisms to prevent
- unauthorized use of the X11 server. Implementors, administrators and
- users who wish to further explore the security mechanisms of X11 are
- invited to read [SCHEIFLER] and analyze previously reported problems
- with the interactions between SSH forwarding and X11 in CERT
- vulnerabilities VU#363181 and VU#118892 [CERT].
-
- X11 display forwarding with SSH, by itself, is not sufficient to
- correct well known problems with X11 security [VENEMA]. However, X11
- display forwarding in SSHv2 (or other, secure protocols), combined
- with actual and pseudo-displays which accept connections only over
- local IPC mechanisms authorized by permissions or ACLs, does correct
- many X11 security problems as long as the "none" MAC is not used. It
- is RECOMMENDED that X11 display implementations default to allowing
- display opens only over local IPC. It is RECOMMENDED that SSHv2
- server implementations that support X11 forwarding default to
- allowing display opens only over local IPC. On single-user systems
- it might be reasonable to default to allowing local display opens
- over TCP/IP.
-
- Implementors of the X11 forwarding protocol SHOULD implement the
- magic cookie access checking spoofing mechanism as described in
- [ssh-connect] as an additional mechanism to prevent unauthorized use
- of the proxy.
-
-Normative References
-
- [SSH-ARCH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D
- draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-TRANS]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-USERAUTH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-CONNECT]
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 24]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-NUMBERS]
- Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned
- Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct
- 2003.
-
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
- Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
-
-Informative References
-
- [FIPS-186]
- Federal Information Processing Standards Publication,
- "FIPS PUB 186, Digital Signature Standard", May 1994.
-
- [FIPS-197]
- National Institue of Standards and Technology, "FIPS 197,
- Specification for the Advanced Encryption Standard",
- November 2001.
-
- [ANSI T1.523-2001]
- American National Standards Insitute, Inc., "Telecom
- Glossary 2000", February 2001.
-
- [SCHEIFLER]
- Scheifler, R., "X Window System : The Complete Reference
- to Xlib, X Protocol, Icccm, Xlfd, 3rd edition.", Digital
- Press ISBN 1555580882, Feburary 1992.
-
- [RFC0854] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Protocol
- Specification", STD 8, RFC 854, May 1983.
-
- [RFC0894] Hornig, C., "Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams
- over Ethernet networks", STD 41, RFC 894, April 1984.
-
- [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
- STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.
-
- [RFC1134] Perkins, D., "Point-to-Point Protocol: A proposal for
- multi-protocol transmission of datagrams over
- Point-to-Point links", RFC 1134, November 1989.
-
- [RFC1282] Kantor, B., "BSD Rlogin", RFC 1282, December 1991.
-
- [RFC1510] Kohl, J. and B. Neuman, "The Kerberos Network
- Authentication Service (V5)", RFC 1510, September 1993.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 25]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
- [RFC1700] Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", RFC 1700,
- October 1994.
-
- [RFC1750] Eastlake, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller, "Randomness
- Recommendations for Security", RFC 1750, December 1994.
-
- [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of
- Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.
-
- [RFC1964] Linn, J., "The Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API Mechanism", RFC
- 1964, June 1996.
-
- [RFC2025] Adams, C., "The Simple Public-Key GSS-API Mechanism
- (SPKM)", RFC 2025, October 1996.
-
- [RFC2085] Oehler, M. and R. Glenn, "HMAC-MD5 IP Authentication with
- Replay Prevention", RFC 2085, February 1997.
-
- [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC:
- Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,
- February 1997.
-
- [RFC2246] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A.
- and P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246,
- January 1999.
-
- [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
- 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.
-
- [RFC2410] Glenn, R. and S. Kent, "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and
- Its Use With IPsec", RFC 2410, November 1998.
-
- [RFC2434] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
- IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434,
- October 1998.
-
- [RFC2743] Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program
- Interface Version 2, Update 1", RFC 2743, January 2000.
-
- [SCHNEIER]
- Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography Second Edition:
- protocols algorithms and source in code in C", 1996.
-
- [KAUFMAN,PERLMAN,SPECINER]
- Kaufman, C., Perlman, R. and M. Speciner, "Network
- Security: PRIVATE Communication in a PUBLIC World", 1995.
-
- [CERT] CERT Coordination Center, The., "http://www.cert.org/nav/
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 26]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
- index_red.html".
-
- [VENEMA] Venema, W., "Murphy's Law and Computer Security",
- Proceedings of 6th USENIX Security Symposium, San Jose CA
- http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/
- sec96/venema.html, July 1996.
-
- [ROGAWAY] Rogaway, P., "Problems with Proposed IP Cryptography",
- Unpublished paper http://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~rogaway/
- papers/draft-rogaway-ipsec-comments-00.txt, 1996.
-
- [DAI] Dai, W., "An attack against SSH2 protocol", Email to the
- SECSH Working Group [email protected] ftp://
- ftp.ietf.org/ietf-mail-archive/secsh/2002-02.mail, Feb
- 2002.
-
- [BELLARE,KOHNO,NAMPREMPRE]
- Bellaire, M., Kohno, T. and C. Namprempre, "Authenticated
- Encryption in SSH: Fixing the SSH Binary Packet Protocol",
- , Sept 2002.
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Darren J. Moffat (editor)
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- 17 Network Circle
- Menlo Park CA 94025
- USA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-Intellectual Property Statement
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
- copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
- rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
- this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
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-
- The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in
- regard to some or all of the specification contained in this
- document. For more information consult the online list of claimed
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-
-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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-
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-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 28]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Protocol Architecture Oct 2003
-
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
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-
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-Acknowledgment
-
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-5 701 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp) s
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-(Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Editor, Ed.) s
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-( Sun Microsystems, Inc) s
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-( SSH Connection Protocol) s
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-( This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.) s
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-(Copyright Notice) s
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-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
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-(Abstract) s
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-( SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network) s
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-( services over an insecure network.) s
-5 250 M
-( This document describes the SSH Connection Protocol. It provides) s
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-( interactive login sessions, remote execution of commands, forwarded) s
-5 228 M
-( TCP/IP connections, and forwarded X11 connections. All of these) s
-5 217 M
-( channels are multiplexed into a single encrypted tunnel.) s
-5 195 M
-( The SSH Connection Protocol has been designed to run on top of the) s
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-( SSH transport layer and user authentication protocols.) s
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-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]) s
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-( 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
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-( 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
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-( 5. Channel Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
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-( 5.1 Opening a Channel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
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-( 5.2 Data Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
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-( 5.3 Closing a Channel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6) s
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-( 5.4 Channel-Specific Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
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-( 6. Interactive Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8) s
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-( 6.5 Starting a Shell or a Command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
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-( 6.6 Session Data Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
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-( 6.7 Window Dimension Change Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
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-( 6.8 Local Flow Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
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-( 6.9 Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
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-( 6.10 Returning Exit Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
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-( 7. TCP/IP Port Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
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-( 7.1 Requesting Port Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
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-( 7.2 TCP/IP Forwarding Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15) s
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-( 8. Encoding of Terminal Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16) s
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-( 9. Summary of Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
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-( 10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
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-( 11. iana cONSiderations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
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-( 12. Intellectual Property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
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-(1. Contributors) s
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-( The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,) s
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-( Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen \(all of SSH Communications) s
-5 646 M
-( Security Corp\), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen \(University of) s
-5 635 M
-( Jyvaskyla\)) s
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-( The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this) s
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-( internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,) s
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-( details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html) s
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-(2. Introduction) s
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-( The SSH Connection Protocol has been designed to run on top of the) s
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-( SSH transport layer and user authentication protocols. It provides) s
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-( interactive login sessions, remote execution of commands, forwarded) s
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-( TCP/IP connections, and forwarded X11 connections. The service name) s
-5 503 M
-( for this protocol is "ssh-connection".) s
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-( This document should be read only after reading the SSH architecture) s
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-( document [SSH-ARCH]. This document freely uses terminology and) s
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-( notation from the architecture document without reference or further) s
-5 448 M
-( explanation.) s
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-(3. Conventions Used in This Document) s
-5 404 M
-( The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",) s
-5 393 M
-( and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as) s
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-( described in [RFC2119].) s
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-( The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture) s
-5 349 M
-( document [SSH-ARCH].) s
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-( The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming) s
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-( conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.) s
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-(4. Global Requests) s
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-( There are several kinds of requests that affect the state of the) s
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-( remote end "globally", independent of any channels. An example is a) s
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-( request to start TCP/IP forwarding for a specific port. All such) s
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-( requests use the following format.) s
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-( byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST) s
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-( string request name \(restricted to US-ASCII\)) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
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-( Request names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention outlined) s
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-( in [SSH-ARCH].) s
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-( The recipient will respond to this message with) s
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-( TRUE.) s
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-( byte SSH_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS) s
-5 602 M
-( ..... response specific data) s
-5 580 M
-( Usually the response specific data is non-existent.) s
-5 558 M
-( If the recipient does not recognize or support the request, it simply) s
-5 547 M
-( responds with SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE.) s
-5 525 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE) s
-5 492 M
-(5. Channel Mechanism) s
-5 470 M
-( All terminal sessions, forwarded connections, etc. are channels.) s
-5 459 M
-( Either side may open a channel. Multiple channels are multiplexed) s
-5 448 M
-( into a single connection.) s
-5 426 M
-( Channels are identified by numbers at each end. The number referring) s
-5 415 M
-( to a channel may be different on each side. Requests to open a) s
-5 404 M
-( channel contain the sender's channel number. Any other) s
-5 393 M
-( channel-related messages contain the recipient's channel number for) s
-5 382 M
-( the channel.) s
-5 360 M
-( Channels are flow-controlled. No data may be sent to a channel until) s
-5 349 M
-( a message is received to indicate that window space is available.) s
-5 327 M
-(5.1 Opening a Channel) s
-5 305 M
-( When either side wishes to open a new channel, it allocates a local) s
-5 294 M
-( number for the channel. It then sends the following message to the) s
-5 283 M
-( other side, and includes the local channel number and initial window) s
-5 272 M
-( size in the message.) s
-5 250 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN) s
-5 239 M
-( string channel type \(restricted to US-ASCII\)) s
-5 228 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 217 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 206 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 195 M
-( ... channel type specific data follows) s
-5 173 M
-( The channel type is a name as described in the SSH architecture) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 4]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( document, with similar extension mechanisms. `sender channel' is a) s
-5 679 M
-( local identifier for the channel used by the sender of this message.) s
-5 668 M
-( `initial window size' specifies how many bytes of channel data can be) s
-5 657 M
-( sent to the sender of this message without adjusting the window.) s
-5 646 M
-( `Maximum packet size' specifies the maximum size of an individual) s
-5 635 M
-( data packet that can be sent to the sender \(for example, one might) s
-5 624 M
-( want to use smaller packets for interactive connections to get better) s
-5 613 M
-( interactive response on slow links\).) s
-5 591 M
-( The remote side then decides whether it can open the channel, and) s
-5 580 M
-( responds with either) s
-5 558 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION) s
-5 547 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 536 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 525 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 514 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 503 M
-( ... channel type specific data follows) s
-5 481 M
-( where `recipient channel' is the channel number given in the original) s
-5 470 M
-( open request, and `sender channel' is the channel number allocated by) s
-5 459 M
-( the other side, or) s
-5 437 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE) s
-5 426 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 415 M
-( uint32 reason code) s
-5 404 M
-( string additional textual information \(ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC2279]\)) s
-5 393 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC3066]\)) s
-5 371 M
-( If the recipient of the SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN message does not support) s
-5 360 M
-( the specified channel type, it simply responds with) s
-5 349 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. The client MAY show the additional) s
-5 338 M
-( information to the user. If this is done, the client software should) s
-5 327 M
-( take the precautions discussed in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 305 M
-( The following reason codes are defined:) s
-5 283 M
-( #define SSH_OPEN_ADMINISTRATIVELY_PROHIBITED 1) s
-5 272 M
-( #define SSH_OPEN_CONNECT_FAILED 2) s
-5 261 M
-( #define SSH_OPEN_UNKNOWN_CHANNEL_TYPE 3) s
-5 250 M
-( #define SSH_OPEN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE 4) s
-5 217 M
-(5.2 Data Transfer) s
-5 195 M
-( The window size specifies how many bytes the other party can send) s
-5 184 M
-( before it must wait for the window to be adjusted. Both parties use) s
-5 173 M
-( the following message to adjust the window.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 5]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST) s
-5 679 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 668 M
-( uint32 bytes to add) s
-5 646 M
-( After receiving this message, the recipient MAY send the given number) s
-5 635 M
-( of bytes more than it was previously allowed to send; the window size) s
-5 624 M
-( is incremented.) s
-5 602 M
-( Data transfer is done with messages of the following type.) s
-5 580 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA) s
-5 569 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 558 M
-( string data) s
-5 536 M
-( The maximum amount of data allowed is the current window size. The) s
-5 525 M
-( window size is decremented by the amount of data sent. Both parties) s
-5 514 M
-( MAY ignore all extra data sent after the allowed window is empty.) s
-5 492 M
-( Additionally, some channels can transfer several types of data. An) s
-5 481 M
-( example of this is stderr data from interactive sessions. Such data) s
-5 470 M
-( can be passed with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA messages, where a) s
-5 459 M
-( separate integer specifies the type of the data. The available types) s
-5 448 M
-( and their interpretation depend on the type of the channel.) s
-5 426 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA) s
-5 415 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 404 M
-( uint32 data_type_code) s
-5 393 M
-( string data) s
-5 371 M
-( Data sent with these messages consumes the same window as ordinary) s
-5 360 M
-( data.) s
-5 338 M
-( Currently, only the following type is defined.) s
-5 316 M
-( #define SSH_EXTENDED_DATA_STDERR 1) s
-5 283 M
-(5.3 Closing a Channel) s
-5 261 M
-( When a party will no longer send more data to a channel, it SHOULD) s
-5 250 M
-( send SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF.) s
-5 228 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF) s
-5 217 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 195 M
-( No explicit response is sent to this message; however, the) s
-5 184 M
-( application may send EOF to whatever is at the other end of the) s
-5 173 M
-( channel. Note that the channel remains open after this message, and) s
-5 129 M
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-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( more data may still be sent in the other direction. This message) s
-5 679 M
-( does not consume window space and can be sent even if no window space) s
-5 668 M
-( is available.) s
-5 646 M
-( When either party wishes to terminate the channel, it sends) s
-5 635 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE. Upon receiving this message, a party MUST) s
-5 624 M
-( send back a SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE unless it has already sent this) s
-5 613 M
-( message for the channel. The channel is considered closed for a) s
-5 602 M
-( party when it has both sent and received SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE, and) s
-5 591 M
-( the party may then reuse the channel number. A party MAY send) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE without having sent or received) s
-5 569 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF.) s
-5 547 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE) s
-5 536 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 514 M
-( This message does not consume window space and can be sent even if no) s
-5 503 M
-( window space is available.) s
-5 481 M
-( It is recommended that any data sent before this message is delivered) s
-5 470 M
-( to the actual destination, if possible.) s
-5 448 M
-(5.4 Channel-Specific Requests) s
-5 426 M
-( Many channel types have extensions that are specific to that) s
-5 415 M
-( particular channel type. An example is requesting a pty \(pseudo) s
-5 404 M
-( terminal\) for an interactive session.) s
-5 382 M
-( All channel-specific requests use the following format.) s
-5 360 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 349 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 338 M
-( string request type \(restricted to US-ASCII\)) s
-5 327 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 316 M
-( ... type-specific data) s
-5 294 M
-( If want reply is FALSE, no response will be sent to the request.) s
-5 283 M
-( Otherwise, the recipient responds with either SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS) s
-5 272 M
-( or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE, or request-specific continuation) s
-5 261 M
-( messages. If the request is not recognized or is not supported for) s
-5 250 M
-( the channel, SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE is returned.) s
-5 228 M
-( This message does not consume window space and can be sent even if no) s
-5 217 M
-( window space is available. Request types are local to each channel) s
-5 206 M
-( type.) s
-5 184 M
-( The client is allowed to send further messages without waiting for) s
-5 173 M
-( the response to the request.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 7]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( request type names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention) s
-5 679 M
-( outlined in [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 657 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS) s
-5 646 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 613 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE) s
-5 602 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 580 M
-( These messages do not consume window space and can be sent even if no) s
-5 569 M
-( window space is available.) s
-5 547 M
-(6. Interactive Sessions) s
-5 525 M
-( A session is a remote execution of a program. The program may be a) s
-5 514 M
-( shell, an application, a system command, or some built-in subsystem.) s
-5 503 M
-( It may or may not have a tty, and may or may not involve X11) s
-5 492 M
-( forwarding. Multiple sessions can be active simultaneously.) s
-5 470 M
-(6.1 Opening a Session) s
-5 448 M
-( A session is started by sending the following message.) s
-5 426 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN) s
-5 415 M
-( string "session") s
-5 404 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 382 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 360 M
-( Client implementations SHOULD reject any session channel open) s
-5 349 M
-( requests to make it more difficult for a corrupt server to attack the) s
-5 338 M
-( client.) s
-5 316 M
-(6.2 Requesting a Pseudo-Terminal) s
-5 294 M
-( A pseudo-terminal can be allocated for the session by sending the) s
-5 283 M
-( following message.) s
-5 261 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 250 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 239 M
-( string "pty-req") s
-5 228 M
-( boolean want_reply) s
-5 217 M
-( string TERM environment variable value \(e.g., vt100\)) s
-5 206 M
-( uint32 terminal width, characters \(e.g., 80\)) s
-5 195 M
-( uint32 terminal height, rows \(e.g., 24\)) s
-5 184 M
-( uint32 terminal width, pixels \(e.g., 640\)) s
-5 173 M
-( uint32 terminal height, pixels \(e.g., 480\)) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 8]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
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-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 9 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( string encoded terminal modes) s
-5 668 M
-( The encoding of terminal modes is described in Section Encoding of) s
-5 657 M
-( Terminal Modes \(Section 8\). Zero dimension parameters MUST be) s
-5 646 M
-( ignored. The character/row dimensions override the pixel dimensions) s
-5 635 M
-( \(when nonzero\). Pixel dimensions refer to the drawable area of the) s
-5 624 M
-( window.) s
-5 602 M
-( The dimension parameters are only informational.) s
-5 580 M
-( The client SHOULD ignore pty requests.) s
-5 558 M
-(6.3 X11 Forwarding) s
-5 536 M
-(6.3.1 Requesting X11 Forwarding) s
-5 514 M
-( X11 forwarding may be requested for a session by sending) s
-5 492 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 481 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 470 M
-( string "x11-req") s
-5 459 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 448 M
-( boolean single connection) s
-5 437 M
-( string x11 authentication protocol) s
-5 426 M
-( string x11 authentication cookie) s
-5 415 M
-( uint32 x11 screen number) s
-5 393 M
-( It is recommended that the authentication cookie that is sent be a) s
-5 382 M
-( fake, random cookie, and that the cookie is checked and replaced by) s
-5 371 M
-( the real cookie when a connection request is received.) s
-5 349 M
-( X11 connection forwarding should stop when the session channel is) s
-5 338 M
-( closed; however, already opened forwardings should not be) s
-5 327 M
-( automatically closed when the session channel is closed.) s
-5 305 M
-( If `single connection' is TRUE, only a single connection should be) s
-5 294 M
-( forwarded. No more connections will be forwarded after the first, or) s
-5 283 M
-( after the session channel has been closed.) s
-5 261 M
-( The "x11 authentication protocol" is the name of the X11) s
-5 250 M
-( authentication method used, e.g. "MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1".) s
-5 228 M
-( The x11 authentication cookie MUST be hexadecimal encoded.) s
-5 206 M
-( X Protocol is documented in [SCHEIFLER].) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 9]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(6.3.2 X11 Channels) s
-5 668 M
-( X11 channels are opened with a channel open request. The resulting) s
-5 657 M
-( channels are independent of the session, and closing the session) s
-5 646 M
-( channel does not close the forwarded X11 channels.) s
-5 624 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN) s
-5 613 M
-( string "x11") s
-5 602 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 591 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 580 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 569 M
-( string originator address \(e.g. "192.168.7.38"\)) s
-5 558 M
-( uint32 originator port) s
-5 536 M
-( The recipient should respond with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION) s
-5 525 M
-( or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE.) s
-5 503 M
-( Implementations MUST reject any X11 channel open requests if they) s
-5 492 M
-( have not requested X11 forwarding.) s
-5 470 M
-(6.4 Environment Variable Passing) s
-5 448 M
-( Environment variables may be passed to the shell/command to be) s
-5 437 M
-( started later. Uncontrolled setting of environment variables in a) s
-5 426 M
-( privileged process can be a security hazard. It is recommended that) s
-5 415 M
-( implementations either maintain a list of allowable variable names or) s
-5 404 M
-( only set environment variables after the server process has dropped) s
-5 393 M
-( sufficient privileges.) s
-5 371 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 360 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 349 M
-( string "env") s
-5 338 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 327 M
-( string variable name) s
-5 316 M
-( string variable value) s
-5 283 M
-(6.5 Starting a Shell or a Command) s
-5 261 M
-( Once the session has been set up, a program is started at the remote) s
-5 250 M
-( end. The program can be a shell, an application program or a) s
-5 239 M
-( subsystem with a host-independent name. Only one of these requests) s
-5 228 M
-( can succeed per channel.) s
-5 206 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 195 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 184 M
-( string "shell") s
-5 173 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 10]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( This message will request the user's default shell \(typically defined) s
-5 679 M
-( in /etc/passwd in UNIX systems\) to be started at the other end.) s
-5 657 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 646 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 635 M
-( string "exec") s
-5 624 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 613 M
-( string command) s
-5 591 M
-( This message will request the server to start the execution of the) s
-5 580 M
-( given command. The command string may contain a path. Normal) s
-5 569 M
-( precautions MUST be taken to prevent the execution of unauthorized) s
-5 558 M
-( commands.) s
-5 536 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 525 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 514 M
-( string "subsystem") s
-5 503 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 492 M
-( string subsystem name) s
-5 470 M
-( This last form executes a predefined subsystem. It is expected that) s
-5 459 M
-( these will include a general file transfer mechanism, and possibly) s
-5 448 M
-( other features. Implementations may also allow configuring more such) s
-5 437 M
-( mechanisms. As the user's shell is usually used to execute the) s
-5 426 M
-( subsystem, it is advisable for the subsystem protocol to have a) s
-5 415 M
-( "magic cookie" at the beginning of the protocol transaction to) s
-5 404 M
-( distinguish it from arbitrary output generated by shell) s
-5 393 M
-( initialization scripts etc. This spurious output from the shell may) s
-5 382 M
-( be filtered out either at the server or at the client.) s
-5 360 M
-( The server SHOULD not halt the execution of the protocol stack when) s
-5 349 M
-( starting a shell or a program. All input and output from these SHOULD) s
-5 338 M
-( be redirected to the channel or to the encrypted tunnel.) s
-5 316 M
-( It is RECOMMENDED to request and check the reply for these messages.) s
-5 305 M
-( The client SHOULD ignore these messages.) s
-5 283 M
-( Subsystem names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention) s
-5 272 M
-( outlined in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 250 M
-(6.6 Session Data Transfer) s
-5 228 M
-( Data transfer for a session is done using SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA and) s
-5 217 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA packets and the window mechanism. The) s
-5 206 M
-( extended data type SSH_EXTENDED_DATA_STDERR has been defined for) s
-5 195 M
-( stderr data.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 11]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(6.7 Window Dimension Change Message) s
-5 668 M
-( When the window \(terminal\) size changes on the client side, it MAY) s
-5 657 M
-( send a message to the other side to inform it of the new dimensions.) s
-5 635 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 624 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 613 M
-( string "window-change") s
-5 602 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 591 M
-( uint32 terminal width, columns) s
-5 580 M
-( uint32 terminal height, rows) s
-5 569 M
-( uint32 terminal width, pixels) s
-5 558 M
-( uint32 terminal height, pixels) s
-5 536 M
-( No response SHOULD be sent to this message.) s
-5 514 M
-(6.8 Local Flow Control) s
-5 492 M
-( On many systems, it is possible to determine if a pseudo-terminal is) s
-5 481 M
-( using control-S/control-Q flow control. When flow control is) s
-5 470 M
-( allowed, it is often desirable to do the flow control at the client) s
-5 459 M
-( end to speed up responses to user requests. This is facilitated by) s
-5 448 M
-( the following notification. Initially, the server is responsible for) s
-5 437 M
-( flow control. \(Here, again, client means the side originating the) s
-5 426 M
-( session, and server means the other side.\)) s
-5 404 M
-( The message below is used by the server to inform the client when it) s
-5 393 M
-( can or cannot perform flow control \(control-S/control-Q processing\).) s
-5 382 M
-( If `client can do' is TRUE, the client is allowed to do flow control) s
-5 371 M
-( using control-S and control-Q. The client MAY ignore this message.) s
-5 349 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 338 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 327 M
-( string "xon-xoff") s
-5 316 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 305 M
-( boolean client can do) s
-5 283 M
-( No response is sent to this message.) s
-5 261 M
-(6.9 Signals) s
-5 239 M
-( A signal can be delivered to the remote process/service using the) s
-5 228 M
-( following message. Some systems may not implement signals, in which) s
-5 217 M
-( case they SHOULD ignore this message.) s
-5 195 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 184 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 173 M
-( string "signal") s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 679 M
-( string signal name without the "SIG" prefix.) s
-5 657 M
-( Signal names will be encoded as discussed in the "exit-signal") s
-5 646 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST.) s
-5 624 M
-(6.10 Returning Exit Status) s
-5 602 M
-( When the command running at the other end terminates, the following) s
-5 591 M
-( message can be sent to return the exit status of the command.) s
-5 580 M
-( Returning the status is RECOMMENDED. No acknowledgment is sent for) s
-5 569 M
-( this message. The channel needs to be closed with) s
-5 558 M
-( SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE after this message.) s
-5 536 M
-( The client MAY ignore these messages.) s
-5 514 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 recipient_channel) s
-5 492 M
-( string "exit-status") s
-5 481 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 470 M
-( uint32 exit_status) s
-5 448 M
-( The remote command may also terminate violently due to a signal.) s
-5 437 M
-( Such a condition can be indicated by the following message. A zero) s
-5 426 M
-( exit_status usually means that the command terminated successfully.) s
-5 404 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST) s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 recipient channel) s
-5 382 M
-( string "exit-signal") s
-5 371 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 360 M
-( string signal name without the "SIG" prefix.) s
-5 349 M
-( boolean core dumped) s
-5 338 M
-( string error message \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 327 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC3066]\)) s
-5 305 M
-( The signal name is one of the following \(these are from [POSIX]\)) s
-5 283 M
-( ABRT) s
-5 272 M
-( ALRM) s
-5 261 M
-( FPE) s
-5 250 M
-( HUP) s
-5 239 M
-( ILL) s
-5 228 M
-( INT) s
-5 217 M
-( KILL) s
-5 206 M
-( PIPE) s
-5 195 M
-( QUIT) s
-5 184 M
-( SEGV) s
-5 173 M
-( TERM) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( USR1) s
-5 679 M
-( USR2) s
-5 657 M
-( Additional signal names MAY be sent in the format "sig-name@xyz",) s
-5 646 M
-( where `sig-name' and `xyz' may be anything a particular implementor) s
-5 635 M
-( wants \(except the `@' sign\). However, it is suggested that if a) s
-5 624 M
-( `configure' script is used, the non-standard signal names it finds be) s
-5 613 M
-( encoded as "[email protected]", where `SIG' is the signal name) s
-5 602 M
-( without the "SIG" prefix, and `xyz' be the host type, as determined) s
-5 591 M
-( by `config.guess'.) s
-5 569 M
-( The `error message' contains an additional explanation of the error) s
-5 558 M
-( message. The message may consist of multiple lines. The client) s
-5 547 M
-( software MAY display this message to the user. If this is done, the) s
-5 536 M
-( client software should take the precautions discussed in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 514 M
-(7. TCP/IP Port Forwarding) s
-5 492 M
-(7.1 Requesting Port Forwarding) s
-5 470 M
-( A party need not explicitly request forwardings from its own end to) s
-5 459 M
-( the other direction. However, if it wishes that connections to a) s
-5 448 M
-( port on the other side be forwarded to the local side, it must) s
-5 437 M
-( explicitly request this.) s
-5 404 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST) s
-5 393 M
-( string "tcpip-forward") s
-5 382 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 371 M
-( string address to bind \(e.g. "0.0.0.0"\)) s
-5 360 M
-( uint32 port number to bind) s
-5 338 M
-( `Address to bind' and `port number to bind' specify the IP address) s
-5 327 M
-( and port to which the socket to be listened is bound. The address) s
-5 316 M
-( should be "0.0.0.0" if connections are allowed from anywhere. \(Note) s
-5 305 M
-( that the client can still filter connections based on information) s
-5 294 M
-( passed in the open request.\)) s
-5 272 M
-( Implementations should only allow forwarding privileged ports if the) s
-5 261 M
-( user has been authenticated as a privileged user.) s
-5 239 M
-( Client implementations SHOULD reject these messages; they are) s
-5 228 M
-( normally only sent by the client.) s
-5 195 M
-( If a client passes 0 as port number to bind and has want reply TRUE) s
-5 184 M
-( then the server allocates the next available unprivileged port number) s
-5 173 M
-( and replies with the following message, otherwise there is no) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 14]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( response specific data.) s
-5 657 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST_SUCCESS) s
-5 646 M
-( uint32 port that was bound on the server) s
-5 624 M
-( A port forwarding can be cancelled with the following message. Note) s
-5 613 M
-( that channel open requests may be received until a reply to this) s
-5 602 M
-( message is received.) s
-5 580 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST) s
-5 569 M
-( string "cancel-tcpip-forward") s
-5 558 M
-( boolean want reply) s
-5 547 M
-( string address_to_bind \(e.g. "127.0.0.1"\)) s
-5 536 M
-( uint32 port number to bind) s
-5 514 M
-( Client implementations SHOULD reject these messages; they are) s
-5 503 M
-( normally only sent by the client.) s
-5 481 M
-(7.2 TCP/IP Forwarding Channels) s
-5 459 M
-( When a connection comes to a port for which remote forwarding has) s
-5 448 M
-( been requested, a channel is opened to forward the port to the other) s
-5 437 M
-( side.) s
-5 415 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN) s
-5 404 M
-( string "forwarded-tcpip") s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 382 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 371 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 360 M
-( string address that was connected) s
-5 349 M
-( uint32 port that was connected) s
-5 338 M
-( string originator IP address) s
-5 327 M
-( uint32 originator port) s
-5 305 M
-( Implementations MUST reject these messages unless they have) s
-5 294 M
-( previously requested a remote TCP/IP port forwarding with the given) s
-5 283 M
-( port number.) s
-5 261 M
-( When a connection comes to a locally forwarded TCP/IP port, the) s
-5 250 M
-( following packet is sent to the other side. Note that these messages) s
-5 239 M
-( MAY be sent also for ports for which no forwarding has been) s
-5 228 M
-( explicitly requested. The receiving side must decide whether to) s
-5 217 M
-( allow the forwarding.) s
-5 195 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN) s
-5 184 M
-( string "direct-tcpip") s
-5 173 M
-( uint32 sender channel) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 15]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( uint32 initial window size) s
-5 679 M
-( uint32 maximum packet size) s
-5 668 M
-( string host to connect) s
-5 657 M
-( uint32 port to connect) s
-5 646 M
-( string originator IP address) s
-5 635 M
-( uint32 originator port) s
-5 613 M
-( `Host to connect' and `port to connect' specify the TCP/IP host and) s
-5 602 M
-( port where the recipient should connect the channel. `Host to) s
-5 591 M
-( connect' may be either a domain name or a numeric IP address.) s
-5 569 M
-( `Originator IP address' is the numeric IP address of the machine) s
-5 558 M
-( where the connection request comes from, and `originator port' is the) s
-5 547 M
-( port on the originator host from where the connection came from.) s
-5 525 M
-( Forwarded TCP/IP channels are independent of any sessions, and) s
-5 514 M
-( closing a session channel does not in any way imply that forwarded) s
-5 503 M
-( connections should be closed.) s
-5 481 M
-( Client implementations SHOULD reject direct TCP/IP open requests for) s
-5 470 M
-( security reasons.) s
-5 448 M
-(8. Encoding of Terminal Modes) s
-5 426 M
-( Terminal modes \(as passed in a pty request\) are encoded into a byte) s
-5 415 M
-( stream. It is intended that the coding be portable across different) s
-5 404 M
-( environments.) s
-5 382 M
-( The tty mode description is a stream of bytes. The stream consists) s
-5 371 M
-( of opcode-argument pairs. It is terminated by opcode TTY_OP_END \(0\).) s
-5 360 M
-( Opcodes 1 to 159 have a single uint32 argument. Opcodes 160 to 255) s
-5 349 M
-( are not yet defined, and cause parsing to stop \(they should only be) s
-5 338 M
-( used after any other data\).) s
-5 316 M
-( The client SHOULD put in the stream any modes it knows about, and the) s
-5 305 M
-( server MAY ignore any modes it does not know about. This allows some) s
-5 294 M
-( degree of machine-independence, at least between systems that use a) s
-5 283 M
-( POSIX-like tty interface. The protocol can support other systems as) s
-5 272 M
-( well, but the client may need to fill reasonable values for a number) s
-5 261 M
-( of parameters so the server pty gets set to a reasonable mode \(the) s
-5 250 M
-( server leaves all unspecified mode bits in their default values, and) s
-5 239 M
-( only some combinations make sense\).) s
-5 217 M
-( The following opcodes have been defined. The naming of opcodes) s
-5 206 M
-( mostly follows the POSIX terminal mode flags.) s
-5 184 M
-( 0 TTY_OP_END Indicates end of options.) s
-5 173 M
-( 1 VINTR Interrupt character; 255 if none. Similarly for the) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 16]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( other characters. Not all of these characters are) s
-5 679 M
-( supported on all systems.) s
-5 668 M
-( 2 VQUIT The quit character \(sends SIGQUIT signal on POSIX) s
-5 657 M
-( systems\).) s
-5 646 M
-( 3 VERASE Erase the character to left of the cursor.) s
-5 635 M
-( 4 VKILL Kill the current input line.) s
-5 624 M
-( 5 VEOF End-of-file character \(sends EOF from the terminal\).) s
-5 613 M
-( 6 VEOL End-of-line character in addition to carriage return) s
-5 602 M
-( and/or linefeed.) s
-5 591 M
-( 7 VEOL2 Additional end-of-line character.) s
-5 580 M
-( 8 VSTART Continues paused output \(normally control-Q\).) s
-5 569 M
-( 9 VSTOP Pauses output \(normally control-S\).) s
-5 558 M
-( 10 VSUSP Suspends the current program.) s
-5 547 M
-( 11 VDSUSP Another suspend character.) s
-5 536 M
-( 12 VREPRINT Reprints the current input line.) s
-5 525 M
-( 13 VWERASE Erases a word left of cursor.) s
-5 514 M
-( 14 VLNEXT Enter the next character typed literally, even if it) s
-5 503 M
-( is a special character) s
-5 492 M
-( 15 VFLUSH Character to flush output.) s
-5 481 M
-( 16 VSWTCH Switch to a different shell layer.) s
-5 470 M
-( 17 VSTATUS Prints system status line \(load, command, pid etc\).) s
-5 459 M
-( 18 VDISCARD Toggles the flushing of terminal output.) s
-5 448 M
-( 30 IGNPAR The ignore parity flag. The parameter SHOULD be 0 if) s
-5 437 M
-( this flag is FALSE set, and 1 if it is TRUE.) s
-5 426 M
-( 31 PARMRK Mark parity and framing errors.) s
-5 415 M
-( 32 INPCK Enable checking of parity errors.) s
-5 404 M
-( 33 ISTRIP Strip 8th bit off characters.) s
-5 393 M
-( 34 INLCR Map NL into CR on input.) s
-5 382 M
-( 35 IGNCR Ignore CR on input.) s
-5 371 M
-( 36 ICRNL Map CR to NL on input.) s
-5 360 M
-( 37 IUCLC Translate uppercase characters to lowercase.) s
-5 349 M
-( 38 IXON Enable output flow control.) s
-5 338 M
-( 39 IXANY Any char will restart after stop.) s
-5 327 M
-( 40 IXOFF Enable input flow control.) s
-5 316 M
-( 41 IMAXBEL Ring bell on input queue full.) s
-5 305 M
-( 50 ISIG Enable signals INTR, QUIT, [D]SUSP.) s
-5 294 M
-( 51 ICANON Canonicalize input lines.) s
-5 283 M
-( 52 XCASE Enable input and output of uppercase characters by) s
-5 272 M
-( preceding their lowercase equivalents with `\\'.) s
-5 261 M
-( 53 ECHO Enable echoing.) s
-5 250 M
-( 54 ECHOE Visually erase chars.) s
-5 239 M
-( 55 ECHOK Kill character discards current line.) s
-5 228 M
-( 56 ECHONL Echo NL even if ECHO is off.) s
-5 217 M
-( 57 NOFLSH Don't flush after interrupt.) s
-5 206 M
-( 58 TOSTOP Stop background jobs from output.) s
-5 195 M
-( 59 IEXTEN Enable extensions.) s
-5 184 M
-( 60 ECHOCTL Echo control characters as ^\(Char\).) s
-5 173 M
-( 61 ECHOKE Visual erase for line kill.) s
-5 129 M
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( 62 PENDIN Retype pending input.) s
-5 679 M
-( 70 OPOST Enable output processing.) s
-5 668 M
-( 71 OLCUC Convert lowercase to uppercase.) s
-5 657 M
-( 72 ONLCR Map NL to CR-NL.) s
-5 646 M
-( 73 OCRNL Translate carriage return to newline \(output\).) s
-5 635 M
-( 74 ONOCR Translate newline to carriage return-newline) s
-5 624 M
-( \(output\).) s
-5 613 M
-( 75 ONLRET Newline performs a carriage return \(output\).) s
-5 602 M
-( 90 CS7 7 bit mode.) s
-5 591 M
-( 91 CS8 8 bit mode.) s
-5 580 M
-( 92 PARENB Parity enable.) s
-5 569 M
-( 93 PARODD Odd parity, else even.) s
-5 547 M
-( 128 TTY_OP_ISPEED Specifies the input baud rate in bits per second.) s
-5 536 M
-( 129 TTY_OP_OSPEED Specifies the output baud rate in bits per second.) s
-5 503 M
-(9. Summary of Message Numbers) s
-5 481 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST 80) s
-5 470 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS 81) s
-5 459 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE 82) s
-5 448 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN 90) s
-5 437 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION 91) s
-5 426 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE 92) s
-5 415 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST 93) s
-5 404 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA 94) s
-5 393 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA 95) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF 96) s
-5 371 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE 97) s
-5 360 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST 98) s
-5 349 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS 99) s
-5 338 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE 100) s
-5 305 M
-(10. Security Considerations) s
-5 283 M
-( This protocol is assumed to run on top of a secure, authenticated) s
-5 272 M
-( transport. User authentication and protection against network-level) s
-5 261 M
-( attacks are assumed to be provided by the underlying protocols.) s
-5 239 M
-( It is RECOMMENDED that implementations disable all the potentially) s
-5 228 M
-( dangerous features \(e.g. agent forwarding, X11 forwarding, and TCP/IP) s
-5 217 M
-( forwarding\) if the host key has changed.) s
-5 195 M
-( Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in) s
-5 184 M
-( Section 8 of [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 18]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(11. iana cONSiderations) s
-5 668 M
-( This document is part of a set, the IANA considerations for the SSH) s
-5 657 M
-( protocol as defined in [SSH-ARCH], [SSH-TRANS], [SSH-USERAUTH],) s
-5 646 M
-( [SSH-CONNECT] are detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].) s
-5 624 M
-(12. Intellectual Property) s
-5 602 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 591 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
-5 580 M
-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
-5 569 M
-( this document or the extent to which any license under such rights) s
-5 558 M
-( might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it) s
-5 547 M
-( has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the) s
-5 536 M
-( IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and) s
-5 525 M
-( standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of) s
-5 514 M
-( claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of) s
-5 503 M
-( licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to) s
-5 492 M
-( obtain a general license or permission for the use of such) s
-5 481 M
-( proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can) s
-5 470 M
-( be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.) s
-5 448 M
-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
-5 437 M
-( regard to some or all of the specification contained in this) s
-5 426 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 415 M
-( rights.) s
-5 393 M
-(Normative References) s
-5 371 M
-( [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 360 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D) s
-5 349 M
-( draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 327 M
-( [SSH-TRANS]) s
-5 316 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D) s
-5 305 M
-( draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 283 M
-( [SSH-USERAUTH]) s
-5 272 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D) s
-5 261 M
-( draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 239 M
-( [SSH-CONNECT]) s
-5 228 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D) s
-5 217 M
-( draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 195 M
-( [SSH-NUMBERS]) s
-5 184 M
-( Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned) s
-5 173 M
-( Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct) s
-5 129 M
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- closepath}put initclip
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-/fname () def
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-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( 2003.) s
-5 668 M
-( [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate) s
-5 657 M
-( Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.) s
-5 635 M
-(Informative References) s
-5 613 M
-( [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of) s
-5 602 M
-( Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.) s
-5 580 M
-( [RFC1884] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing) s
-5 569 M
-( Architecture", RFC 1884, December 1995.) s
-5 547 M
-( [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO) s
-5 536 M
-( 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.) s
-5 514 M
-( [SCHEIFLER]) s
-5 503 M
-( Scheifler, R., "X Window System : The Complete Reference) s
-5 492 M
-( to Xlib, X Protocol, Icccm, Xlfd, 3rd edition.", Digital) s
-5 481 M
-( Press ISBN 1555580882, Feburary 1992.) s
-5 459 M
-( [POSIX] ISO/IEC, 9945-1., "Information technology -- Portable) s
-5 448 M
-( Operating System Interface \(POSIX\)-Part 1: System) s
-5 437 M
-( Application Program Interface \(API\) C Language", ANSI/IEE) s
-5 426 M
-( Std 1003.1, July 1996.) s
-5 393 M
-(Authors' Addresses) s
-5 371 M
-( Tatu Ylonen) s
-5 360 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 349 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 338 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 327 M
-( Finland) s
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-( EMail: [email protected]) s
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-( Darren J. Moffat \(editor\)) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
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-5 668 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 657 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
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-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
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-( might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it) s
-5 613 M
-( has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the) s
-5 602 M
-( IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and) s
-5 591 M
-( standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of) s
-5 580 M
-( claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of) s
-5 569 M
-( licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to) s
-5 558 M
-( obtain a general license or permission for the use of such) s
-5 547 M
-( proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can) s
-5 536 M
-( be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.) s
-5 514 M
-( The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any) s
-5 503 M
-( copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary) s
-5 492 M
-( rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice) s
-5 481 M
-( this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive) s
-5 470 M
-( Director.) s
-5 448 M
-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
-5 437 M
-( regard to some or all of the specification contained in this) s
-5 426 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 415 M
-( rights.) s
-5 382 M
-(Full Copyright Statement) s
-5 360 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 338 M
-( This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to) s
-5 327 M
-( others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it) s
-5 316 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
-5 305 M
-( and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any) s
-5 294 M
-( kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are) s
-5 283 M
-( included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this) s
-5 272 M
-( document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing) s
-5 261 M
-( the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other) s
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-( Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of) s
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-( developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for) s
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-( followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than) s
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-( English.) s
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-( The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be) s
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-%%EndPageSetup
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-( This document and the information contained herein is provided on an) s
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-( "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING) s
-5 668 M
-( TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING) s
-5 657 M
-( BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION) s
-5 646 M
-( HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF) s
-5 635 M
-( MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.) s
-5 602 M
-(Acknowledgment) s
-5 580 M
-( Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the) s
-5 569 M
-( Internet Society.) s
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-%%EOF
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 1cb8ad6409..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1232 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Network Working Group T. Ylonen
-Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp
-Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Editor, Ed.
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- Oct 2003
-
-
- SSH Connection Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-connect-18.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
- groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network
- services over an insecure network.
-
- This document describes the SSH Connection Protocol. It provides
- interactive login sessions, remote execution of commands, forwarded
- TCP/IP connections, and forwarded X11 connections. All of these
- channels are multiplexed into a single encrypted tunnel.
-
- The SSH Connection Protocol has been designed to run on top of the
- SSH transport layer and user authentication protocols.
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3. Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 4. Global Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 5. Channel Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 5.1 Opening a Channel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 5.2 Data Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 5.3 Closing a Channel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 5.4 Channel-Specific Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 6. Interactive Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 6.1 Opening a Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 6.2 Requesting a Pseudo-Terminal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 6.3 X11 Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 6.3.1 Requesting X11 Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 6.3.2 X11 Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 6.4 Environment Variable Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 6.5 Starting a Shell or a Command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 6.6 Session Data Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 6.7 Window Dimension Change Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 6.8 Local Flow Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 6.9 Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 6.10 Returning Exit Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 7. TCP/IP Port Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 7.1 Requesting Port Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 7.2 TCP/IP Forwarding Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 8. Encoding of Terminal Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 9. Summary of Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 11. iana cONSiderations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 12. Intellectual Property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 21
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-1. Contributors
-
- The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,
- Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen (all of SSH Communications
- Security Corp), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen (University of
- Jyvaskyla)
-
- The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this
- internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,
- details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html
-
-2. Introduction
-
- The SSH Connection Protocol has been designed to run on top of the
- SSH transport layer and user authentication protocols. It provides
- interactive login sessions, remote execution of commands, forwarded
- TCP/IP connections, and forwarded X11 connections. The service name
- for this protocol is "ssh-connection".
-
- This document should be read only after reading the SSH architecture
- document [SSH-ARCH]. This document freely uses terminology and
- notation from the architecture document without reference or further
- explanation.
-
-3. Conventions Used in This Document
-
- The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
- and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as
- described in [RFC2119].
-
- The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture
- document [SSH-ARCH].
-
- The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming
- conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.
-
-4. Global Requests
-
- There are several kinds of requests that affect the state of the
- remote end "globally", independent of any channels. An example is a
- request to start TCP/IP forwarding for a specific port. All such
- requests use the following format.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST
- string request name (restricted to US-ASCII)
- boolean want reply
- ... request-specific data follows
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 3]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- Request names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention outlined
- in [SSH-ARCH].
-
- The recipient will respond to this message with
- SSH_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS or SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE if `want reply' is
- TRUE.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS
- ..... response specific data
-
- Usually the response specific data is non-existent.
-
- If the recipient does not recognize or support the request, it simply
- responds with SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE
-
-
-5. Channel Mechanism
-
- All terminal sessions, forwarded connections, etc. are channels.
- Either side may open a channel. Multiple channels are multiplexed
- into a single connection.
-
- Channels are identified by numbers at each end. The number referring
- to a channel may be different on each side. Requests to open a
- channel contain the sender's channel number. Any other
- channel-related messages contain the recipient's channel number for
- the channel.
-
- Channels are flow-controlled. No data may be sent to a channel until
- a message is received to indicate that window space is available.
-
-5.1 Opening a Channel
-
- When either side wishes to open a new channel, it allocates a local
- number for the channel. It then sends the following message to the
- other side, and includes the local channel number and initial window
- size in the message.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN
- string channel type (restricted to US-ASCII)
- uint32 sender channel
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
- ... channel type specific data follows
-
- The channel type is a name as described in the SSH architecture
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 4]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- document, with similar extension mechanisms. `sender channel' is a
- local identifier for the channel used by the sender of this message.
- `initial window size' specifies how many bytes of channel data can be
- sent to the sender of this message without adjusting the window.
- `Maximum packet size' specifies the maximum size of an individual
- data packet that can be sent to the sender (for example, one might
- want to use smaller packets for interactive connections to get better
- interactive response on slow links).
-
- The remote side then decides whether it can open the channel, and
- responds with either
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION
- uint32 recipient channel
- uint32 sender channel
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
- ... channel type specific data follows
-
- where `recipient channel' is the channel number given in the original
- open request, and `sender channel' is the channel number allocated by
- the other side, or
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE
- uint32 recipient channel
- uint32 reason code
- string additional textual information (ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC2279])
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC3066])
-
- If the recipient of the SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN message does not support
- the specified channel type, it simply responds with
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE. The client MAY show the additional
- information to the user. If this is done, the client software should
- take the precautions discussed in [SSH-ARCH].
-
- The following reason codes are defined:
-
- #define SSH_OPEN_ADMINISTRATIVELY_PROHIBITED 1
- #define SSH_OPEN_CONNECT_FAILED 2
- #define SSH_OPEN_UNKNOWN_CHANNEL_TYPE 3
- #define SSH_OPEN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE 4
-
-
-5.2 Data Transfer
-
- The window size specifies how many bytes the other party can send
- before it must wait for the window to be adjusted. Both parties use
- the following message to adjust the window.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 5]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST
- uint32 recipient channel
- uint32 bytes to add
-
- After receiving this message, the recipient MAY send the given number
- of bytes more than it was previously allowed to send; the window size
- is incremented.
-
- Data transfer is done with messages of the following type.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA
- uint32 recipient channel
- string data
-
- The maximum amount of data allowed is the current window size. The
- window size is decremented by the amount of data sent. Both parties
- MAY ignore all extra data sent after the allowed window is empty.
-
- Additionally, some channels can transfer several types of data. An
- example of this is stderr data from interactive sessions. Such data
- can be passed with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA messages, where a
- separate integer specifies the type of the data. The available types
- and their interpretation depend on the type of the channel.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA
- uint32 recipient_channel
- uint32 data_type_code
- string data
-
- Data sent with these messages consumes the same window as ordinary
- data.
-
- Currently, only the following type is defined.
-
- #define SSH_EXTENDED_DATA_STDERR 1
-
-
-5.3 Closing a Channel
-
- When a party will no longer send more data to a channel, it SHOULD
- send SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF
- uint32 recipient_channel
-
- No explicit response is sent to this message; however, the
- application may send EOF to whatever is at the other end of the
- channel. Note that the channel remains open after this message, and
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 6]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- more data may still be sent in the other direction. This message
- does not consume window space and can be sent even if no window space
- is available.
-
- When either party wishes to terminate the channel, it sends
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE. Upon receiving this message, a party MUST
- send back a SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE unless it has already sent this
- message for the channel. The channel is considered closed for a
- party when it has both sent and received SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE, and
- the party may then reuse the channel number. A party MAY send
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE without having sent or received
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE
- uint32 recipient_channel
-
- This message does not consume window space and can be sent even if no
- window space is available.
-
- It is recommended that any data sent before this message is delivered
- to the actual destination, if possible.
-
-5.4 Channel-Specific Requests
-
- Many channel types have extensions that are specific to that
- particular channel type. An example is requesting a pty (pseudo
- terminal) for an interactive session.
-
- All channel-specific requests use the following format.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string request type (restricted to US-ASCII)
- boolean want reply
- ... type-specific data
-
- If want reply is FALSE, no response will be sent to the request.
- Otherwise, the recipient responds with either SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS
- or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE, or request-specific continuation
- messages. If the request is not recognized or is not supported for
- the channel, SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE is returned.
-
- This message does not consume window space and can be sent even if no
- window space is available. Request types are local to each channel
- type.
-
- The client is allowed to send further messages without waiting for
- the response to the request.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 7]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- request type names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention
- outlined in [SSH-ARCH]
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS
- uint32 recipient_channel
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE
- uint32 recipient_channel
-
- These messages do not consume window space and can be sent even if no
- window space is available.
-
-6. Interactive Sessions
-
- A session is a remote execution of a program. The program may be a
- shell, an application, a system command, or some built-in subsystem.
- It may or may not have a tty, and may or may not involve X11
- forwarding. Multiple sessions can be active simultaneously.
-
-6.1 Opening a Session
-
- A session is started by sending the following message.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN
- string "session"
- uint32 sender channel
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
-
- Client implementations SHOULD reject any session channel open
- requests to make it more difficult for a corrupt server to attack the
- client.
-
-6.2 Requesting a Pseudo-Terminal
-
- A pseudo-terminal can be allocated for the session by sending the
- following message.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient_channel
- string "pty-req"
- boolean want_reply
- string TERM environment variable value (e.g., vt100)
- uint32 terminal width, characters (e.g., 80)
- uint32 terminal height, rows (e.g., 24)
- uint32 terminal width, pixels (e.g., 640)
- uint32 terminal height, pixels (e.g., 480)
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 8]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- string encoded terminal modes
-
- The encoding of terminal modes is described in Section Encoding of
- Terminal Modes (Section 8). Zero dimension parameters MUST be
- ignored. The character/row dimensions override the pixel dimensions
- (when nonzero). Pixel dimensions refer to the drawable area of the
- window.
-
- The dimension parameters are only informational.
-
- The client SHOULD ignore pty requests.
-
-6.3 X11 Forwarding
-
-6.3.1 Requesting X11 Forwarding
-
- X11 forwarding may be requested for a session by sending
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "x11-req"
- boolean want reply
- boolean single connection
- string x11 authentication protocol
- string x11 authentication cookie
- uint32 x11 screen number
-
- It is recommended that the authentication cookie that is sent be a
- fake, random cookie, and that the cookie is checked and replaced by
- the real cookie when a connection request is received.
-
- X11 connection forwarding should stop when the session channel is
- closed; however, already opened forwardings should not be
- automatically closed when the session channel is closed.
-
- If `single connection' is TRUE, only a single connection should be
- forwarded. No more connections will be forwarded after the first, or
- after the session channel has been closed.
-
- The "x11 authentication protocol" is the name of the X11
- authentication method used, e.g. "MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1".
-
- The x11 authentication cookie MUST be hexadecimal encoded.
-
- X Protocol is documented in [SCHEIFLER].
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-6.3.2 X11 Channels
-
- X11 channels are opened with a channel open request. The resulting
- channels are independent of the session, and closing the session
- channel does not close the forwarded X11 channels.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN
- string "x11"
- uint32 sender channel
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
- string originator address (e.g. "192.168.7.38")
- uint32 originator port
-
- The recipient should respond with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION
- or SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE.
-
- Implementations MUST reject any X11 channel open requests if they
- have not requested X11 forwarding.
-
-6.4 Environment Variable Passing
-
- Environment variables may be passed to the shell/command to be
- started later. Uncontrolled setting of environment variables in a
- privileged process can be a security hazard. It is recommended that
- implementations either maintain a list of allowable variable names or
- only set environment variables after the server process has dropped
- sufficient privileges.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "env"
- boolean want reply
- string variable name
- string variable value
-
-
-6.5 Starting a Shell or a Command
-
- Once the session has been set up, a program is started at the remote
- end. The program can be a shell, an application program or a
- subsystem with a host-independent name. Only one of these requests
- can succeed per channel.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "shell"
- boolean want reply
-
-
-
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-
-
- This message will request the user's default shell (typically defined
- in /etc/passwd in UNIX systems) to be started at the other end.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "exec"
- boolean want reply
- string command
-
- This message will request the server to start the execution of the
- given command. The command string may contain a path. Normal
- precautions MUST be taken to prevent the execution of unauthorized
- commands.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "subsystem"
- boolean want reply
- string subsystem name
-
- This last form executes a predefined subsystem. It is expected that
- these will include a general file transfer mechanism, and possibly
- other features. Implementations may also allow configuring more such
- mechanisms. As the user's shell is usually used to execute the
- subsystem, it is advisable for the subsystem protocol to have a
- "magic cookie" at the beginning of the protocol transaction to
- distinguish it from arbitrary output generated by shell
- initialization scripts etc. This spurious output from the shell may
- be filtered out either at the server or at the client.
-
- The server SHOULD not halt the execution of the protocol stack when
- starting a shell or a program. All input and output from these SHOULD
- be redirected to the channel or to the encrypted tunnel.
-
- It is RECOMMENDED to request and check the reply for these messages.
- The client SHOULD ignore these messages.
-
- Subsystem names follow the DNS extensibility naming convention
- outlined in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-6.6 Session Data Transfer
-
- Data transfer for a session is done using SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA and
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA packets and the window mechanism. The
- extended data type SSH_EXTENDED_DATA_STDERR has been defined for
- stderr data.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-6.7 Window Dimension Change Message
-
- When the window (terminal) size changes on the client side, it MAY
- send a message to the other side to inform it of the new dimensions.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient_channel
- string "window-change"
- boolean FALSE
- uint32 terminal width, columns
- uint32 terminal height, rows
- uint32 terminal width, pixels
- uint32 terminal height, pixels
-
- No response SHOULD be sent to this message.
-
-6.8 Local Flow Control
-
- On many systems, it is possible to determine if a pseudo-terminal is
- using control-S/control-Q flow control. When flow control is
- allowed, it is often desirable to do the flow control at the client
- end to speed up responses to user requests. This is facilitated by
- the following notification. Initially, the server is responsible for
- flow control. (Here, again, client means the side originating the
- session, and server means the other side.)
-
- The message below is used by the server to inform the client when it
- can or cannot perform flow control (control-S/control-Q processing).
- If `client can do' is TRUE, the client is allowed to do flow control
- using control-S and control-Q. The client MAY ignore this message.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "xon-xoff"
- boolean FALSE
- boolean client can do
-
- No response is sent to this message.
-
-6.9 Signals
-
- A signal can be delivered to the remote process/service using the
- following message. Some systems may not implement signals, in which
- case they SHOULD ignore this message.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "signal"
-
-
-
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-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- boolean FALSE
- string signal name without the "SIG" prefix.
-
- Signal names will be encoded as discussed in the "exit-signal"
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST.
-
-6.10 Returning Exit Status
-
- When the command running at the other end terminates, the following
- message can be sent to return the exit status of the command.
- Returning the status is RECOMMENDED. No acknowledgment is sent for
- this message. The channel needs to be closed with
- SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE after this message.
-
- The client MAY ignore these messages.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient_channel
- string "exit-status"
- boolean FALSE
- uint32 exit_status
-
- The remote command may also terminate violently due to a signal.
- Such a condition can be indicated by the following message. A zero
- exit_status usually means that the command terminated successfully.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST
- uint32 recipient channel
- string "exit-signal"
- boolean FALSE
- string signal name without the "SIG" prefix.
- boolean core dumped
- string error message (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC3066])
-
- The signal name is one of the following (these are from [POSIX])
-
- ABRT
- ALRM
- FPE
- HUP
- ILL
- INT
- KILL
- PIPE
- QUIT
- SEGV
- TERM
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 13]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- USR1
- USR2
-
- Additional signal names MAY be sent in the format "sig-name@xyz",
- where `sig-name' and `xyz' may be anything a particular implementor
- wants (except the `@' sign). However, it is suggested that if a
- `configure' script is used, the non-standard signal names it finds be
- encoded as "[email protected]", where `SIG' is the signal name
- without the "SIG" prefix, and `xyz' be the host type, as determined
- by `config.guess'.
-
- The `error message' contains an additional explanation of the error
- message. The message may consist of multiple lines. The client
- software MAY display this message to the user. If this is done, the
- client software should take the precautions discussed in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-7. TCP/IP Port Forwarding
-
-7.1 Requesting Port Forwarding
-
- A party need not explicitly request forwardings from its own end to
- the other direction. However, if it wishes that connections to a
- port on the other side be forwarded to the local side, it must
- explicitly request this.
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST
- string "tcpip-forward"
- boolean want reply
- string address to bind (e.g. "0.0.0.0")
- uint32 port number to bind
-
- `Address to bind' and `port number to bind' specify the IP address
- and port to which the socket to be listened is bound. The address
- should be "0.0.0.0" if connections are allowed from anywhere. (Note
- that the client can still filter connections based on information
- passed in the open request.)
-
- Implementations should only allow forwarding privileged ports if the
- user has been authenticated as a privileged user.
-
- Client implementations SHOULD reject these messages; they are
- normally only sent by the client.
-
-
- If a client passes 0 as port number to bind and has want reply TRUE
- then the server allocates the next available unprivileged port number
- and replies with the following message, otherwise there is no
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 14]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- response specific data.
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST_SUCCESS
- uint32 port that was bound on the server
-
- A port forwarding can be cancelled with the following message. Note
- that channel open requests may be received until a reply to this
- message is received.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST
- string "cancel-tcpip-forward"
- boolean want reply
- string address_to_bind (e.g. "127.0.0.1")
- uint32 port number to bind
-
- Client implementations SHOULD reject these messages; they are
- normally only sent by the client.
-
-7.2 TCP/IP Forwarding Channels
-
- When a connection comes to a port for which remote forwarding has
- been requested, a channel is opened to forward the port to the other
- side.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN
- string "forwarded-tcpip"
- uint32 sender channel
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
- string address that was connected
- uint32 port that was connected
- string originator IP address
- uint32 originator port
-
- Implementations MUST reject these messages unless they have
- previously requested a remote TCP/IP port forwarding with the given
- port number.
-
- When a connection comes to a locally forwarded TCP/IP port, the
- following packet is sent to the other side. Note that these messages
- MAY be sent also for ports for which no forwarding has been
- explicitly requested. The receiving side must decide whether to
- allow the forwarding.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN
- string "direct-tcpip"
- uint32 sender channel
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 15]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- uint32 initial window size
- uint32 maximum packet size
- string host to connect
- uint32 port to connect
- string originator IP address
- uint32 originator port
-
- `Host to connect' and `port to connect' specify the TCP/IP host and
- port where the recipient should connect the channel. `Host to
- connect' may be either a domain name or a numeric IP address.
-
- `Originator IP address' is the numeric IP address of the machine
- where the connection request comes from, and `originator port' is the
- port on the originator host from where the connection came from.
-
- Forwarded TCP/IP channels are independent of any sessions, and
- closing a session channel does not in any way imply that forwarded
- connections should be closed.
-
- Client implementations SHOULD reject direct TCP/IP open requests for
- security reasons.
-
-8. Encoding of Terminal Modes
-
- Terminal modes (as passed in a pty request) are encoded into a byte
- stream. It is intended that the coding be portable across different
- environments.
-
- The tty mode description is a stream of bytes. The stream consists
- of opcode-argument pairs. It is terminated by opcode TTY_OP_END (0).
- Opcodes 1 to 159 have a single uint32 argument. Opcodes 160 to 255
- are not yet defined, and cause parsing to stop (they should only be
- used after any other data).
-
- The client SHOULD put in the stream any modes it knows about, and the
- server MAY ignore any modes it does not know about. This allows some
- degree of machine-independence, at least between systems that use a
- POSIX-like tty interface. The protocol can support other systems as
- well, but the client may need to fill reasonable values for a number
- of parameters so the server pty gets set to a reasonable mode (the
- server leaves all unspecified mode bits in their default values, and
- only some combinations make sense).
-
- The following opcodes have been defined. The naming of opcodes
- mostly follows the POSIX terminal mode flags.
-
- 0 TTY_OP_END Indicates end of options.
- 1 VINTR Interrupt character; 255 if none. Similarly for the
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 16]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- other characters. Not all of these characters are
- supported on all systems.
- 2 VQUIT The quit character (sends SIGQUIT signal on POSIX
- systems).
- 3 VERASE Erase the character to left of the cursor.
- 4 VKILL Kill the current input line.
- 5 VEOF End-of-file character (sends EOF from the terminal).
- 6 VEOL End-of-line character in addition to carriage return
- and/or linefeed.
- 7 VEOL2 Additional end-of-line character.
- 8 VSTART Continues paused output (normally control-Q).
- 9 VSTOP Pauses output (normally control-S).
- 10 VSUSP Suspends the current program.
- 11 VDSUSP Another suspend character.
- 12 VREPRINT Reprints the current input line.
- 13 VWERASE Erases a word left of cursor.
- 14 VLNEXT Enter the next character typed literally, even if it
- is a special character
- 15 VFLUSH Character to flush output.
- 16 VSWTCH Switch to a different shell layer.
- 17 VSTATUS Prints system status line (load, command, pid etc).
- 18 VDISCARD Toggles the flushing of terminal output.
- 30 IGNPAR The ignore parity flag. The parameter SHOULD be 0 if
- this flag is FALSE set, and 1 if it is TRUE.
- 31 PARMRK Mark parity and framing errors.
- 32 INPCK Enable checking of parity errors.
- 33 ISTRIP Strip 8th bit off characters.
- 34 INLCR Map NL into CR on input.
- 35 IGNCR Ignore CR on input.
- 36 ICRNL Map CR to NL on input.
- 37 IUCLC Translate uppercase characters to lowercase.
- 38 IXON Enable output flow control.
- 39 IXANY Any char will restart after stop.
- 40 IXOFF Enable input flow control.
- 41 IMAXBEL Ring bell on input queue full.
- 50 ISIG Enable signals INTR, QUIT, [D]SUSP.
- 51 ICANON Canonicalize input lines.
- 52 XCASE Enable input and output of uppercase characters by
- preceding their lowercase equivalents with `\'.
- 53 ECHO Enable echoing.
- 54 ECHOE Visually erase chars.
- 55 ECHOK Kill character discards current line.
- 56 ECHONL Echo NL even if ECHO is off.
- 57 NOFLSH Don't flush after interrupt.
- 58 TOSTOP Stop background jobs from output.
- 59 IEXTEN Enable extensions.
- 60 ECHOCTL Echo control characters as ^(Char).
- 61 ECHOKE Visual erase for line kill.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 17]
-
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-
-
- 62 PENDIN Retype pending input.
- 70 OPOST Enable output processing.
- 71 OLCUC Convert lowercase to uppercase.
- 72 ONLCR Map NL to CR-NL.
- 73 OCRNL Translate carriage return to newline (output).
- 74 ONOCR Translate newline to carriage return-newline
- (output).
- 75 ONLRET Newline performs a carriage return (output).
- 90 CS7 7 bit mode.
- 91 CS8 8 bit mode.
- 92 PARENB Parity enable.
- 93 PARODD Odd parity, else even.
-
- 128 TTY_OP_ISPEED Specifies the input baud rate in bits per second.
- 129 TTY_OP_OSPEED Specifies the output baud rate in bits per second.
-
-
-9. Summary of Message Numbers
-
- #define SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST 80
- #define SSH_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS 81
- #define SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE 82
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN 90
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION 91
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE 92
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST 93
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA 94
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA 95
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF 96
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE 97
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST 98
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS 99
- #define SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE 100
-
-
-10. Security Considerations
-
- This protocol is assumed to run on top of a secure, authenticated
- transport. User authentication and protection against network-level
- attacks are assumed to be provided by the underlying protocols.
-
- It is RECOMMENDED that implementations disable all the potentially
- dangerous features (e.g. agent forwarding, X11 forwarding, and TCP/IP
- forwarding) if the host key has changed.
-
- Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in
- Section 8 of [SSH-ARCH]
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 18]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-11. iana cONSiderations
-
- This document is part of a set, the IANA considerations for the SSH
- protocol as defined in [SSH-ARCH], [SSH-TRANS], [SSH-USERAUTH],
- [SSH-CONNECT] are detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].
-
-12. Intellectual Property
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in
- regard to some or all of the specification contained in this
- document. For more information consult the online list of claimed
- rights.
-
-Normative References
-
- [SSH-ARCH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D
- draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-TRANS]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-USERAUTH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-CONNECT]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-NUMBERS]
- Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned
- Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 19]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- 2003.
-
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
- Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
-
-Informative References
-
- [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of
- Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.
-
- [RFC1884] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
- Architecture", RFC 1884, December 1995.
-
- [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
- 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.
-
- [SCHEIFLER]
- Scheifler, R., "X Window System : The Complete Reference
- to Xlib, X Protocol, Icccm, Xlfd, 3rd edition.", Digital
- Press ISBN 1555580882, Feburary 1992.
-
- [POSIX] ISO/IEC, 9945-1., "Information technology -- Portable
- Operating System Interface (POSIX)-Part 1: System
- Application Program Interface (API) C Language", ANSI/IEE
- Std 1003.1, July 1996.
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Darren J. Moffat (editor)
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- 17 Network Circle
- Menlo Park CA 94025
- USA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 20]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-Intellectual Property Statement
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
- copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
- rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
- this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
- Director.
-
- The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in
- regard to some or all of the specification contained in this
- document. For more information consult the online list of claimed
- rights.
-
-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
- and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
- kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
- included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
- document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
- the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
- Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
- developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
- copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
- followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
- English.
-
- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
- revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 21]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Connection Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
- HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-
-Acknowledgment
-
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 22] \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.2.ps b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.2.ps
deleted file mode 100644
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-5 701 M
-(Network Working Group T. Ylonen) s
-5 690 M
-(Internet-Draft S. Lehtinen) s
-5 679 M
-(Expires: April 1, 2002 SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 668 M
-( October 2001) s
-5 635 M
-( SSH File Transfer Protocol) s
-5 624 M
-( draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt) s
-5 602 M
-(Status of this Memo) s
-5 580 M
-( This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with) s
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-( all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.) s
-5 547 M
-( Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering) s
-5 536 M
-( Task Force \(IETF\), its areas, and its working groups. Note that) s
-5 525 M
-( other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-) s
-5 514 M
-( Drafts.) s
-5 492 M
-( Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months) s
-5 481 M
-( and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any) s
-5 470 M
-( time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference) s
-5 459 M
-( material or to cite them other than as "work in progress.") s
-5 437 M
-( The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://) s
-5 426 M
-( www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.) s
-5 404 M
-( The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at) s
-5 393 M
-( http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.) s
-5 371 M
-( This Internet-Draft will expire on April 1, 2002.) s
-5 349 M
-(Copyright Notice) s
-5 327 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2001\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 305 M
-(Abstract) s
-5 283 M
-( The SSH File Transfer Protocol provides secure file transfer) s
-5 272 M
-( functionality over any reliable data stream. It is the standard file) s
-5 261 M
-( transfer protocol for use with the SSH2 protocol. This document) s
-5 250 M
-( describes the file transfer protocol and its interface to the SSH2) s
-5 239 M
-( protocol suite.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 1]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(Table of Contents) s
-5 668 M
-( 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
-5 657 M
-( 2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
-5 646 M
-( 3. General Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
-5 635 M
-( 4. Protocol Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 624 M
-( 5. File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8) s
-5 613 M
-( 6. Requests From the Client to the Server . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 602 M
-( 6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 591 M
-( 6.2 File Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 580 M
-( 6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 569 M
-( 6.4 Reading and Writing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
-5 558 M
-( 6.5 Removing and Renaming Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
-5 547 M
-( 6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15) s
-5 536 M
-( 6.7 Scanning Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15) s
-5 525 M
-( 6.8 Retrieving File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16) s
-5 514 M
-( 6.9 Setting File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17) s
-5 503 M
-( 6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
-5 492 M
-( 6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
-5 481 M
-( 7. Responses from the Server to the Client . . . . . . . . . . 20) s
-5 470 M
-( 8. Vendor-Specific Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 459 M
-( 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25) s
-5 448 M
-( 10. Changes from previous protocol versions . . . . . . . . . . 26) s
-5 437 M
-( 10.1 Changes between versions 3 and 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26) s
-5 426 M
-( 10.2 Changes between versions 2 and 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26) s
-5 415 M
-( 10.3 Changes between versions 1 and 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26) s
-5 404 M
-( 11. Trademark Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27) s
-5 393 M
-( References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28) s
-5 382 M
-( Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28) s
-5 371 M
-( Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 2]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(1. Introduction) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol provides secure file transfer \(and more generally file) s
-5 657 M
-( system access\) functionality over a reliable data stream, such as a) s
-5 646 M
-( channel in the SSH2 protocol [3].) s
-5 624 M
-( This protocol is designed so that it could be used to implement a) s
-5 613 M
-( secure remote file system service, as well as a secure file transfer) s
-5 602 M
-( service.) s
-5 580 M
-( This protocol assumes that it runs over a secure channel, and that) s
-5 569 M
-( the server has already authenticated the user at the client end, and) s
-5 558 M
-( that the identity of the client user is externally available to the) s
-5 547 M
-( server implementation.) s
-5 525 M
-( In general, this protocol follows a simple request-response model.) s
-5 514 M
-( Each request and response contains a sequence number and multiple) s
-5 503 M
-( requests may be pending simultaneously. There are a relatively large) s
-5 492 M
-( number of different request messages, but a small number of possible) s
-5 481 M
-( response messages. Each request has one or more response messages) s
-5 470 M
-( that may be returned in result \(e.g., a read either returns data or) s
-5 459 M
-( reports error status\).) s
-5 437 M
-( The packet format descriptions in this specification follow the) s
-5 426 M
-( notation presented in the secsh architecture draft.[3].) s
-5 404 M
-( Even though this protocol is described in the context of the SSH2) s
-5 393 M
-( protocol, this protocol is general and independent of the rest of the) s
-5 382 M
-( SSH2 protocol suite. It could be used in a number of different) s
-5 371 M
-( applications, such as secure file transfer over TLS RFC 2246 [1] and) s
-5 360 M
-( transfer of management information in VPN applications.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 3]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol) s
-5 668 M
-( When used with the SSH2 Protocol suite, this protocol is intended to) s
-5 657 M
-( be used from the SSH Connection Protocol [5] as a subsystem, as) s
-5 646 M
-( described in section ``Starting a Shell or a Command''. The) s
-5 635 M
-( subsystem name used with this protocol is "sftp".) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 4]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(3. General Packet Format) s
-5 668 M
-( All packets transmitted over the secure connection are of the) s
-5 657 M
-( following format:) s
-5 635 M
-( uint32 length) s
-5 624 M
-( byte type) s
-5 613 M
-( byte[length - 1] data payload) s
-5 591 M
-( That is, they are just data preceded by 32-bit length and 8-bit type) s
-5 580 M
-( fields. The `length' is the length of the data area, and does not) s
-5 569 M
-( include the `length' field itself. The format and interpretation of) s
-5 558 M
-( the data area depends on the packet type.) s
-5 536 M
-( All packet descriptions below only specify the packet type and the) s
-5 525 M
-( data that goes into the data field. Thus, they should be prefixed by) s
-5 514 M
-( the `length' and `type' fields.) s
-5 492 M
-( The maximum size of a packet is in practice determined by the client) s
-5 481 M
-( \(the maximum size of read or write requests that it sends, plus a few) s
-5 470 M
-( bytes of packet overhead\). All servers SHOULD support packets of at) s
-5 459 M
-( least 34000 bytes \(where the packet size refers to the full length,) s
-5 448 M
-( including the header above\). This should allow for reads and writes) s
-5 437 M
-( of at most 32768 bytes.) s
-5 415 M
-( There is no limit on the number of outstanding \(non-acknowledged\)) s
-5 404 M
-( requests that the client may send to the server. In practice this is) s
-5 393 M
-( limited by the buffering available on the data stream and the queuing) s
-5 382 M
-( performed by the server. If the server's queues are full, it should) s
-5 371 M
-( not read any more data from the stream, and flow control will prevent) s
-5 360 M
-( the client from sending more requests. Note, however, that while) s
-5 349 M
-( there is no restriction on the protocol level, the client's API may) s
-5 338 M
-( provide a limit in order to prevent infinite queuing of outgoing) s
-5 327 M
-( requests at the client.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 5]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( The following values are defined for packet types.) s
-5 668 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_INIT 1) s
-5 657 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_VERSION 2) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_OPEN 3) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_CLOSE 4) s
-5 624 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_READ 5) s
-5 613 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_WRITE 6) s
-5 602 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_LSTAT 7) s
-5 591 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_FSTAT 8) s
-5 580 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_SETSTAT 9) s
-5 569 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT 10) s
-5 558 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_OPENDIR 11) s
-5 547 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_READDIR 12) s
-5 536 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_REMOVE 13) s
-5 525 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_MKDIR 14) s
-5 514 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_RMDIR 15) s
-5 503 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_REALPATH 16) s
-5 492 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_STAT 17) s
-5 481 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_RENAME 18) s
-5 470 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_READLINK 19) s
-5 459 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_SYMLINK 20) s
-5 448 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_STATUS 101) s
-5 437 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_HANDLE 102) s
-5 426 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_DATA 103) s
-5 415 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_NAME 104) s
-5 404 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_ATTRS 105) s
-5 393 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED 200) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY 201) s
-5 360 M
-( Additional packet types should only be defined if the protocol) s
-5 349 M
-( version number \(see Section ``Protocol Initialization''\) is) s
-5 338 M
-( incremented, and their use MUST be negotiated using the version) s
-5 327 M
-( number. However, the SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY) s
-5 316 M
-( packets can be used to implement vendor-specific extensions. See) s
-5 305 M
-( Section ``Vendor-Specific-Extensions'' for more details.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 6]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(4. Protocol Initialization) s
-5 668 M
-( When the file transfer protocol starts, it first sends a SSH_FXP_INIT) s
-5 657 M
-( \(including its version number\) packet to the server. The server) s
-5 646 M
-( responds with a SSH_FXP_VERSION packet, supplying the lowest of its) s
-5 635 M
-( own and the client's version number. Both parties should from then) s
-5 624 M
-( on adhere to particular version of the protocol.) s
-5 602 M
-( The SSH_FXP_INIT packet \(from client to server\) has the following) s
-5 591 M
-( data:) s
-5 569 M
-( uint32 version) s
-5 558 M
-( <extension data>) s
-5 536 M
-( The SSH_FXP_VERSION packet \(from server to client\) has the following) s
-5 525 M
-( data:) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 version) s
-5 492 M
-( <extension data>) s
-5 470 M
-( The version number of the protocol specified in this document is 3.) s
-5 459 M
-( The version number should be incremented for each incompatible) s
-5 448 M
-( revision of this protocol.) s
-5 426 M
-( The extension data in the above packets may be empty, or may be a) s
-5 415 M
-( sequence of) s
-5 393 M
-( string extension_name) s
-5 382 M
-( string extension_data) s
-5 360 M
-( pairs \(both strings MUST always be present if one is, but the) s
-5 349 M
-( `extension_data' string may be of zero length\). If present, these) s
-5 338 M
-( strings indicate extensions to the baseline protocol. The) s
-5 327 M
-( `extension_name' field\(s\) identify the name of the extension. The) s
-5 316 M
-( name should be of the form "name@domain", where the domain is the DNS) s
-5 305 M
-( domain name of the organization defining the extension. Additional) s
-5 294 M
-( names that are not of this format may be defined later by the IETF.) s
-5 283 M
-( Implementations MUST silently ignore any extensions whose name they) s
-5 272 M
-( do not recognize.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 7]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(5. File Attributes) s
-5 668 M
-( A new compound data type is defined for encoding file attributes. It) s
-5 657 M
-( is basically just a combination of elementary types, but is defined) s
-5 646 M
-( once because of the non-trivial description of the fields and to) s
-5 635 M
-( ensure maintainability.) s
-5 613 M
-( The same encoding is used both when returning file attributes from) s
-5 602 M
-( the server and when sending file attributes to the server. When) s
-5 591 M
-( sending it to the server, the flags field specifies which attributes) s
-5 580 M
-( are included, and the server will use default values for the) s
-5 569 M
-( remaining attributes \(or will not modify the values of remaining) s
-5 558 M
-( attributes\). When receiving attributes from the server, the flags) s
-5 547 M
-( specify which attributes are included in the returned data. The) s
-5 536 M
-( server normally returns all attributes it knows about.) s
-5 514 M
-( uint32 flags) s
-5 503 M
-( uint64 size present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE) s
-5 492 M
-( uint32 uid present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID) s
-5 481 M
-( uint32 gid present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID) s
-5 470 M
-( uint32 permissions present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS) s
-5 459 M
-( uint32 atime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ACMODTIME) s
-5 448 M
-( uint32 mtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ACMODTIME) s
-5 437 M
-( uint32 extended_count present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED) s
-5 426 M
-( string extended_type) s
-5 415 M
-( string extended_data) s
-5 404 M
-( ... more extended data \(extended_type - extended_data pairs\),) s
-5 393 M
-( so that number of pairs equals extended_count) s
-5 371 M
-( The `flags' specify which of the fields are present. Those fields) s
-5 360 M
-( for which the corresponding flag is not set are not present \(not) s
-5 349 M
-( included in the packet\). New flags can only be added by incrementing) s
-5 338 M
-( the protocol version number \(or by using the extension mechanism) s
-5 327 M
-( described below\).) s
-5 305 M
-( The `size' field specifies the size of the file in bytes.) s
-5 283 M
-( The `uid' and `gid' fields contain numeric Unix-like user and group) s
-5 272 M
-( identifiers, respectively.) s
-5 250 M
-( The `permissions' field contains a bit mask of file permissions as) s
-5 239 M
-( defined by posix [1].) s
-5 217 M
-( The `atime' and `mtime' contain the access and modification times of) s
-5 206 M
-( the files, respectively. They are represented as seconds from Jan 1,) s
-5 195 M
-( 1970 in UTC.) s
-5 173 M
-( The SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED flag provides a general extension) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 8]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( mechanism for vendor-specific extensions. If the flag is specified,) s
-5 679 M
-( then the `extended_count' field is present. It specifies the number) s
-5 668 M
-( of extended_type-extended_data pairs that follow. Each of these) s
-5 657 M
-( pairs specifies an extended attribute. For each of the attributes,) s
-5 646 M
-( the extended_type field should be a string of the format) s
-5 635 M
-( "name@domain", where "domain" is a valid, registered domain name and) s
-5 624 M
-( "name" identifies the method. The IETF may later standardize certain) s
-5 613 M
-( names that deviate from this format \(e.g., that do not contain the) s
-5 602 M
-( "@" sign\). The interpretation of `extended_data' depends on the) s
-5 591 M
-( type. Implementations SHOULD ignore extended data fields that they) s
-5 580 M
-( do not understand.) s
-5 558 M
-( Additional fields can be added to the attributes by either defining) s
-5 547 M
-( additional bits to the flags field to indicate their presence, or by) s
-5 536 M
-( defining extended attributes for them. The extended attributes) s
-5 525 M
-( mechanism is recommended for most purposes; additional flags bits) s
-5 514 M
-( should only be defined by an IETF standards action that also) s
-5 503 M
-( increments the protocol version number. The use of such new fields) s
-5 492 M
-( MUST be negotiated by the version number in the protocol exchange.) s
-5 481 M
-( It is a protocol error if a packet with unsupported protocol bits is) s
-5 470 M
-( received.) s
-5 448 M
-( The flags bits are defined to have the following values:) s
-5 426 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE 0x00000001) s
-5 415 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID 0x00000002) s
-5 404 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS 0x00000004) s
-5 393 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACMODTIME 0x00000008) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED 0x80000000) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 9]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(6. Requests From the Client to the Server) s
-5 668 M
-( Requests from the client to the server represent the various file) s
-5 657 M
-( system operations. Each request begins with an `id' field, which is) s
-5 646 M
-( a 32-bit identifier identifying the request \(selected by the client\).) s
-5 635 M
-( The same identifier will be returned in the response to the request.) s
-5 624 M
-( One possible implementation of it is a monotonically increasing) s
-5 613 M
-( request sequence number \(modulo 2^32\).) s
-5 591 M
-( Many operations in the protocol operate on open files. The) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPEN request can return a file handle \(which is an opaque) s
-5 569 M
-( variable-length string\) which may be used to access the file later) s
-5 558 M
-( \(e.g. in a read operation\). The client MUST NOT send requests the) s
-5 547 M
-( server with bogus or closed handles. However, the server MUST) s
-5 536 M
-( perform adequate checks on the handle in order to avoid security) s
-5 525 M
-( risks due to fabricated handles.) s
-5 503 M
-( This design allows either stateful and stateless server) s
-5 492 M
-( implementation, as well as an implementation which caches state) s
-5 481 M
-( between requests but may also flush it. The contents of the file) s
-5 470 M
-( handle string are entirely up to the server and its design. The) s
-5 459 M
-( client should not modify or attempt to interpret the file handle) s
-5 448 M
-( strings.) s
-5 426 M
-( The file handle strings MUST NOT be longer than 256 bytes.) s
-5 404 M
-(6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering) s
-5 382 M
-( The protocol and implementations MUST process requests relating to) s
-5 371 M
-( the same file in the order in which they are received. In other) s
-5 360 M
-( words, if an application submits multiple requests to the server, the) s
-5 349 M
-( results in the responses will be the same as if it had sent the) s
-5 338 M
-( requests one at a time and waited for the response in each case. For) s
-5 327 M
-( example, the server may process non-overlapping read/write requests) s
-5 316 M
-( to the same file in parallel, but overlapping reads and writes cannot) s
-5 305 M
-( be reordered or parallelized. However, there are no ordering) s
-5 294 M
-( restrictions on the server for processing requests from two different) s
-5 283 M
-( file transfer connections. The server may interleave and parallelize) s
-5 272 M
-( them at will.) s
-5 250 M
-( There are no restrictions on the order in which responses to) s
-5 239 M
-( outstanding requests are delivered to the client, except that the) s
-5 228 M
-( server must ensure fairness in the sense that processing of no) s
-5 217 M
-( request will be indefinitely delayed even if the client is sending) s
-5 206 M
-( other requests so that there are multiple outstanding requests all) s
-5 195 M
-( the time.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 10]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(6.2 File Names) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol represents file names as strings. File names are) s
-5 657 M
-( assumed to use the slash \('/'\) character as a directory separator.) s
-5 635 M
-( File names starting with a slash are "absolute", and are relative to) s
-5 624 M
-( the root of the file system. Names starting with any other character) s
-5 613 M
-( are relative to the user's default directory \(home directory\). Note) s
-5 602 M
-( that identifying the user is assumed to take place outside of this) s
-5 591 M
-( protocol.) s
-5 569 M
-( Servers SHOULD interpret a path name component ".." as referring to) s
-5 558 M
-( the parent directory, and "." as referring to the current directory.) s
-5 547 M
-( If the server implementation limits access to certain parts of the) s
-5 536 M
-( file system, it must be extra careful in parsing file names when) s
-5 525 M
-( enforcing such restrictions. There have been numerous reported) s
-5 514 M
-( security bugs where a ".." in a path name has allowed access outside) s
-5 503 M
-( the intended area.) s
-5 481 M
-( An empty path name is valid, and it refers to the user's default) s
-5 470 M
-( directory \(usually the user's home directory\).) s
-5 448 M
-( Otherwise, no syntax is defined for file names by this specification.) s
-5 437 M
-( Clients should not make any other assumptions; however, they can) s
-5 426 M
-( splice path name components returned by SSH_FXP_READDIR together) s
-5 415 M
-( using a slash \('/'\) as the separator, and that will work as expected.) s
-5 393 M
-( It is understood that the lack of well-defined semantics for file) s
-5 382 M
-( names may cause interoperability problems between clients and servers) s
-5 371 M
-( using radically different operating systems. However, this approach) s
-5 360 M
-( is known to work acceptably with most systems, and alternative) s
-5 349 M
-( approaches that e.g. treat file names as sequences of structured) s
-5 338 M
-( components are quite complicated.) s
-5 316 M
-(6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files) s
-5 294 M
-( Files are opened and created using the SSH_FXP_OPEN message, whose) s
-5 283 M
-( data part is as follows:) s
-5 261 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 250 M
-( string filename) s
-5 239 M
-( uint32 pflags) s
-5 228 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 206 M
-( The `id' field is the request identifier as for all requests.) s
-5 184 M
-( The `filename' field specifies the file name. See Section ``File) s
-5 173 M
-( Names'' for more information.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 11]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( The `pflags' field is a bitmask. The following bits have been) s
-5 679 M
-( defined.) s
-5 657 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_READ 0x00000001) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_WRITE 0x00000002) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_APPEND 0x00000004) s
-5 624 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_CREAT 0x00000008) s
-5 613 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_TRUNC 0x00000010) s
-5 602 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_EXCL 0x00000020) s
-5 580 M
-( These have the following meanings:) s
-5 558 M
-( SSH_FXF_READ) s
-5 547 M
-( Open the file for reading.) s
-5 525 M
-( SSH_FXF_WRITE) s
-5 514 M
-( Open the file for writing. If both this and SSH_FXF_READ are) s
-5 503 M
-( specified, the file is opened for both reading and writing.) s
-5 481 M
-( SSH_FXF_APPEND) s
-5 470 M
-( Force all writes to append data at the end of the file.) s
-5 448 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT) s
-5 437 M
-( If this flag is specified, then a new file will be created if one) s
-5 426 M
-( does not already exist \(if O_TRUNC is specified, the new file will) s
-5 415 M
-( be truncated to zero length if it previously exists\).) s
-5 393 M
-( SSH_FXF_TRUNC) s
-5 382 M
-( Forces an existing file with the same name to be truncated to zero) s
-5 371 M
-( length when creating a file by specifying SSH_FXF_CREAT.) s
-5 360 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.) s
-5 338 M
-( SSH_FXF_EXCL) s
-5 327 M
-( Causes the request to fail if the named file already exists.) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.) s
-5 294 M
-( The `attrs' field specifies the initial attributes for the file.) s
-5 283 M
-( Default values will be used for those attributes that are not) s
-5 272 M
-( specified. See Section ``File Attributes'' for more information.) s
-5 250 M
-( Regardless the server operating system, the file will always be) s
-5 239 M
-( opened in "binary" mode \(i.e., no translations between different) s
-5 228 M
-( character sets and newline encodings\).) s
-5 206 M
-( The response to this message will be either SSH_FXP_HANDLE \(if the) s
-5 195 M
-( operation is successful\) or SSH_FXP_STATUS \(if the operation fails\).) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 12]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( A file is closed by using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request. Its data field) s
-5 679 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 657 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 646 M
-( string handle) s
-5 624 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle) s
-5 613 M
-( previously returned in the response to SSH_FXP_OPEN or) s
-5 602 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. The handle becomes invalid immediately after this) s
-5 591 M
-( request has been sent.) s
-5 569 M
-( The response to this request will be a SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One) s
-5 558 M
-( should note that on some server platforms even a close can fail.) s
-5 547 M
-( This can happen e.g. if the server operating system caches writes,) s
-5 536 M
-( and an error occurs while flushing cached writes during the close.) s
-5 514 M
-(6.4 Reading and Writing) s
-5 492 M
-( Once a file has been opened, it can be read using the SSH_FXP_READ) s
-5 481 M
-( message, which has the following format:) s
-5 459 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 448 M
-( string handle) s
-5 437 M
-( uint64 offset) s
-5 426 M
-( uint32 len) s
-5 404 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' is an open file handle) s
-5 393 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset \(in bytes\) relative) s
-5 382 M
-( to the beginning of the file from where to start reading, and `len') s
-5 371 M
-( is the maximum number of bytes to read.) s
-5 349 M
-( In response to this request, the server will read as many bytes as it) s
-5 338 M
-( can from the file \(up to `len'\), and return them in a SSH_FXP_DATA) s
-5 327 M
-( message. If an error occurs or EOF is encountered before reading any) s
-5 316 M
-( data, the server will respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS. For normal disk) s
-5 305 M
-( files, it is guaranteed that this will read the specified number of) s
-5 294 M
-( bytes, or up to end of file. For e.g. device files this may return) s
-5 283 M
-( fewer bytes than requested.) s
-5 261 M
-( Writing to a file is achieved using the SSH_FXP_WRITE message, which) s
-5 250 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 228 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 217 M
-( string handle) s
-5 206 M
-( uint64 offset) s
-5 195 M
-( string data) s
-5 173 M
-( where `id' is a request identifier, `handle' is a file handle) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 13]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset \(in bytes\) from the) s
-5 679 M
-( beginning of the file where to start writing, and `data' is the data) s
-5 668 M
-( to be written.) s
-5 646 M
-( The write will extend the file if writing beyond the end of the file.) s
-5 635 M
-( It is legal to write way beyond the end of the file; the semantics) s
-5 624 M
-( are to write zeroes from the end of the file to the specified offset) s
-5 613 M
-( and then the data. On most operating systems, such writes do not) s
-5 602 M
-( allocate disk space but instead leave "holes" in the file.) s
-5 580 M
-( The server responds to a write request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 558 M
-(6.5 Removing and Renaming Files) s
-5 536 M
-( Files can be removed using the SSH_FXP_REMOVE message. It has the) s
-5 525 M
-( following format:) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 492 M
-( string filename) s
-5 470 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `filename' is the name of) s
-5 459 M
-( the file to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more) s
-5 448 M
-( information. This request cannot be used to remove directories.) s
-5 426 M
-( The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 415 M
-( message.) s
-5 393 M
-( Files \(and directories\) can be renamed using the SSH_FXP_RENAME) s
-5 382 M
-( message. Its data is as follows:) s
-5 360 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 349 M
-( string oldpath) s
-5 338 M
-( string newpath) s
-5 316 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `oldpath' is the name of an) s
-5 305 M
-( existing file or directory, and `newpath' is the new name for the) s
-5 294 M
-( file or directory. It is an error if there already exists a file) s
-5 283 M
-( with the name specified by newpath. The server may also fail rename) s
-5 272 M
-( requests in other situations, for example if `oldpath' and `newpath') s
-5 261 M
-( point to different file systems on the server.) s
-5 239 M
-( The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 228 M
-( message.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 14]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories) s
-5 668 M
-( New directories can be created using the SSH_FXP_MKDIR request. It) s
-5 657 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 635 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 624 M
-( string path) s
-5 613 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 591 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `path' and `attrs' specifies) s
-5 580 M
-( the modifications to be made to its attributes. See Section ``File) s
-5 569 M
-( Names'' for more information on file names. Attributes are discussed) s
-5 558 M
-( in more detail in Section ``File Attributes''. specifies the) s
-5 547 M
-( directory to be created. An error will be returned if a file or) s
-5 536 M
-( directory with the specified path already exists. The server will) s
-5 525 M
-( respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 503 M
-( Directories can be removed using the SSH_FXP_RMDIR request, which) s
-5 492 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 470 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 459 M
-( string path) s
-5 437 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the) s
-5 426 M
-( directory to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more) s
-5 415 M
-( information on file names. An error will be returned if no directory) s
-5 404 M
-( with the specified path exists, or if the specified directory is not) s
-5 393 M
-( empty, or if the path specified a file system object other than a) s
-5 382 M
-( directory. The server responds to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 371 M
-( message.) s
-5 349 M
-(6.7 Scanning Directories) s
-5 327 M
-( The files in a directory can be listed using the SSH_FXP_OPENDIR and) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR requests. Each SSH_FXP_READDIR request returns one) s
-5 305 M
-( or more file names with full file attributes for each file. The) s
-5 294 M
-( client should call SSH_FXP_READDIR repeatedly until it has found the) s
-5 283 M
-( file it is looking for or until the server responds with a) s
-5 272 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message indicating an error \(normally SSH_FX_EOF if) s
-5 261 M
-( there are no more files in the directory\). The client should then) s
-5 250 M
-( close the handle using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 15]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( The SSH_FXP_OPENDIR opens a directory for reading. It has the) s
-5 679 M
-( following format:) s
-5 657 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 646 M
-( string path) s
-5 624 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' is the path name of) s
-5 613 M
-( the directory to be listed \(without any trailing slash\). See Section) s
-5 602 M
-( ``File Names'' for more information on file names. This will return) s
-5 591 M
-( an error if the path does not specify a directory or if the directory) s
-5 580 M
-( is not readable. The server will respond to this request with either) s
-5 569 M
-( a SSH_FXP_HANDLE or a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 547 M
-( Once the directory has been successfully opened, files \(and) s
-5 536 M
-( directories\) contained in it can be listed using SSH_FXP_READDIR) s
-5 525 M
-( requests. These are of the format) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 492 M
-( string handle) s
-5 470 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle) s
-5 459 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. \(It is a protocol error to attempt to) s
-5 448 M
-( use an ordinary file handle returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN.\)) s
-5 426 M
-( The server responds to this request with either a SSH_FXP_NAME or a) s
-5 415 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One or more names may be returned at a time.) s
-5 404 M
-( Full status information is returned for each name in order to speed) s
-5 393 M
-( up typical directory listings.) s
-5 371 M
-( When the client no longer wishes to read more names from the) s
-5 360 M
-( directory, it SHOULD call SSH_FXP_CLOSE for the handle. The handle) s
-5 349 M
-( should be closed regardless of whether an error has occurred or not.) s
-5 327 M
-(6.8 Retrieving File Attributes) s
-5 305 M
-( Very often, file attributes are automatically returned by) s
-5 294 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR. However, sometimes there is need to specifically) s
-5 283 M
-( retrieve the attributes for a named file. This can be done using the) s
-5 272 M
-( SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT and SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.) s
-5 250 M
-( SSH_FXP_STAT and SSH_FXP_LSTAT only differ in that SSH_FXP_STAT) s
-5 239 M
-( follows symbolic links on the server, whereas SSH_FXP_LSTAT does not) s
-5 228 M
-( follow symbolic links. Both have the same format:) s
-5 206 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 195 M
-( string path) s
-5 173 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the file) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 16]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( system object for which status is to be returned. The server) s
-5 679 M
-( responds to this request with either SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 657 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSTAT differs from the others in that it returns status) s
-5 646 M
-( information for an open file \(identified by the file handle\). Its) s
-5 635 M
-( format is as follows:) s
-5 613 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 602 M
-( string handle) s
-5 580 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `handle' is a file handle) s
-5 569 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN. The server responds to this request with) s
-5 558 M
-( SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 536 M
-(6.9 Setting File Attributes) s
-5 514 M
-( File attributes may be modified using the SSH_FXP_SETSTAT and) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT requests. These requests are used for operations) s
-5 492 M
-( such as changing the ownership, permissions or access times, as well) s
-5 481 M
-( as for truncating a file.) s
-5 459 M
-( The SSH_FXP_SETSTAT request is of the following format:) s
-5 437 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 426 M
-( string path) s
-5 415 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 393 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `path' specifies the file) s
-5 382 M
-( system object \(e.g. file or directory\) whose attributes are to be) s
-5 371 M
-( modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its) s
-5 360 M
-( attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section) s
-5 349 M
-( ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 327 M
-( An error will be returned if the specified file system object does) s
-5 316 M
-( not exist or the user does not have sufficient rights to modify the) s
-5 305 M
-( specified attributes. The server responds to this request with a) s
-5 294 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 272 M
-( The SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT request modifies the attributes of a file which) s
-5 261 M
-( is already open. It has the following format:) s
-5 239 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 228 M
-( string handle) s
-5 217 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 195 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' \(MUST be returned by) s
-5 184 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPEN\) identifies the file whose attributes are to be) s
-5 173 M
-( modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 17]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section) s
-5 679 M
-( ``File Attributes''. The server will respond to this request with) s
-5 668 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 646 M
-(6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links) s
-5 624 M
-( The SSH_FXP_READLINK request may be used to read the target of a) s
-5 613 M
-( symbolic link. It would have a data part as follows:) s
-5 591 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 580 M
-( string path) s
-5 558 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path) s
-5 547 M
-( name of the symlink to be read.) s
-5 525 M
-( The server will respond with a SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only) s
-5 514 M
-( one name and a dummy attributes value. The name in the returned) s
-5 503 M
-( packet contains the target of the link. If an error occurs, the) s
-5 492 M
-( server may respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 470 M
-( The SSH_FXP_SYMLINK request will create a symbolic link on the) s
-5 459 M
-( server. It is of the following format) s
-5 437 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 426 M
-( string linkpath) s
-5 415 M
-( string targetpath) s
-5 393 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `linkpath' specifies the path) s
-5 382 M
-( name of the symlink to be created and `targetpath' specifies the) s
-5 371 M
-( target of the symlink. The server shall respond with a) s
-5 360 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS indicating either success \(SSH_FX_OK\) or an error) s
-5 349 M
-( condition.) s
-5 327 M
-(6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name) s
-5 305 M
-( The SSH_FXP_REALPATH request can be used to have the server) s
-5 294 M
-( canonicalize any given path name to an absolute path. This is useful) s
-5 283 M
-( for converting path names containing ".." components or relative) s
-5 272 M
-( pathnames without a leading slash into absolute paths. The format of) s
-5 261 M
-( the request is as follows:) s
-5 239 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 228 M
-( string path) s
-5 206 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path) s
-5 195 M
-( name to be canonicalized. The server will respond with a) s
-5 184 M
-( SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only one name and a dummy attributes) s
-5 173 M
-( value. The name is the returned packet will be in canonical form.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 18]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( If an error occurs, the server may also respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 19]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(7. Responses from the Server to the Client) s
-5 668 M
-( The server responds to the client using one of a few response) s
-5 657 M
-( packets. All requests can return a SSH_FXP_STATUS response upon) s
-5 646 M
-( failure. When the operation is successful, any of the responses may) s
-5 635 M
-( be returned \(depending on the operation\). If no data needs to be) s
-5 624 M
-( returned to the client, the SSH_FXP_STATUS response with SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 613 M
-( status is appropriate. Otherwise, the SSH_FXP_HANDLE message is used) s
-5 602 M
-( to return a file handle \(for SSH_FXP_OPEN and SSH_FXP_OPENDIR) s
-5 591 M
-( requests\), SSH_FXP_DATA is used to return data from SSH_FXP_READ,) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_FXP_NAME is used to return one or more file names from a) s
-5 569 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR or SSH_FXP_REALPATH request, and SSH_FXP_ATTRS is) s
-5 558 M
-( used to return file attributes from SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT, and) s
-5 547 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.) s
-5 525 M
-( Exactly one response will be returned for each request. Each) s
-5 514 M
-( response packet contains a request identifier which can be used to) s
-5 503 M
-( match each response with the corresponding request. Note that it is) s
-5 492 M
-( legal to have several requests outstanding simultaneously, and the) s
-5 481 M
-( server is allowed to send responses to them in a different order from) s
-5 470 M
-( the order in which the requests were sent \(the result of their) s
-5 459 M
-( execution, however, is guaranteed to be as if they had been processed) s
-5 448 M
-( one at a time in the order in which the requests were sent\).) s
-5 426 M
-( Response packets are of the same general format as request packets.) s
-5 415 M
-( Each response packet begins with the request identifier.) s
-5 393 M
-( The format of the data portion of the SSH_FXP_STATUS response is as) s
-5 382 M
-( follows:) s
-5 360 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 349 M
-( uint32 error/status code) s
-5 338 M
-( string error message \(ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC-2279]\)) s
-5 327 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC-1766]\)) s
-5 305 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `error/status code') s
-5 294 M
-( indicates the result of the requested operation. The value SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 283 M
-( indicates success, and all other values indicate failure.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 20]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( Currently, the following values are defined \(other values may be) s
-5 679 M
-( defined by future versions of this protocol\):) s
-5 657 M
-( #define SSH_FX_OK 0) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_FX_EOF 1) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE 2) s
-5 624 M
-( #define SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED 3) s
-5 613 M
-( #define SSH_FX_FAILURE 4) s
-5 602 M
-( #define SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE 5) s
-5 591 M
-( #define SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION 6) s
-5 580 M
-( #define SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST 7) s
-5 569 M
-( #define SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED 8) s
-5 547 M
-( SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 536 M
-( Indicates successful completion of the operation.) s
-5 514 M
-( SSH_FX_EOF) s
-5 503 M
-( indicates end-of-file condition; for SSH_FX_READ it means that no) s
-5 492 M
-( more data is available in the file, and for SSH_FX_READDIR it) s
-5 481 M
-( indicates that no more files are contained in the directory.) s
-5 459 M
-( SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE) s
-5 448 M
-( is returned when a reference is made to a file which should exist) s
-5 437 M
-( but doesn't.) s
-5 415 M
-( SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED) s
-5 404 M
-( is returned when the authenticated user does not have sufficient) s
-5 393 M
-( permissions to perform the operation.) s
-5 371 M
-( SSH_FX_FAILURE) s
-5 360 M
-( is a generic catch-all error message; it should be returned if an) s
-5 349 M
-( error occurs for which there is no more specific error code) s
-5 338 M
-( defined.) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE) s
-5 305 M
-( may be returned if a badly formatted packet or protocol) s
-5 294 M
-( incompatibility is detected.) s
-5 272 M
-( SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION) s
-5 261 M
-( is a pseudo-error which indicates that the client has no) s
-5 250 M
-( connection to the server \(it can only be generated locally by the) s
-5 239 M
-( client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers\).) s
-5 217 M
-( SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST) s
-5 206 M
-( is a pseudo-error which indicates that the connection to the) s
-5 195 M
-( server has been lost \(it can only be generated locally by the) s
-5 184 M
-( client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers\).) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 21]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED) s
-5 679 M
-( indicates that an attempt was made to perform an operation which) s
-5 668 M
-( is not supported for the server \(it may be generated locally by) s
-5 657 M
-( the client if e.g. the version number exchange indicates that a) s
-5 646 M
-( required feature is not supported by the server, or it may be) s
-5 635 M
-( returned by the server if the server does not implement an) s
-5 624 M
-( operation\).) s
-5 602 M
-( The SSH_FXP_HANDLE response has the following format:) s
-5 580 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 569 M
-( string handle) s
-5 547 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is an arbitrary) s
-5 536 M
-( string that identifies an open file or directory on the server. The) s
-5 525 M
-( handle is opaque to the client; the client MUST NOT attempt to) s
-5 514 M
-( interpret or modify it in any way. The length of the handle string) s
-5 503 M
-( MUST NOT exceed 256 data bytes.) s
-5 481 M
-( The SSH_FXP_DATA response has the following format:) s
-5 459 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 448 M
-( string data) s
-5 426 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `data' is an arbitrary byte) s
-5 415 M
-( string containing the requested data. The data string may be at most) s
-5 404 M
-( the number of bytes requested in a SSH_FXP_READ request, but may also) s
-5 393 M
-( be shorter if end of file is reached or if the read is from something) s
-5 382 M
-( other than a regular file.) s
-5 360 M
-( The SSH_FXP_NAME response has the following format:) s
-5 338 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 327 M
-( uint32 count) s
-5 316 M
-( repeats count times:) s
-5 305 M
-( string filename) s
-5 294 M
-( string longname) s
-5 283 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 261 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `count' is the number of names) s
-5 250 M
-( returned in this response, and the remaining fields repeat `count') s
-5 239 M
-( times \(so that all three fields are first included for the first) s
-5 228 M
-( file, then for the second file, etc\). In the repeated part,) s
-5 217 M
-( `filename' is a file name being returned \(for SSH_FXP_READDIR, it) s
-5 206 M
-( will be a relative name within the directory, without any path) s
-5 195 M
-( components; for SSH_FXP_REALPATH it will be an absolute path name\),) s
-5 184 M
-( `longname' is an expanded format for the file name, similar to what) s
-5 173 M
-( is returned by "ls -l" on Unix systems, and `attrs' is the attributes) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-( of the file as described in Section ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 668 M
-( The format of the `longname' field is unspecified by this protocol.) s
-5 657 M
-( It MUST be suitable for use in the output of a directory listing) s
-5 646 M
-( command \(in fact, the recommended operation for a directory listing) s
-5 635 M
-( command is to simply display this data\). However, clients SHOULD NOT) s
-5 624 M
-( attempt to parse the longname field for file attributes; they SHOULD) s
-5 613 M
-( use the attrs field instead.) s
-5 591 M
-( The recommended format for the longname field is as follows:) s
-5 569 M
-( -rwxr-xr-x 1 mjos staff 348911 Mar 25 14:29 t-filexfer) s
-5 558 M
-( 1234567890 123 12345678 12345678 12345678 123456789012) s
-5 536 M
-( Here, the first line is sample output, and the second field indicates) s
-5 525 M
-( widths of the various fields. Fields are separated by spaces. The) s
-5 514 M
-( first field lists file permissions for user, group, and others; the) s
-5 503 M
-( second field is link count; the third field is the name of the user) s
-5 492 M
-( who owns the file; the fourth field is the name of the group that) s
-5 481 M
-( owns the file; the fifth field is the size of the file in bytes; the) s
-5 470 M
-( sixth field \(which actually may contain spaces, but is fixed to 12) s
-5 459 M
-( characters\) is the file modification time, and the seventh field is) s
-5 448 M
-( the file name. Each field is specified to be a minimum of certain) s
-5 437 M
-( number of character positions \(indicated by the second line above\),) s
-5 426 M
-( but may also be longer if the data does not fit in the specified) s
-5 415 M
-( length.) s
-5 393 M
-( The SSH_FXP_ATTRS response has the following format:) s
-5 371 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 360 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 338 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `attrs' is the returned) s
-5 327 M
-( file attributes as described in Section ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(8. Vendor-Specific Extensions) s
-5 668 M
-( The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED request provides a generic extension mechanism) s
-5 657 M
-( for adding vendor-specific commands. The request has the following) s
-5 646 M
-( format:) s
-5 624 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 613 M
-( string extended-request) s
-5 602 M
-( ... any request-specific data ...) s
-5 580 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `extended-request' is a) s
-5 569 M
-( string of the format "name@domain", where domain is an internet) s
-5 558 M
-( domain name of the vendor defining the request. The rest of the) s
-5 547 M
-( request is completely vendor-specific, and servers should only) s
-5 536 M
-( attempt to interpret it if they recognize the `extended-request') s
-5 525 M
-( name.) s
-5 503 M
-( The server may respond to such requests using any of the response) s
-5 492 M
-( packets defined in Section ``Responses from the Server to the) s
-5 481 M
-( Client''. Additionally, the server may also respond with a) s
-5 470 M
-( SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet, as defined below. If the server does) s
-5 459 M
-( not recognize the `extended-request' name, then the server MUST) s
-5 448 M
-( respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS with error/status set to) s
-5 437 M
-( SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED.) s
-5 415 M
-( The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet can be used to carry arbitrary) s
-5 404 M
-( extension-specific data from the server to the client. It is of the) s
-5 393 M
-( following format:) s
-5 371 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 360 M
-( ... any request-specific data ...) s
-5 129 M
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(9. Security Considerations) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol assumes that it is run over a secure channel and that) s
-5 657 M
-( the endpoints of the channel have been authenticated. Thus, this) s
-5 646 M
-( protocol assumes that it is externally protected from network-level) s
-5 635 M
-( attacks.) s
-5 613 M
-( This protocol provides file system access to arbitrary files on the) s
-5 602 M
-( server \(only constrained by the server implementation\). It is the) s
-5 591 M
-( responsibility of the server implementation to enforce any access) s
-5 580 M
-( controls that may be required to limit the access allowed for any) s
-5 569 M
-( particular user \(the user being authenticated externally to this) s
-5 558 M
-( protocol, typically using the SSH User Authentication Protocol [6].) s
-5 536 M
-( Care must be taken in the server implementation to check the validity) s
-5 525 M
-( of received file handle strings. The server should not rely on them) s
-5 514 M
-( directly; it MUST check the validity of each handle before relying on) s
-5 503 M
-( it.) s
-5 129 M
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(10. Changes from previous protocol versions) s
-5 668 M
-( The SSH File Transfer Protocol has changed over time, before it's) s
-5 657 M
-( standardization. The following is a description of the incompatible) s
-5 646 M
-( changes between different versions.) s
-5 624 M
-(10.1 Changes between versions 3 and 2) s
-5 602 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_READLINK and SSH_FXP_SYMLINK messages were added.) s
-5 580 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY messages were) s
-5 569 M
-( added.) s
-5 547 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_STATUS message was changed to include fields `error) s
-5 536 M
-( message' and `language tag'.) s
-5 503 M
-(10.2 Changes between versions 2 and 1) s
-5 481 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_RENAME message was added.) s
-5 448 M
-(10.3 Changes between versions 1 and 0) s
-5 426 M
-( o Implementation changes, no actual protocol changes.) s
-5 129 M
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(11. Trademark Issues) s
-5 668 M
-( "ssh" is a registered trademark of SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 657 M
-( in the United States and/or other countries.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 27]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(References) s
-5 668 M
-( [1] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A. and) s
-5 657 M
-( P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January) s
-5 646 M
-( 1999.) s
-5 624 M
-( [2] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information) s
-5 613 M
-( Technology - Portable Operating System Interface \(POSIX\) - Part) s
-5 602 M
-( 1: System Application Program Interface \(API\) [C Language]",) s
-5 591 M
-( IEEE Standard 1003.2, 1996.) s
-5 569 M
-( [3] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 558 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Architecture", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 547 M
-( architecture-09 \(work in progress\), July 2001.) s
-5 525 M
-( [4] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 514 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Transport Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 503 M
-( architecture-09 \(work in progress\), July 2001.) s
-5 481 M
-( [5] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 470 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Connection Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-connect-11) s
-5 459 M
-( \(work in progress\), July 2001.) s
-5 437 M
-( [6] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 426 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Authentication Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 415 M
-( userauth-11 \(work in progress\), July 2001.) s
-5 382 M
-(Authors' Addresses) s
-5 360 M
-( Tatu Ylonen) s
-5 349 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 338 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 327 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 316 M
-( Finland) s
-5 294 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 261 M
-( Sami Lehtinen) s
-5 250 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 239 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 228 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 217 M
-( Finland) s
-5 195 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001) s
-5 690 M
-(Full Copyright Statement) s
-5 668 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2001\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 646 M
-( This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to) s
-5 635 M
-( others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it) s
-5 624 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
-5 613 M
-( and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any) s
-5 602 M
-( kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are) s
-5 591 M
-( included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this) s
-5 580 M
-( document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing) s
-5 569 M
-( the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other) s
-5 558 M
-( Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of) s
-5 547 M
-( developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for) s
-5 536 M
-( copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be) s
-5 525 M
-( followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than) s
-5 514 M
-( English.) s
-5 492 M
-( The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be) s
-5 481 M
-( revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.) s
-5 459 M
-( This document and the information contained herein is provided on an) s
-5 448 M
-( "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING) s
-5 437 M
-( TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING) s
-5 426 M
-( BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION) s
-5 415 M
-( HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF) s
-5 404 M
-( MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.) s
-5 382 M
-(Acknowledgement) s
-5 360 M
-( Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the) s
-5 349 M
-( Internet Society.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 29]) s
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diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index c4ec8c1125..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1627 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Network Working Group T. Ylonen
-Internet-Draft S. Lehtinen
-Expires: April 1, 2002 SSH Communications Security Corp
- October 2001
-
-
- SSH File Transfer Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
- other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
- Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on April 1, 2002.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol provides secure file transfer
- functionality over any reliable data stream. It is the standard file
- transfer protocol for use with the SSH2 protocol. This document
- describes the file transfer protocol and its interface to the SSH2
- protocol suite.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 3. General Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 4. Protocol Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 5. File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 6. Requests From the Client to the Server . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 6.2 File Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 6.4 Reading and Writing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 6.5 Removing and Renaming Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 6.7 Scanning Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 6.8 Retrieving File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.9 Setting File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- 6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 7. Responses from the Server to the Client . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 8. Vendor-Specific Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- 10. Changes from previous protocol versions . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 10.1 Changes between versions 3 and 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 10.2 Changes between versions 2 and 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 10.3 Changes between versions 1 and 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 11. Trademark Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
- Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
-
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-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-1. Introduction
-
- This protocol provides secure file transfer (and more generally file
- system access) functionality over a reliable data stream, such as a
- channel in the SSH2 protocol [3].
-
- This protocol is designed so that it could be used to implement a
- secure remote file system service, as well as a secure file transfer
- service.
-
- This protocol assumes that it runs over a secure channel, and that
- the server has already authenticated the user at the client end, and
- that the identity of the client user is externally available to the
- server implementation.
-
- In general, this protocol follows a simple request-response model.
- Each request and response contains a sequence number and multiple
- requests may be pending simultaneously. There are a relatively large
- number of different request messages, but a small number of possible
- response messages. Each request has one or more response messages
- that may be returned in result (e.g., a read either returns data or
- reports error status).
-
- The packet format descriptions in this specification follow the
- notation presented in the secsh architecture draft.[3].
-
- Even though this protocol is described in the context of the SSH2
- protocol, this protocol is general and independent of the rest of the
- SSH2 protocol suite. It could be used in a number of different
- applications, such as secure file transfer over TLS RFC 2246 [1] and
- transfer of management information in VPN applications.
-
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-
-
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-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 3]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol
-
- When used with the SSH2 Protocol suite, this protocol is intended to
- be used from the SSH Connection Protocol [5] as a subsystem, as
- described in section ``Starting a Shell or a Command''. The
- subsystem name used with this protocol is "sftp".
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 4]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-3. General Packet Format
-
- All packets transmitted over the secure connection are of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 length
- byte type
- byte[length - 1] data payload
-
- That is, they are just data preceded by 32-bit length and 8-bit type
- fields. The `length' is the length of the data area, and does not
- include the `length' field itself. The format and interpretation of
- the data area depends on the packet type.
-
- All packet descriptions below only specify the packet type and the
- data that goes into the data field. Thus, they should be prefixed by
- the `length' and `type' fields.
-
- The maximum size of a packet is in practice determined by the client
- (the maximum size of read or write requests that it sends, plus a few
- bytes of packet overhead). All servers SHOULD support packets of at
- least 34000 bytes (where the packet size refers to the full length,
- including the header above). This should allow for reads and writes
- of at most 32768 bytes.
-
- There is no limit on the number of outstanding (non-acknowledged)
- requests that the client may send to the server. In practice this is
- limited by the buffering available on the data stream and the queuing
- performed by the server. If the server's queues are full, it should
- not read any more data from the stream, and flow control will prevent
- the client from sending more requests. Note, however, that while
- there is no restriction on the protocol level, the client's API may
- provide a limit in order to prevent infinite queuing of outgoing
- requests at the client.
-
-
-
-
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-
- The following values are defined for packet types.
-
- #define SSH_FXP_INIT 1
- #define SSH_FXP_VERSION 2
- #define SSH_FXP_OPEN 3
- #define SSH_FXP_CLOSE 4
- #define SSH_FXP_READ 5
- #define SSH_FXP_WRITE 6
- #define SSH_FXP_LSTAT 7
- #define SSH_FXP_FSTAT 8
- #define SSH_FXP_SETSTAT 9
- #define SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT 10
- #define SSH_FXP_OPENDIR 11
- #define SSH_FXP_READDIR 12
- #define SSH_FXP_REMOVE 13
- #define SSH_FXP_MKDIR 14
- #define SSH_FXP_RMDIR 15
- #define SSH_FXP_REALPATH 16
- #define SSH_FXP_STAT 17
- #define SSH_FXP_RENAME 18
- #define SSH_FXP_READLINK 19
- #define SSH_FXP_SYMLINK 20
- #define SSH_FXP_STATUS 101
- #define SSH_FXP_HANDLE 102
- #define SSH_FXP_DATA 103
- #define SSH_FXP_NAME 104
- #define SSH_FXP_ATTRS 105
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED 200
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY 201
-
- Additional packet types should only be defined if the protocol
- version number (see Section ``Protocol Initialization'') is
- incremented, and their use MUST be negotiated using the version
- number. However, the SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY
- packets can be used to implement vendor-specific extensions. See
- Section ``Vendor-Specific-Extensions'' for more details.
-
-
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-
-4. Protocol Initialization
-
- When the file transfer protocol starts, it first sends a SSH_FXP_INIT
- (including its version number) packet to the server. The server
- responds with a SSH_FXP_VERSION packet, supplying the lowest of its
- own and the client's version number. Both parties should from then
- on adhere to particular version of the protocol.
-
- The SSH_FXP_INIT packet (from client to server) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
- <extension data>
-
- The SSH_FXP_VERSION packet (from server to client) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
- <extension data>
-
- The version number of the protocol specified in this document is 3.
- The version number should be incremented for each incompatible
- revision of this protocol.
-
- The extension data in the above packets may be empty, or may be a
- sequence of
-
- string extension_name
- string extension_data
-
- pairs (both strings MUST always be present if one is, but the
- `extension_data' string may be of zero length). If present, these
- strings indicate extensions to the baseline protocol. The
- `extension_name' field(s) identify the name of the extension. The
- name should be of the form "name@domain", where the domain is the DNS
- domain name of the organization defining the extension. Additional
- names that are not of this format may be defined later by the IETF.
- Implementations MUST silently ignore any extensions whose name they
- do not recognize.
-
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-
-5. File Attributes
-
- A new compound data type is defined for encoding file attributes. It
- is basically just a combination of elementary types, but is defined
- once because of the non-trivial description of the fields and to
- ensure maintainability.
-
- The same encoding is used both when returning file attributes from
- the server and when sending file attributes to the server. When
- sending it to the server, the flags field specifies which attributes
- are included, and the server will use default values for the
- remaining attributes (or will not modify the values of remaining
- attributes). When receiving attributes from the server, the flags
- specify which attributes are included in the returned data. The
- server normally returns all attributes it knows about.
-
- uint32 flags
- uint64 size present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE
- uint32 uid present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID
- uint32 gid present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID
- uint32 permissions present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS
- uint32 atime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ACMODTIME
- uint32 mtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ACMODTIME
- uint32 extended_count present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED
- string extended_type
- string extended_data
- ... more extended data (extended_type - extended_data pairs),
- so that number of pairs equals extended_count
-
- The `flags' specify which of the fields are present. Those fields
- for which the corresponding flag is not set are not present (not
- included in the packet). New flags can only be added by incrementing
- the protocol version number (or by using the extension mechanism
- described below).
-
- The `size' field specifies the size of the file in bytes.
-
- The `uid' and `gid' fields contain numeric Unix-like user and group
- identifiers, respectively.
-
- The `permissions' field contains a bit mask of file permissions as
- defined by posix [1].
-
- The `atime' and `mtime' contain the access and modification times of
- the files, respectively. They are represented as seconds from Jan 1,
- 1970 in UTC.
-
- The SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED flag provides a general extension
-
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- mechanism for vendor-specific extensions. If the flag is specified,
- then the `extended_count' field is present. It specifies the number
- of extended_type-extended_data pairs that follow. Each of these
- pairs specifies an extended attribute. For each of the attributes,
- the extended_type field should be a string of the format
- "name@domain", where "domain" is a valid, registered domain name and
- "name" identifies the method. The IETF may later standardize certain
- names that deviate from this format (e.g., that do not contain the
- "@" sign). The interpretation of `extended_data' depends on the
- type. Implementations SHOULD ignore extended data fields that they
- do not understand.
-
- Additional fields can be added to the attributes by either defining
- additional bits to the flags field to indicate their presence, or by
- defining extended attributes for them. The extended attributes
- mechanism is recommended for most purposes; additional flags bits
- should only be defined by an IETF standards action that also
- increments the protocol version number. The use of such new fields
- MUST be negotiated by the version number in the protocol exchange.
- It is a protocol error if a packet with unsupported protocol bits is
- received.
-
- The flags bits are defined to have the following values:
-
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID 0x00000002
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS 0x00000004
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACMODTIME 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED 0x80000000
-
-
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-
-6. Requests From the Client to the Server
-
- Requests from the client to the server represent the various file
- system operations. Each request begins with an `id' field, which is
- a 32-bit identifier identifying the request (selected by the client).
- The same identifier will be returned in the response to the request.
- One possible implementation of it is a monotonically increasing
- request sequence number (modulo 2^32).
-
- Many operations in the protocol operate on open files. The
- SSH_FXP_OPEN request can return a file handle (which is an opaque
- variable-length string) which may be used to access the file later
- (e.g. in a read operation). The client MUST NOT send requests the
- server with bogus or closed handles. However, the server MUST
- perform adequate checks on the handle in order to avoid security
- risks due to fabricated handles.
-
- This design allows either stateful and stateless server
- implementation, as well as an implementation which caches state
- between requests but may also flush it. The contents of the file
- handle string are entirely up to the server and its design. The
- client should not modify or attempt to interpret the file handle
- strings.
-
- The file handle strings MUST NOT be longer than 256 bytes.
-
-6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering
-
- The protocol and implementations MUST process requests relating to
- the same file in the order in which they are received. In other
- words, if an application submits multiple requests to the server, the
- results in the responses will be the same as if it had sent the
- requests one at a time and waited for the response in each case. For
- example, the server may process non-overlapping read/write requests
- to the same file in parallel, but overlapping reads and writes cannot
- be reordered or parallelized. However, there are no ordering
- restrictions on the server for processing requests from two different
- file transfer connections. The server may interleave and parallelize
- them at will.
-
- There are no restrictions on the order in which responses to
- outstanding requests are delivered to the client, except that the
- server must ensure fairness in the sense that processing of no
- request will be indefinitely delayed even if the client is sending
- other requests so that there are multiple outstanding requests all
- the time.
-
-
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-
-6.2 File Names
-
- This protocol represents file names as strings. File names are
- assumed to use the slash ('/') character as a directory separator.
-
- File names starting with a slash are "absolute", and are relative to
- the root of the file system. Names starting with any other character
- are relative to the user's default directory (home directory). Note
- that identifying the user is assumed to take place outside of this
- protocol.
-
- Servers SHOULD interpret a path name component ".." as referring to
- the parent directory, and "." as referring to the current directory.
- If the server implementation limits access to certain parts of the
- file system, it must be extra careful in parsing file names when
- enforcing such restrictions. There have been numerous reported
- security bugs where a ".." in a path name has allowed access outside
- the intended area.
-
- An empty path name is valid, and it refers to the user's default
- directory (usually the user's home directory).
-
- Otherwise, no syntax is defined for file names by this specification.
- Clients should not make any other assumptions; however, they can
- splice path name components returned by SSH_FXP_READDIR together
- using a slash ('/') as the separator, and that will work as expected.
-
- It is understood that the lack of well-defined semantics for file
- names may cause interoperability problems between clients and servers
- using radically different operating systems. However, this approach
- is known to work acceptably with most systems, and alternative
- approaches that e.g. treat file names as sequences of structured
- components are quite complicated.
-
-6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files
-
- Files are opened and created using the SSH_FXP_OPEN message, whose
- data part is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string filename
- uint32 pflags
- ATTRS attrs
-
- The `id' field is the request identifier as for all requests.
-
- The `filename' field specifies the file name. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information.
-
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-
- The `pflags' field is a bitmask. The following bits have been
- defined.
-
- #define SSH_FXF_READ 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FXF_WRITE 0x00000002
- #define SSH_FXF_APPEND 0x00000004
- #define SSH_FXF_CREAT 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FXF_TRUNC 0x00000010
- #define SSH_FXF_EXCL 0x00000020
-
- These have the following meanings:
-
- SSH_FXF_READ
- Open the file for reading.
-
- SSH_FXF_WRITE
- Open the file for writing. If both this and SSH_FXF_READ are
- specified, the file is opened for both reading and writing.
-
- SSH_FXF_APPEND
- Force all writes to append data at the end of the file.
-
- SSH_FXF_CREAT
- If this flag is specified, then a new file will be created if one
- does not already exist (if O_TRUNC is specified, the new file will
- be truncated to zero length if it previously exists).
-
- SSH_FXF_TRUNC
- Forces an existing file with the same name to be truncated to zero
- length when creating a file by specifying SSH_FXF_CREAT.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
- SSH_FXF_EXCL
- Causes the request to fail if the named file already exists.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
- The `attrs' field specifies the initial attributes for the file.
- Default values will be used for those attributes that are not
- specified. See Section ``File Attributes'' for more information.
-
- Regardless the server operating system, the file will always be
- opened in "binary" mode (i.e., no translations between different
- character sets and newline encodings).
-
- The response to this message will be either SSH_FXP_HANDLE (if the
- operation is successful) or SSH_FXP_STATUS (if the operation fails).
-
-
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-
- A file is closed by using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request. Its data field
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- previously returned in the response to SSH_FXP_OPEN or
- SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. The handle becomes invalid immediately after this
- request has been sent.
-
- The response to this request will be a SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One
- should note that on some server platforms even a close can fail.
- This can happen e.g. if the server operating system caches writes,
- and an error occurs while flushing cached writes during the close.
-
-6.4 Reading and Writing
-
- Once a file has been opened, it can be read using the SSH_FXP_READ
- message, which has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- uint32 len
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' is an open file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) relative
- to the beginning of the file from where to start reading, and `len'
- is the maximum number of bytes to read.
-
- In response to this request, the server will read as many bytes as it
- can from the file (up to `len'), and return them in a SSH_FXP_DATA
- message. If an error occurs or EOF is encountered before reading any
- data, the server will respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS. For normal disk
- files, it is guaranteed that this will read the specified number of
- bytes, or up to end of file. For e.g. device files this may return
- fewer bytes than requested.
-
- Writing to a file is achieved using the SSH_FXP_WRITE message, which
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- string data
-
- where `id' is a request identifier, `handle' is a file handle
-
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- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) from the
- beginning of the file where to start writing, and `data' is the data
- to be written.
-
- The write will extend the file if writing beyond the end of the file.
- It is legal to write way beyond the end of the file; the semantics
- are to write zeroes from the end of the file to the specified offset
- and then the data. On most operating systems, such writes do not
- allocate disk space but instead leave "holes" in the file.
-
- The server responds to a write request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
-6.5 Removing and Renaming Files
-
- Files can be removed using the SSH_FXP_REMOVE message. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string filename
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `filename' is the name of
- the file to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information. This request cannot be used to remove directories.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
- Files (and directories) can be renamed using the SSH_FXP_RENAME
- message. Its data is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string oldpath
- string newpath
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `oldpath' is the name of an
- existing file or directory, and `newpath' is the new name for the
- file or directory. It is an error if there already exists a file
- with the name specified by newpath. The server may also fail rename
- requests in other situations, for example if `oldpath' and `newpath'
- point to different file systems on the server.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
-
-
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-6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories
-
- New directories can be created using the SSH_FXP_MKDIR request. It
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `path' and `attrs' specifies
- the modifications to be made to its attributes. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information on file names. Attributes are discussed
- in more detail in Section ``File Attributes''. specifies the
- directory to be created. An error will be returned if a file or
- directory with the specified path already exists. The server will
- respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- Directories can be removed using the SSH_FXP_RMDIR request, which
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the
- directory to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information on file names. An error will be returned if no directory
- with the specified path exists, or if the specified directory is not
- empty, or if the path specified a file system object other than a
- directory. The server responds to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
-6.7 Scanning Directories
-
- The files in a directory can be listed using the SSH_FXP_OPENDIR and
- SSH_FXP_READDIR requests. Each SSH_FXP_READDIR request returns one
- or more file names with full file attributes for each file. The
- client should call SSH_FXP_READDIR repeatedly until it has found the
- file it is looking for or until the server responds with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message indicating an error (normally SSH_FX_EOF if
- there are no more files in the directory). The client should then
- close the handle using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request.
-
-
-
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-
- The SSH_FXP_OPENDIR opens a directory for reading. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' is the path name of
- the directory to be listed (without any trailing slash). See Section
- ``File Names'' for more information on file names. This will return
- an error if the path does not specify a directory or if the directory
- is not readable. The server will respond to this request with either
- a SSH_FXP_HANDLE or a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- Once the directory has been successfully opened, files (and
- directories) contained in it can be listed using SSH_FXP_READDIR
- requests. These are of the format
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. (It is a protocol error to attempt to
- use an ordinary file handle returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN.)
-
- The server responds to this request with either a SSH_FXP_NAME or a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One or more names may be returned at a time.
- Full status information is returned for each name in order to speed
- up typical directory listings.
-
- When the client no longer wishes to read more names from the
- directory, it SHOULD call SSH_FXP_CLOSE for the handle. The handle
- should be closed regardless of whether an error has occurred or not.
-
-6.8 Retrieving File Attributes
-
- Very often, file attributes are automatically returned by
- SSH_FXP_READDIR. However, sometimes there is need to specifically
- retrieve the attributes for a named file. This can be done using the
- SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT and SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- SSH_FXP_STAT and SSH_FXP_LSTAT only differ in that SSH_FXP_STAT
- follows symbolic links on the server, whereas SSH_FXP_LSTAT does not
- follow symbolic links. Both have the same format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the file
-
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- system object for which status is to be returned. The server
- responds to this request with either SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT differs from the others in that it returns status
- information for an open file (identified by the file handle). Its
- format is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `handle' is a file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN. The server responds to this request with
- SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.9 Setting File Attributes
-
- File attributes may be modified using the SSH_FXP_SETSTAT and
- SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT requests. These requests are used for operations
- such as changing the ownership, permissions or access times, as well
- as for truncating a file.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SETSTAT request is of the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `path' specifies the file
- system object (e.g. file or directory) whose attributes are to be
- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''.
-
- An error will be returned if the specified file system object does
- not exist or the user does not have sufficient rights to modify the
- specified attributes. The server responds to this request with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- The SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT request modifies the attributes of a file which
- is already open. It has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' (MUST be returned by
- SSH_FXP_OPEN) identifies the file whose attributes are to be
- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
-
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- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''. The server will respond to this request with
- SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links
-
- The SSH_FXP_READLINK request may be used to read the target of a
- symbolic link. It would have a data part as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be read.
-
- The server will respond with a SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only
- one name and a dummy attributes value. The name in the returned
- packet contains the target of the link. If an error occurs, the
- server may respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SYMLINK request will create a symbolic link on the
- server. It is of the following format
-
- uint32 id
- string linkpath
- string targetpath
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `linkpath' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be created and `targetpath' specifies the
- target of the symlink. The server shall respond with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS indicating either success (SSH_FX_OK) or an error
- condition.
-
-6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name
-
- The SSH_FXP_REALPATH request can be used to have the server
- canonicalize any given path name to an absolute path. This is useful
- for converting path names containing ".." components or relative
- pathnames without a leading slash into absolute paths. The format of
- the request is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name to be canonicalized. The server will respond with a
- SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only one name and a dummy attributes
- value. The name is the returned packet will be in canonical form.
-
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- If an error occurs, the server may also respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
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-7. Responses from the Server to the Client
-
- The server responds to the client using one of a few response
- packets. All requests can return a SSH_FXP_STATUS response upon
- failure. When the operation is successful, any of the responses may
- be returned (depending on the operation). If no data needs to be
- returned to the client, the SSH_FXP_STATUS response with SSH_FX_OK
- status is appropriate. Otherwise, the SSH_FXP_HANDLE message is used
- to return a file handle (for SSH_FXP_OPEN and SSH_FXP_OPENDIR
- requests), SSH_FXP_DATA is used to return data from SSH_FXP_READ,
- SSH_FXP_NAME is used to return one or more file names from a
- SSH_FXP_READDIR or SSH_FXP_REALPATH request, and SSH_FXP_ATTRS is
- used to return file attributes from SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT, and
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- Exactly one response will be returned for each request. Each
- response packet contains a request identifier which can be used to
- match each response with the corresponding request. Note that it is
- legal to have several requests outstanding simultaneously, and the
- server is allowed to send responses to them in a different order from
- the order in which the requests were sent (the result of their
- execution, however, is guaranteed to be as if they had been processed
- one at a time in the order in which the requests were sent).
-
- Response packets are of the same general format as request packets.
- Each response packet begins with the request identifier.
-
- The format of the data portion of the SSH_FXP_STATUS response is as
- follows:
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 error/status code
- string error message (ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC-2279])
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC-1766])
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `error/status code'
- indicates the result of the requested operation. The value SSH_FX_OK
- indicates success, and all other values indicate failure.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 20]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
- Currently, the following values are defined (other values may be
- defined by future versions of this protocol):
-
- #define SSH_FX_OK 0
- #define SSH_FX_EOF 1
- #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE 2
- #define SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED 3
- #define SSH_FX_FAILURE 4
- #define SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE 5
- #define SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION 6
- #define SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST 7
- #define SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED 8
-
- SSH_FX_OK
- Indicates successful completion of the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_EOF
- indicates end-of-file condition; for SSH_FX_READ it means that no
- more data is available in the file, and for SSH_FX_READDIR it
- indicates that no more files are contained in the directory.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE
- is returned when a reference is made to a file which should exist
- but doesn't.
-
- SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED
- is returned when the authenticated user does not have sufficient
- permissions to perform the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_FAILURE
- is a generic catch-all error message; it should be returned if an
- error occurs for which there is no more specific error code
- defined.
-
- SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE
- may be returned if a badly formatted packet or protocol
- incompatibility is detected.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the client has no
- connection to the server (it can only be generated locally by the
- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
- SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the connection to the
- server has been lost (it can only be generated locally by the
- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 21]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED
- indicates that an attempt was made to perform an operation which
- is not supported for the server (it may be generated locally by
- the client if e.g. the version number exchange indicates that a
- required feature is not supported by the server, or it may be
- returned by the server if the server does not implement an
- operation).
-
- The SSH_FXP_HANDLE response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is an arbitrary
- string that identifies an open file or directory on the server. The
- handle is opaque to the client; the client MUST NOT attempt to
- interpret or modify it in any way. The length of the handle string
- MUST NOT exceed 256 data bytes.
-
- The SSH_FXP_DATA response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string data
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `data' is an arbitrary byte
- string containing the requested data. The data string may be at most
- the number of bytes requested in a SSH_FXP_READ request, but may also
- be shorter if end of file is reached or if the read is from something
- other than a regular file.
-
- The SSH_FXP_NAME response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 count
- repeats count times:
- string filename
- string longname
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `count' is the number of names
- returned in this response, and the remaining fields repeat `count'
- times (so that all three fields are first included for the first
- file, then for the second file, etc). In the repeated part,
- `filename' is a file name being returned (for SSH_FXP_READDIR, it
- will be a relative name within the directory, without any path
- components; for SSH_FXP_REALPATH it will be an absolute path name),
- `longname' is an expanded format for the file name, similar to what
- is returned by "ls -l" on Unix systems, and `attrs' is the attributes
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 22]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
- of the file as described in Section ``File Attributes''.
-
- The format of the `longname' field is unspecified by this protocol.
- It MUST be suitable for use in the output of a directory listing
- command (in fact, the recommended operation for a directory listing
- command is to simply display this data). However, clients SHOULD NOT
- attempt to parse the longname field for file attributes; they SHOULD
- use the attrs field instead.
-
- The recommended format for the longname field is as follows:
-
- -rwxr-xr-x 1 mjos staff 348911 Mar 25 14:29 t-filexfer
- 1234567890 123 12345678 12345678 12345678 123456789012
-
- Here, the first line is sample output, and the second field indicates
- widths of the various fields. Fields are separated by spaces. The
- first field lists file permissions for user, group, and others; the
- second field is link count; the third field is the name of the user
- who owns the file; the fourth field is the name of the group that
- owns the file; the fifth field is the size of the file in bytes; the
- sixth field (which actually may contain spaces, but is fixed to 12
- characters) is the file modification time, and the seventh field is
- the file name. Each field is specified to be a minimum of certain
- number of character positions (indicated by the second line above),
- but may also be longer if the data does not fit in the specified
- length.
-
- The SSH_FXP_ATTRS response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `attrs' is the returned
- file attributes as described in Section ``File Attributes''.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 23]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-8. Vendor-Specific Extensions
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED request provides a generic extension mechanism
- for adding vendor-specific commands. The request has the following
- format:
-
- uint32 id
- string extended-request
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `extended-request' is a
- string of the format "name@domain", where domain is an internet
- domain name of the vendor defining the request. The rest of the
- request is completely vendor-specific, and servers should only
- attempt to interpret it if they recognize the `extended-request'
- name.
-
- The server may respond to such requests using any of the response
- packets defined in Section ``Responses from the Server to the
- Client''. Additionally, the server may also respond with a
- SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet, as defined below. If the server does
- not recognize the `extended-request' name, then the server MUST
- respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS with error/status set to
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED.
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet can be used to carry arbitrary
- extension-specific data from the server to the client. It is of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 24]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-9. Security Considerations
-
- This protocol assumes that it is run over a secure channel and that
- the endpoints of the channel have been authenticated. Thus, this
- protocol assumes that it is externally protected from network-level
- attacks.
-
- This protocol provides file system access to arbitrary files on the
- server (only constrained by the server implementation). It is the
- responsibility of the server implementation to enforce any access
- controls that may be required to limit the access allowed for any
- particular user (the user being authenticated externally to this
- protocol, typically using the SSH User Authentication Protocol [6].
-
- Care must be taken in the server implementation to check the validity
- of received file handle strings. The server should not rely on them
- directly; it MUST check the validity of each handle before relying on
- it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 25]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-10. Changes from previous protocol versions
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol has changed over time, before it's
- standardization. The following is a description of the incompatible
- changes between different versions.
-
-10.1 Changes between versions 3 and 2
-
- o The SSH_FXP_READLINK and SSH_FXP_SYMLINK messages were added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY messages were
- added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_STATUS message was changed to include fields `error
- message' and `language tag'.
-
-
-10.2 Changes between versions 2 and 1
-
- o The SSH_FXP_RENAME message was added.
-
-
-10.3 Changes between versions 1 and 0
-
- o Implementation changes, no actual protocol changes.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 26]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-11. Trademark Issues
-
- "ssh" is a registered trademark of SSH Communications Security Corp
- in the United States and/or other countries.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 27]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-References
-
- [1] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A. and
- P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January
- 1999.
-
- [2] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information
- Technology - Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part
- 1: System Application Program Interface (API) [C Language]",
- IEEE Standard 1003.2, 1996.
-
- [3] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Architecture", draft-ietf-secsh-
- architecture-09 (work in progress), July 2001.
-
- [4] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Transport Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-
- architecture-09 (work in progress), July 2001.
-
- [5] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Connection Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-connect-11
- (work in progress), July 2001.
-
- [6] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Authentication Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-
- userauth-11 (work in progress), July 2001.
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Sami Lehtinen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 28]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2001
-
-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
- and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
- kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
- included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
- document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
- the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
- Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
- developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
- copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
- followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
- English.
-
- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
- revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
- HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-Acknowledgement
-
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Lehtinen Expires April 1, 2002 [Page 29]
-
-
-
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.2.ps b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.2.ps
deleted file mode 100644
index 6a40cd6067..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.2.ps
+++ /dev/null
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-5 701 M
-(Secure Shell Working Group J. Galbraith) s
-5 690 M
-(Internet-Draft VanDyke Software) s
-5 679 M
-(Expires: April 16, 2003 T. Ylonen) s
-5 668 M
-( S. Lehtinen) s
-5 657 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 646 M
-( October 16, 2002) s
-5 613 M
-( SSH File Transfer Protocol) s
-5 602 M
-( draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt) s
-5 580 M
-(Status of this Memo) s
-5 558 M
-( This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with) s
-5 547 M
-( all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.) s
-5 525 M
-( Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering) s
-5 514 M
-( Task Force \(IETF\), its areas, and its working groups. Note that) s
-5 503 M
-( other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-) s
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-( Drafts.) s
-5 470 M
-( Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months) s
-5 459 M
-( and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any) s
-5 448 M
-( time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference) s
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-( material or to cite them other than as "work in progress.") s
-5 415 M
-( The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://) s
-5 404 M
-( www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.) s
-5 382 M
-( The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at) s
-5 371 M
-( http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.) s
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-( This Internet-Draft will expire on April 16, 2003.) s
-5 327 M
-(Copyright Notice) s
-5 305 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2002\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 283 M
-(Abstract) s
-5 261 M
-( The SSH File Transfer Protocol provides secure file transfer) s
-5 250 M
-( functionality over any reliable data stream. It is the standard file) s
-5 239 M
-( transfer protocol for use with the SSH2 protocol. This document) s
-5 228 M
-( describes the file transfer protocol and its interface to the SSH2) s
-5 217 M
-( protocol suite.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 1]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(Table of Contents) s
-5 668 M
-( 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
-5 657 M
-( 2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
-5 646 M
-( 3. General Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
-5 635 M
-( 4. Protocol Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 624 M
-( 4.1 Client Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 613 M
-( 4.2 Server Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 602 M
-( 4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention . . . . . . . . . . 8) s
-5 591 M
-( 5. File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9) s
-5 580 M
-( 5.1 Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9) s
-5 569 M
-( 5.2 Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 558 M
-( 5.3 Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 547 M
-( 5.4 Owner and Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 536 M
-( 5.5 Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 525 M
-( 5.6 Times . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 514 M
-( 5.7 ACL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 503 M
-( 5.8 Extended attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
-5 492 M
-( 6. Requests From the Client to the Server . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
-5 481 M
-( 6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
-5 470 M
-( 6.2 File Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
-5 459 M
-( 6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
-5 448 M
-( 6.4 Reading and Writing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17) s
-5 437 M
-( 6.5 Removing and Renaming Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
-5 426 M
-( 6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
-5 415 M
-( 6.7 Scanning Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
-5 404 M
-( 6.8 Retrieving File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20) s
-5 393 M
-( 6.9 Setting File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
-5 382 M
-( 6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22) s
-5 371 M
-( 6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 360 M
-( 6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 349 M
-( 7. Responses from the Server to the Client . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 338 M
-( 8. Vendor-Specific Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28) s
-5 327 M
-( 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29) s
-5 316 M
-( 10. Changes from previous protocol versions . . . . . . . . . 30) s
-5 305 M
-( 10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30) s
-5 294 M
-( 10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31) s
-5 283 M
-( 10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31) s
-5 272 M
-( 10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31) s
-5 261 M
-( 11. Trademark Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32) s
-5 250 M
-( References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33) s
-5 239 M
-( Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33) s
-5 228 M
-( Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35) s
-5 129 M
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(1. Introduction) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol provides secure file transfer \(and more generally file) s
-5 657 M
-( system access\) functionality over a reliable data stream, such as a) s
-5 646 M
-( channel in the SSH2 protocol [5].) s
-5 624 M
-( This protocol is designed so that it could be used to implement a) s
-5 613 M
-( secure remote file system service, as well as a secure file transfer) s
-5 602 M
-( service.) s
-5 580 M
-( This protocol assumes that it runs over a secure channel, and that) s
-5 569 M
-( the server has already authenticated the user at the client end, and) s
-5 558 M
-( that the identity of the client user is externally available to the) s
-5 547 M
-( server implementation.) s
-5 525 M
-( In general, this protocol follows a simple request-response model.) s
-5 514 M
-( Each request and response contains a sequence number and multiple) s
-5 503 M
-( requests may be pending simultaneously. There are a relatively large) s
-5 492 M
-( number of different request messages, but a small number of possible) s
-5 481 M
-( response messages. Each request has one or more response messages) s
-5 470 M
-( that may be returned in result \(e.g., a read either returns data or) s
-5 459 M
-( reports error status\).) s
-5 437 M
-( The packet format descriptions in this specification follow the) s
-5 426 M
-( notation presented in the secsh architecture draft. [5]) s
-5 404 M
-( Even though this protocol is described in the context of the SSH2) s
-5 393 M
-( protocol, this protocol is general and independent of the rest of the) s
-5 382 M
-( SSH2 protocol suite. It could be used in a number of different) s
-5 371 M
-( applications, such as secure file transfer over TLS RFC 2246 [1] and) s
-5 360 M
-( transfer of management information in VPN applications.) s
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-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 3]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol) s
-5 668 M
-( When used with the SSH2 Protocol suite, this protocol is intended to) s
-5 657 M
-( be used from the SSH Connection Protocol [7] as a subsystem, as) s
-5 646 M
-( described in section ``Starting a Shell or a Command''. The) s
-5 635 M
-( subsystem name used with this protocol is "sftp".) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(3. General Packet Format) s
-5 668 M
-( All packets transmitted over the secure connection are of the) s
-5 657 M
-( following format:) s
-5 635 M
-( uint32 length) s
-5 624 M
-( byte type) s
-5 613 M
-( byte[length - 1] data payload) s
-5 591 M
-( That is, they are just data preceded by 32-bit length and 8-bit type) s
-5 580 M
-( fields. The `length' is the length of the data area, and does not) s
-5 569 M
-( include the `length' field itself. The format and interpretation of) s
-5 558 M
-( the data area depends on the packet type.) s
-5 536 M
-( All packet descriptions below only specify the packet type and the) s
-5 525 M
-( data that goes into the data field. Thus, they should be prefixed by) s
-5 514 M
-( the `length' and `type' fields.) s
-5 492 M
-( The maximum size of a packet is in practice determined by the client) s
-5 481 M
-( \(the maximum size of read or write requests that it sends, plus a few) s
-5 470 M
-( bytes of packet overhead\). All servers SHOULD support packets of at) s
-5 459 M
-( least 34000 bytes \(where the packet size refers to the full length,) s
-5 448 M
-( including the header above\). This should allow for reads and writes) s
-5 437 M
-( of at most 32768 bytes.) s
-5 415 M
-( There is no limit on the number of outstanding \(non-acknowledged\)) s
-5 404 M
-( requests that the client may send to the server. In practice this is) s
-5 393 M
-( limited by the buffering available on the data stream and the queuing) s
-5 382 M
-( performed by the server. If the server's queues are full, it should) s
-5 371 M
-( not read any more data from the stream, and flow control will prevent) s
-5 360 M
-( the client from sending more requests. Note, however, that while) s
-5 349 M
-( there is no restriction on the protocol level, the client's API may) s
-5 338 M
-( provide a limit in order to prevent infinite queuing of outgoing) s
-5 327 M
-( requests at the client.) s
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-( The following values are defined for packet types.) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_INIT 1) s
-5 679 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_VERSION 2) s
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-( #define SSH_FXP_OPEN 3) s
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-( #define SSH_FXP_CLOSE 4) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_READ 5) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_WRITE 6) s
-5 624 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_LSTAT 7) s
-5 613 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_FSTAT 8) s
-5 602 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_SETSTAT 9) s
-5 591 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT 10) s
-5 580 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_OPENDIR 11) s
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-( #define SSH_FXP_READDIR 12) s
-5 558 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_REMOVE 13) s
-5 547 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_MKDIR 14) s
-5 536 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_RMDIR 15) s
-5 525 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_REALPATH 16) s
-5 514 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_STAT 17) s
-5 503 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_RENAME 18) s
-5 492 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_READLINK 19) s
-5 481 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_SYMLINK 20) s
-5 459 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_STATUS 101) s
-5 448 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_HANDLE 102) s
-5 437 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_DATA 103) s
-5 426 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_NAME 104) s
-5 415 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_ATTRS 105) s
-5 393 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED 200) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY 201) s
-5 360 M
-( RESERVED_FOR_EXTENSIONS 210-255) s
-5 338 M
-( Additional packet types should only be defined if the protocol) s
-5 327 M
-( version number \(see Section ``Protocol Initialization''\) is) s
-5 316 M
-( incremented, and their use MUST be negotiated using the version) s
-5 305 M
-( number. However, the SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY) s
-5 294 M
-( packets can be used to implement vendor-specific extensions. See) s
-5 283 M
-( Section ``Vendor-Specific-Extensions'' for more details.) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(4. Protocol Initialization) s
-5 668 M
-( When the file transfer protocol starts, the client first sends a) s
-5 657 M
-( SSH_FXP_INIT \(including its version number\) packet to the server.) s
-5 646 M
-( The server responds with a SSH_FXP_VERSION packet, supplying the) s
-5 635 M
-( lowest of its own and the client's version number. Both parties) s
-5 624 M
-( should from then on adhere to particular version of the protocol.) s
-5 602 M
-( The version number of the protocol specified in this document is 4.) s
-5 591 M
-( The version number should be incremented for each incompatible) s
-5 580 M
-( revision of this protocol.) s
-5 558 M
-(4.1 Client Initialization) s
-5 536 M
-( The SSH_FXP_INIT packet \(from client to server\) has the following) s
-5 525 M
-( data:) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 version) s
-5 481 M
-( Version 3 of this protocol allowed clients to include extensions in) s
-5 470 M
-( the SSH_FXP_INIT packet; however, this can cause interoperability) s
-5 459 M
-( problems with version 1 and version 2 servers because the client must) s
-5 448 M
-( send this packet before knowing the servers version.) s
-5 426 M
-( In this version of the protocol, clients MUST use the) s
-5 415 M
-( SSH_FXP_EXTENDED packet to send extensions to the server after) s
-5 404 M
-( version exchange has completed. Clients MUST NOT include extensions) s
-5 393 M
-( in the version packet. This will prevent interoperability problems) s
-5 382 M
-( with older servers) s
-5 360 M
-(4.2 Server Initialization) s
-5 338 M
-( The SSH_FXP_VERSION packet \(from server to client\) has the following) s
-5 327 M
-( data:) s
-5 305 M
-( uint32 version) s
-5 294 M
-( <extension data>) s
-5 272 M
-( 'version' is the lower of the protocol version supported by the) s
-5 261 M
-( server and the version number received from the client.) s
-5 239 M
-( The extension data may be empty, or may be a sequence of) s
-5 217 M
-( string extension_name) s
-5 206 M
-( string extension_data) s
-5 184 M
-( pairs \(both strings MUST always be present if one is, but the) s
-5 173 M
-( `extension_data' string may be of zero length\). If present, these) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( strings indicate extensions to the baseline protocol. The) s
-5 679 M
-( `extension_name' field\(s\) identify the name of the extension. The) s
-5 668 M
-( name should be of the form "name@domain", where the domain is the DNS) s
-5 657 M
-( domain name of the organization defining the extension. Additional) s
-5 646 M
-( names that are not of this format may be defined later by the IETF.) s
-5 635 M
-( Implementations MUST silently ignore any extensions whose name they) s
-5 624 M
-( do not recognize.) s
-5 602 M
-(4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention) s
-5 580 M
-( In order to correctly process text files in a cross platform) s
-5 569 M
-( compatible way, the newline convention must be converted from that of) s
-5 558 M
-( the server to that of the client, or, during an upload, from that of) s
-5 547 M
-( the client to that of the server.) s
-5 525 M
-( Versions 3 and prior of this protocol made no provisions for) s
-5 514 M
-( processing text files. Many clients implemented some sort of) s
-5 503 M
-( conversion algorithm, but without either a 'canonical' on the wire) s
-5 492 M
-( format or knowledge of the servers newline convention, correct) s
-5 481 M
-( conversion was not always possible.) s
-5 459 M
-( Starting with Version 4, the SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag \(Section) s
-5 448 M
-( 6.3\) makes it possible to request that the server translate a file to) s
-5 437 M
-( a 'canonical' on the wire format. This format uses \\r\\n as the line) s
-5 426 M
-( separator.) s
-5 404 M
-( Servers for systems using multiple newline characters \(for example,) s
-5 393 M
-( Mac OS X or VMS\) or systems using counted records, MUST translate to) s
-5 382 M
-( the canonical form.) s
-5 360 M
-( However, to ease the burden of implementation on servers that use a) s
-5 349 M
-( single, simple separator sequence, the following extension allows the) s
-5 338 M
-( canonical format to be changed.) s
-5 316 M
-( string "newline") s
-5 305 M
-( string new-canonical-separator \(usually "\\r" or "\\n" or "\\r\\n"\)) s
-5 283 M
-( All clients MUST support this extension.) s
-5 261 M
-( When processing text files, clients SHOULD NOT translate any) s
-5 250 M
-( character or sequence that is not an exact match of the servers) s
-5 239 M
-( newline separator.) s
-5 217 M
-( In particular, if the newline sequence being used is the canonical) s
-5 206 M
-( "\\r\\n" sequence, a lone \\r or a lone \\n SHOULD be written through) s
-5 195 M
-( without change.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 8]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(5. File Attributes) s
-5 668 M
-( A new compound data type is defined for encoding file attributes.) s
-5 657 M
-( The same encoding is used both when returning file attributes from) s
-5 646 M
-( the server and when sending file attributes to the server. When) s
-5 635 M
-( sending it to the server, the flags field specifies which attributes) s
-5 624 M
-( are included, and the server will use default values for the) s
-5 613 M
-( remaining attributes \(or will not modify the values of remaining) s
-5 602 M
-( attributes\). When receiving attributes from the server, the flags) s
-5 591 M
-( specify which attributes are included in the returned data. The) s
-5 580 M
-( server normally returns all attributes it knows about.) s
-5 558 M
-( uint32 flags) s
-5 547 M
-( byte type always present) s
-5 536 M
-( uint64 size present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE) s
-5 525 M
-( string owner present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP) s
-5 514 M
-( string group present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP) s
-5 503 M
-( uint32 permissions present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS) s
-5 492 M
-( uint32 atime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACCESSTIME) s
-5 481 M
-( uint32 createtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_CREATETIME) s
-5 470 M
-( uint32 mtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_MODIFYTIME) s
-5 459 M
-( string acl present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACL) s
-5 448 M
-( uint32 extended_count present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED) s
-5 437 M
-( string extended_type) s
-5 426 M
-( string extended_data) s
-5 415 M
-( ... more extended data \(extended_type - extended_data pairs\),) s
-5 404 M
-( so that number of pairs equals extended_count) s
-5 371 M
-(5.1 Flags) s
-5 349 M
-( The `flags' specify which of the fields are present. Those fields) s
-5 338 M
-( for which the corresponding flag is not set are not present \(not) s
-5 327 M
-( included in the packet\). New flags can only be added by incrementing) s
-5 316 M
-( the protocol version number \(or by using the extension mechanism) s
-5 305 M
-( described below\).) s
-5 283 M
-( The flags bits are defined to have the following values:) s
-5 261 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE 0x00000001) s
-5 250 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS 0x00000004) s
-5 239 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACCESSTIME 0x00000008) s
-5 228 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_CREATETIME 0x00000010) s
-5 217 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_MODIFYTIME 0x00000020) s
-5 206 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACL 0x00000040) s
-5 195 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP 0x00000080) s
-5 184 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED 0x80000000) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 9]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( In previous versions of this protocol flags value 0x00000002 was) s
-5 679 M
-( SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID. This value is now unused, and OWNERGROUP) s
-5 668 M
-( was given a new value in order to ease implementation burden.) s
-5 657 M
-( 0x00000002 MUST NOT appear in the mask. Some future version of this) s
-5 646 M
-( protocol may reuse flag 0x00000002.) s
-5 624 M
-(5.2 Type) s
-5 602 M
-( The type field is always present. The following types are defined:) s
-5 580 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_REGULAR 1) s
-5 569 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_DIRECTORY 2) s
-5 558 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SYMLINK 3) s
-5 547 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SPECIAL 4) s
-5 536 M
-( #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_UNKNOWN 5) s
-5 514 M
-( On a POSIX system, these values would be derived from the permission) s
-5 503 M
-( field.) s
-5 481 M
-(5.3 Size) s
-5 459 M
-( The `size' field specifies the size of the file on disk, in bytes.) s
-5 448 M
-( If it is present during file creation, it should be considered a hint) s
-5 437 M
-( as to the files eventual size.) s
-5 415 M
-( Files opened with the SSH_FXF_TEXT flag may have a size that is) s
-5 404 M
-( greater or less than the value of the size field.) s
-5 382 M
-(5.4 Owner and Group) s
-5 360 M
-( The `owner' and `group' fields are represented as UTF-8 strings; this) s
-5 349 M
-( is the form used by NFS v4. See NFS version 4 Protocol. [3] The) s
-5 338 M
-( following text is selected quotations from section 5.6.) s
-5 316 M
-( To avoid a representation that is tied to a particular underlying) s
-5 305 M
-( implementation at the client or server, the use of UTF-8 strings has) s
-5 294 M
-( been chosen. The string should be of the form user@dns_domain".) s
-5 283 M
-( This will allow for a client and server that do not use the same) s
-5 272 M
-( local representation the ability to translate to a common syntax that) s
-5 261 M
-( can be interpreted by both. In the case where there is no) s
-5 250 M
-( translation available to the client or server, the attribute value) s
-5 239 M
-( must be constructed without the "@". Therefore, the absence of the @) s
-5 228 M
-( from the owner or owner_group attribute signifies that no translation) s
-5 217 M
-( was available and the receiver of the attribute should not place any) s
-5 206 M
-( special meaning with the attribute value. Even though the attribute) s
-5 195 M
-( value can not be translated, it may still be useful. In the case of) s
-5 184 M
-( a client, the attribute string may be used for local display of) s
-5 173 M
-( ownership.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 10]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(5.5 Permissions) s
-5 668 M
-( The `permissions' field contains a bit mask of file permissions as) s
-5 657 M
-( defined by POSIX [1].) s
-5 635 M
-(5.6 Times) s
-5 613 M
-( The 'atime', 'createtime', and 'mtime' contain the access, creation,) s
-5 602 M
-( and modification times of the files, respectively. They are) s
-5 591 M
-( represented as seconds from Jan 1, 1970 in UTC.) s
-5 569 M
-(5.7 ACL) s
-5 547 M
-( The 'ACL' field contains an ACL similar to that defined in section) s
-5 536 M
-( 5.9 of NFS version 4 Protocol [3].) s
-5 514 M
-( uint32 ace-count) s
-5 492 M
-( repeated ace-count time:) s
-5 481 M
-( uint32 ace-type) s
-5 470 M
-( uint32 ace-flag) s
-5 459 M
-( uint32 ace-mask) s
-5 448 M
-( string who [UTF-8]) s
-5 426 M
-( ace-type is one of the following four values \(taken from NFS Version) s
-5 415 M
-( 4 Protocol [3]:) s
-5 393 M
-( const ACE4_ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000000;) s
-5 382 M
-( const ACE4_ACCESS_DENIED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000001;) s
-5 371 M
-( const ACE4_SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000002;) s
-5 360 M
-( const ACE4_SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000003;) s
-5 338 M
-( ace-flag is a combination of the following flag values. See NFS) s
-5 327 M
-( Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.2:) s
-5 305 M
-( const ACE4_FILE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000001;) s
-5 294 M
-( const ACE4_DIRECTORY_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000002;) s
-5 283 M
-( const ACE4_NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000004;) s
-5 272 M
-( const ACE4_INHERIT_ONLY_ACE = 0x00000008;) s
-5 261 M
-( const ACE4_SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000010;) s
-5 250 M
-( const ACE4_FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000020;) s
-5 239 M
-( const ACE4_IDENTIFIER_GROUP = 0x00000040;) s
-5 217 M
-( ace-mask is any combination of the following flags \(taken from NFS) s
-5 206 M
-( Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.3:) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 11]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( const ACE4_READ_DATA = 0x00000001;) s
-5 679 M
-( const ACE4_LIST_DIRECTORY = 0x00000001;) s
-5 668 M
-( const ACE4_WRITE_DATA = 0x00000002;) s
-5 657 M
-( const ACE4_ADD_FILE = 0x00000002;) s
-5 646 M
-( const ACE4_APPEND_DATA = 0x00000004;) s
-5 635 M
-( const ACE4_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY = 0x00000004;) s
-5 624 M
-( const ACE4_READ_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000008;) s
-5 613 M
-( const ACE4_WRITE_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000010;) s
-5 602 M
-( const ACE4_EXECUTE = 0x00000020;) s
-5 591 M
-( const ACE4_DELETE_CHILD = 0x00000040;) s
-5 580 M
-( const ACE4_READ_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000080;) s
-5 569 M
-( const ACE4_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000100;) s
-5 558 M
-( const ACE4_DELETE = 0x00010000;) s
-5 547 M
-( const ACE4_READ_ACL = 0x00020000;) s
-5 536 M
-( const ACE4_WRITE_ACL = 0x00040000;) s
-5 525 M
-( const ACE4_WRITE_OWNER = 0x00080000;) s
-5 514 M
-( const ACE4_SYNCHRONIZE = 0x00100000;) s
-5 492 M
-( who is a UTF-8 string of the form described in 'Owner and Group') s
-5 481 M
-( \(Section 5.4\)) s
-5 459 M
-(5.8 Extended attributes) s
-5 437 M
-( The SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED flag provides a general extension) s
-5 426 M
-( mechanism for vendor-specific extensions. If the flag is specified,) s
-5 415 M
-( then the `extended_count' field is present. It specifies the number) s
-5 404 M
-( of extended_type-extended_data pairs that follow. Each of these) s
-5 393 M
-( pairs specifies an extended attribute. For each of the attributes,) s
-5 382 M
-( the extended_type field should be a string of the format) s
-5 371 M
-( "name@domain", where "domain" is a valid, registered domain name and) s
-5 360 M
-( "name" identifies the method. The IETF may later standardize certain) s
-5 349 M
-( names that deviate from this format \(e.g., that do not contain the) s
-5 338 M
-( "@" sign\). The interpretation of `extended_data' depends on the) s
-5 327 M
-( type. Implementations SHOULD ignore extended data fields that they) s
-5 316 M
-( do not understand.) s
-5 294 M
-( Additional fields can be added to the attributes by either defining) s
-5 283 M
-( additional bits to the flags field to indicate their presence, or by) s
-5 272 M
-( defining extended attributes for them. The extended attributes) s
-5 261 M
-( mechanism is recommended for most purposes; additional flags bits) s
-5 250 M
-( should only be defined by an IETF standards action that also) s
-5 239 M
-( increments the protocol version number. The use of such new fields) s
-5 228 M
-( MUST be negotiated by the version number in the protocol exchange.) s
-5 217 M
-( It is a protocol error if a packet with unsupported protocol bits is) s
-5 206 M
-( received.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 12]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(6. Requests From the Client to the Server) s
-5 668 M
-( Requests from the client to the server represent the various file) s
-5 657 M
-( system operations. Each request begins with an `id' field, which is) s
-5 646 M
-( a 32-bit identifier identifying the request \(selected by the client\).) s
-5 635 M
-( The same identifier will be returned in the response to the request.) s
-5 624 M
-( One possible implementation is a monotonically increasing request) s
-5 613 M
-( sequence number \(modulo 2^32\).) s
-5 591 M
-( Many operations in the protocol operate on open files. The) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPEN request can return a file handle \(which is an opaque) s
-5 569 M
-( variable-length string\) which may be used to access the file later) s
-5 558 M
-( \(e.g. in a read operation\). The client MUST NOT send requests the) s
-5 547 M
-( server with bogus or closed handles. However, the server MUST) s
-5 536 M
-( perform adequate checks on the handle in order to avoid security) s
-5 525 M
-( risks due to fabricated handles.) s
-5 503 M
-( This design allows either stateful and stateless server) s
-5 492 M
-( implementation, as well as an implementation which caches state) s
-5 481 M
-( between requests but may also flush it. The contents of the file) s
-5 470 M
-( handle string are entirely up to the server and its design. The) s
-5 459 M
-( client should not modify or attempt to interpret the file handle) s
-5 448 M
-( strings.) s
-5 426 M
-( The file handle strings MUST NOT be longer than 256 bytes.) s
-5 404 M
-(6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering) s
-5 382 M
-( The protocol and implementations MUST process requests relating to) s
-5 371 M
-( the same file in the order in which they are received. In other) s
-5 360 M
-( words, if an application submits multiple requests to the server, the) s
-5 349 M
-( results in the responses will be the same as if it had sent the) s
-5 338 M
-( requests one at a time and waited for the response in each case. For) s
-5 327 M
-( example, the server may process non-overlapping read/write requests) s
-5 316 M
-( to the same file in parallel, but overlapping reads and writes cannot) s
-5 305 M
-( be reordered or parallelized. However, there are no ordering) s
-5 294 M
-( restrictions on the server for processing requests from two different) s
-5 283 M
-( file transfer connections. The server may interleave and parallelize) s
-5 272 M
-( them at will.) s
-5 250 M
-( There are no restrictions on the order in which responses to) s
-5 239 M
-( outstanding requests are delivered to the client, except that the) s
-5 228 M
-( server must ensure fairness in the sense that processing of no) s
-5 217 M
-( request will be indefinitely delayed even if the client is sending) s
-5 206 M
-( other requests so that there are multiple outstanding requests all) s
-5 195 M
-( the time.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 13]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(6.2 File Names) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol represents file names as strings. File names are) s
-5 657 M
-( assumed to use the slash \('/'\) character as a directory separator.) s
-5 635 M
-( File names starting with a slash are "absolute", and are relative to) s
-5 624 M
-( the root of the file system. Names starting with any other character) s
-5 613 M
-( are relative to the user's default directory \(home directory\). Note) s
-5 602 M
-( that identifying the user is assumed to take place outside of this) s
-5 591 M
-( protocol.) s
-5 569 M
-( Servers SHOULD interpret a path name component ".." as referring to) s
-5 558 M
-( the parent directory, and "." as referring to the current directory.) s
-5 547 M
-( If the server implementation limits access to certain parts of the) s
-5 536 M
-( file system, it must be extra careful in parsing file names when) s
-5 525 M
-( enforcing such restrictions. There have been numerous reported) s
-5 514 M
-( security bugs where a ".." in a path name has allowed access outside) s
-5 503 M
-( the intended area.) s
-5 481 M
-( An empty path name is valid, and it refers to the user's default) s
-5 470 M
-( directory \(usually the user's home directory\).) s
-5 448 M
-( Otherwise, no syntax is defined for file names by this specification.) s
-5 437 M
-( Clients should not make any other assumptions; however, they can) s
-5 426 M
-( splice path name components returned by SSH_FXP_READDIR together) s
-5 415 M
-( using a slash \('/'\) as the separator, and that will work as expected.) s
-5 393 M
-( In order to comply with IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages) s
-5 382 M
-( [2], all filenames are to be encoded in UTF-8. The shortest valid) s
-5 371 M
-( UTF-8 encoding of the UNICODE data MUST be used. The server is) s
-5 360 M
-( responsible for converting the UNICODE data to whatever canonical) s
-5 349 M
-( form it requires.) s
-5 327 M
-( For example, if the server requires that precomposed characters) s
-5 316 M
-( always be used, the server MUST NOT assume the filename as sent by) s
-5 305 M
-( the client has this attribute, but must do this normalization itself.) s
-5 283 M
-( It is understood that the lack of well-defined semantics for file) s
-5 272 M
-( names may cause interoperability problems between clients and servers) s
-5 261 M
-( using radically different operating systems. However, this approach) s
-5 250 M
-( is known to work acceptably with most systems, and alternative) s
-5 239 M
-( approaches that e.g. treat file names as sequences of structured) s
-5 228 M
-( components are quite complicated.) s
-5 206 M
-(6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files) s
-5 184 M
-( Files are opened and created using the SSH_FXP_OPEN message, whose) s
-5 173 M
-( data part is as follows:) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 14]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 679 M
-( string filename [UTF-8]) s
-5 668 M
-( uint32 pflags) s
-5 657 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 635 M
-( The `id' field is the request identifier as for all requests.) s
-5 613 M
-( The `filename' field specifies the file name. See Section ``File) s
-5 602 M
-( Names'' for more information.) s
-5 580 M
-( The `pflags' field is a bitmask. The following bits have been) s
-5 569 M
-( defined.) s
-5 547 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_READ 0x00000001) s
-5 536 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_WRITE 0x00000002) s
-5 525 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_APPEND 0x00000004) s
-5 514 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_CREAT 0x00000008) s
-5 503 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_TRUNC 0x00000010) s
-5 492 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_EXCL 0x00000020) s
-5 481 M
-( #define SSH_FXF_TEXT 0x00000040) s
-5 459 M
-( These have the following meanings:) s
-5 437 M
-( SSH_FXF_READ) s
-5 426 M
-( Open the file for reading.) s
-5 404 M
-( SSH_FXF_WRITE) s
-5 393 M
-( Open the file for writing. If both this and SSH_FXF_READ are) s
-5 382 M
-( specified, the file is opened for both reading and writing.) s
-5 360 M
-( SSH_FXF_APPEND) s
-5 349 M
-( Force all writes to append data at the end of the file. The) s
-5 338 M
-( offset parameter to write will be ignored.) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT) s
-5 305 M
-( If this flag is specified, then a new file will be created if one) s
-5 294 M
-( does not already exist \(if O_TRUNC is specified, the new file will) s
-5 283 M
-( be truncated to zero length if it previously exists\).) s
-5 261 M
-( SSH_FXF_TRUNC) s
-5 250 M
-( Forces an existing file with the same name to be truncated to zero) s
-5 239 M
-( length when creating a file by specifying SSH_FXF_CREAT.) s
-5 228 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.) s
-5 206 M
-( SSH_FXF_EXCL) s
-5 195 M
-( Causes the request to fail if the named file already exists.) s
-5 184 M
-( SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 15]) s
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( SSH_FXF_TEXT) s
-5 679 M
-( Indicates that the server should treat the file as text and) s
-5 668 M
-( convert it to the canonical newline convention in use. \(See) s
-5 657 M
-( Determining Server Newline Convention. \(Section 4.3\)) s
-5 635 M
-( When a file is opened with the FXF_TEXT flag, the offset field in) s
-5 624 M
-( both the read and write function are ignored.) s
-5 602 M
-( Servers MUST correctly process multiple parallel reads and writes) s
-5 591 M
-( correctly in this mode. Naturally, it is permissible for them to) s
-5 580 M
-( do this by serializing the requests. It would not be possible for) s
-5 569 M
-( a client to reliably detect a server that does not implement) s
-5 558 M
-( parallel writes in time to prevent damage.) s
-5 536 M
-( Clients SHOULD use the SSH_FXF_APPEND flag to append data to a) s
-5 525 M
-( text file rather then using write with a calculated offset.) s
-5 503 M
-( To support seeks on text file the following SSH_FXP_EXTENDED) s
-5 492 M
-( packet is defined.) s
-5 448 M
-( string "text-seek") s
-5 437 M
-( string file-handle) s
-5 426 M
-( uint64 line-number) s
-5 404 M
-( line-number is the index of the line number to seek to, where byte) s
-5 393 M
-( 0 in the file is line number 0, and the byte directly following) s
-5 382 M
-( the first newline sequence in the file is line number 1 and so on.) s
-5 360 M
-( The response to a "text-seek" request is an SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 349 M
-( message.) s
-5 327 M
-( An attempt to seek past the end-of-file should result in a) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_FX_EOF status.) s
-5 294 M
-( Servers SHOULD support at least one "text-seek" in order to) s
-5 283 M
-( support resume. However, a client MUST be prepared to receive) s
-5 272 M
-( SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED when attempting a "text-seek" operation.) s
-5 261 M
-( The client can then try a fall-back strategy, if it has one.) s
-5 239 M
-( Clients MUST be prepared to handle SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED returned) s
-5 228 M
-( for read or write operations that are not sequential.) s
-5 206 M
-( The `attrs' field specifies the initial attributes for the file.) s
-5 195 M
-( Default values will be used for those attributes that are not) s
-5 184 M
-( specified. See Section ``File Attributes'' for more information.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 16]) s
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-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( The response to this message will be either SSH_FXP_HANDLE \(if the) s
-5 679 M
-( operation is successful\) or SSH_FXP_STATUS \(if the operation fails\).) s
-5 657 M
-( A file is closed by using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request. Its data field) s
-5 646 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 624 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 613 M
-( string handle) s
-5 591 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle) s
-5 580 M
-( previously returned in the response to SSH_FXP_OPEN or) s
-5 569 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. The handle becomes invalid immediately after this) s
-5 558 M
-( request has been sent.) s
-5 536 M
-( The response to this request will be a SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One) s
-5 525 M
-( should note that on some server platforms even a close can fail.) s
-5 514 M
-( This can happen e.g. if the server operating system caches writes,) s
-5 503 M
-( and an error occurs while flushing cached writes during the close.) s
-5 481 M
-(6.4 Reading and Writing) s
-5 459 M
-( Once a file has been opened, it can be read using the SSH_FXP_READ) s
-5 448 M
-( message, which has the following format:) s
-5 426 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 415 M
-( string handle) s
-5 404 M
-( uint64 offset) s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 len) s
-5 371 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' is an open file handle) s
-5 360 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset \(in bytes\) relative) s
-5 349 M
-( to the beginning of the file from where to start reading, and `len') s
-5 338 M
-( is the maximum number of bytes to read.) s
-5 316 M
-( In response to this request, the server will read as many bytes as it) s
-5 305 M
-( can from the file \(up to `len'\), and return them in a SSH_FXP_DATA) s
-5 294 M
-( message. If an error occurs or EOF is encountered before reading any) s
-5 283 M
-( data, the server will respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS. For normal disk) s
-5 272 M
-( files, it is guaranteed that this will read the specified number of) s
-5 261 M
-( bytes, or up to end of file. For e.g. device files this may return) s
-5 250 M
-( fewer bytes than requested.) s
-5 228 M
-( Writing to a file is achieved using the SSH_FXP_WRITE message, which) s
-5 217 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 17]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 679 M
-( string handle) s
-5 668 M
-( uint64 offset) s
-5 657 M
-( string data) s
-5 635 M
-( where `id' is a request identifier, `handle' is a file handle) s
-5 624 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset \(in bytes\) from the) s
-5 613 M
-( beginning of the file where to start writing, and `data' is the data) s
-5 602 M
-( to be written.) s
-5 580 M
-( The write will extend the file if writing beyond the end of the file.) s
-5 569 M
-( It is legal to write way beyond the end of the file; the semantics) s
-5 558 M
-( are to write zeroes from the end of the file to the specified offset) s
-5 547 M
-( and then the data. On most operating systems, such writes do not) s
-5 536 M
-( allocate disk space but instead leave "holes" in the file.) s
-5 514 M
-( The server responds to a write request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 492 M
-(6.5 Removing and Renaming Files) s
-5 470 M
-( Files can be removed using the SSH_FXP_REMOVE message. It has the) s
-5 459 M
-( following format:) s
-5 437 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 426 M
-( string filename [UTF-8]) s
-5 404 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `filename' is the name of) s
-5 393 M
-( the file to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more) s
-5 382 M
-( information. This request cannot be used to remove directories.) s
-5 360 M
-( The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 349 M
-( message.) s
-5 327 M
-( Files \(and directories\) can be renamed using the SSH_FXP_RENAME) s
-5 316 M
-( message. Its data is as follows:) s
-5 294 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 283 M
-( string oldpath [UTF-8]) s
-5 272 M
-( string newpath [UTF-8]) s
-5 250 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `oldpath' is the name of an) s
-5 239 M
-( existing file or directory, and `newpath' is the new name for the) s
-5 228 M
-( file or directory. It is an error if there already exists a file) s
-5 217 M
-( with the name specified by newpath. The server may also fail rename) s
-5 206 M
-( requests in other situations, for example if `oldpath' and `newpath') s
-5 195 M
-( point to different file systems on the server.) s
-5 173 M
-( The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 18]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
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-/pagenum 19 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( message.) s
-5 668 M
-(6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories) s
-5 646 M
-( New directories can be created using the SSH_FXP_MKDIR request. It) s
-5 635 M
-( has the following format:) s
-5 613 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 602 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 591 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 569 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier.) s
-5 547 M
-( `path' specifies the directory to be created. See Section ``File) s
-5 536 M
-( Names'' for more information on file names.) s
-5 514 M
-( `attrs' specifies the attributes that should be applied to it upon) s
-5 503 M
-( creation. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section ``File) s
-5 492 M
-( Attributes''.) s
-5 470 M
-( The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS) s
-5 459 M
-( message. If a file or directory with the specified path already) s
-5 448 M
-( exists, an error will be returned.) s
-5 426 M
-( Directories can be removed using the SSH_FXP_RMDIR request, which has) s
-5 415 M
-( the following format:) s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 382 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 360 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the) s
-5 349 M
-( directory to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more) s
-5 338 M
-( information on file names.) s
-5 316 M
-( The server responds to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 305 M
-( Errors may be returned from this operation for various reasons,) s
-5 294 M
-( including, but not limited to, the path does not exist, the path does) s
-5 283 M
-( not refer to a directory object, the directory is not empty, or the) s
-5 272 M
-( user has insufficient access or permission to perform the requested) s
-5 261 M
-( operation.) s
-5 239 M
-(6.7 Scanning Directories) s
-5 217 M
-( The files in a directory can be listed using the SSH_FXP_OPENDIR and) s
-5 206 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR requests. Each SSH_FXP_READDIR request returns one) s
-5 195 M
-( or more file names with full file attributes for each file. The) s
-5 184 M
-( client should call SSH_FXP_READDIR repeatedly until it has found the) s
-5 173 M
-( file it is looking for or until the server responds with a) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 19]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 20 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message indicating an error \(normally SSH_FX_EOF if) s
-5 679 M
-( there are no more files in the directory\). The client should then) s
-5 668 M
-( close the handle using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request.) s
-5 646 M
-( The SSH_FXP_OPENDIR opens a directory for reading. It has the) s
-5 635 M
-( following format:) s
-5 613 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 602 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 580 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' is the path name of) s
-5 569 M
-( the directory to be listed \(without any trailing slash\). See Section) s
-5 558 M
-( ``File Names'' for more information on file names. This will return) s
-5 547 M
-( an error if the path does not specify a directory or if the directory) s
-5 536 M
-( is not readable. The server will respond to this request with either) s
-5 525 M
-( a SSH_FXP_HANDLE or a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 503 M
-( Once the directory has been successfully opened, files \(and) s
-5 492 M
-( directories\) contained in it can be listed using SSH_FXP_READDIR) s
-5 481 M
-( requests. These are of the format) s
-5 459 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 448 M
-( string handle) s
-5 426 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle) s
-5 415 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. \(It is a protocol error to attempt to) s
-5 404 M
-( use an ordinary file handle returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN.\)) s
-5 382 M
-( The server responds to this request with either a SSH_FXP_NAME or a) s
-5 371 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One or more names may be returned at a time.) s
-5 360 M
-( Full status information is returned for each name in order to speed) s
-5 349 M
-( up typical directory listings.) s
-5 327 M
-( If there are no more names available to be read, the server MUST) s
-5 316 M
-( respond with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message with error code of SSH_FX_EOF.) s
-5 294 M
-( When the client no longer wishes to read more names from the) s
-5 283 M
-( directory, it SHOULD call SSH_FXP_CLOSE for the handle. The handle) s
-5 272 M
-( should be closed regardless of whether an error has occurred or not.) s
-5 250 M
-(6.8 Retrieving File Attributes) s
-5 228 M
-( Very often, file attributes are automatically returned by) s
-5 217 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR. However, sometimes there is need to specifically) s
-5 206 M
-( retrieve the attributes for a named file. This can be done using the) s
-5 195 M
-( SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT and SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.) s
-5 173 M
-( SSH_FXP_STAT and SSH_FXP_LSTAT only differ in that SSH_FXP_STAT) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 20]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 21 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( follows symbolic links on the server, whereas SSH_FXP_LSTAT does not) s
-5 679 M
-( follow symbolic links. Both have the same format:) s
-5 657 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 646 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 635 M
-( uint32 flags) s
-5 613 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the file) s
-5 602 M
-( system object for which status is to be returned. The server) s
-5 591 M
-( responds to this request with either SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 569 M
-( The flags field specify the attribute flags in which the client has) s
-5 558 M
-( particular interest. This is a hint to the server. For example,) s
-5 547 M
-( because retrieving owner / group and acl information can be an) s
-5 536 M
-( expensive operation under some operating systems, the server may) s
-5 525 M
-( choose not to retrieve this information unless the client expresses a) s
-5 514 M
-( specific interest in it.) s
-5 492 M
-( The client has no guarantee the server will provide all the fields) s
-5 481 M
-( that it has expressed an interest in.) s
-5 459 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSTAT differs from the others in that it returns status) s
-5 448 M
-( information for an open file \(identified by the file handle\). Its) s
-5 437 M
-( format is as follows:) s
-5 415 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 404 M
-( string handle) s
-5 393 M
-( uint32 flags) s
-5 371 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `handle' is a file handle) s
-5 360 M
-( returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN. The server responds to this request with) s
-5 349 M
-( SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 327 M
-(6.9 Setting File Attributes) s
-5 305 M
-( File attributes may be modified using the SSH_FXP_SETSTAT and) s
-5 294 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT requests. These requests are used for operations) s
-5 283 M
-( such as changing the ownership, permissions or access times, as well) s
-5 272 M
-( as for truncating a file.) s
-5 250 M
-( The SSH_FXP_SETSTAT request is of the following format:) s
-5 228 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 217 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 206 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 184 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `path' specifies the file) s
-5 173 M
-( system object \(e.g. file or directory\) whose attributes are to be) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 21]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-/pagenum 22 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its) s
-5 679 M
-( attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section) s
-5 668 M
-( ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 646 M
-( An error will be returned if the specified file system object does) s
-5 635 M
-( not exist or the user does not have sufficient rights to modify the) s
-5 624 M
-( specified attributes. The server responds to this request with a) s
-5 613 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS message.) s
-5 591 M
-( The SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT request modifies the attributes of a file which) s
-5 580 M
-( is already open. It has the following format:) s
-5 558 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 547 M
-( string handle) s
-5 536 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 514 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' \(MUST be returned by) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_FXP_OPEN\) identifies the file whose attributes are to be) s
-5 492 M
-( modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its) s
-5 481 M
-( attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section) s
-5 470 M
-( ``File Attributes''. The server will respond to this request with) s
-5 459 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 437 M
-(6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links) s
-5 415 M
-( The SSH_FXP_READLINK request may be used to read the target of a) s
-5 404 M
-( symbolic link. It would have a data part as follows:) s
-5 382 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 371 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 349 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path) s
-5 338 M
-( name of the symlink to be read.) s
-5 316 M
-( The server will respond with a SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only) s
-5 305 M
-( one name and a dummy attributes value. The name in the returned) s
-5 294 M
-( packet contains the target of the link. If an error occurs, the) s
-5 283 M
-( server may respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 261 M
-( The SSH_FXP_SYMLINK request will create a symbolic link on the) s
-5 250 M
-( server. It is of the following format) s
-5 228 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 217 M
-( string linkpath [UTF-8]) s
-5 206 M
-( string targetpath [UTF-8]) s
-5 184 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `linkpath' specifies the path) s
-5 173 M
-( name of the symlink to be created and `targetpath' specifies the) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 22]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( target of the symlink. The server shall respond with a) s
-5 679 M
-( SSH_FXP_STATUS indicating either success \(SSH_FX_OK\) or an error) s
-5 668 M
-( condition.) s
-5 646 M
-(6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name) s
-5 624 M
-( The SSH_FXP_REALPATH request can be used to have the server) s
-5 613 M
-( canonicalize any given path name to an absolute path. This is useful) s
-5 602 M
-( for converting path names containing ".." components or relative) s
-5 591 M
-( pathnames without a leading slash into absolute paths. The format of) s
-5 580 M
-( the request is as follows:) s
-5 558 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 547 M
-( string path [UTF-8]) s
-5 525 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path) s
-5 514 M
-( name to be canonicalized. The server will respond with a) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing the name in canonical form and a dummy) s
-5 492 M
-( attributes value. If an error occurs, the server may also respond) s
-5 481 M
-( with SSH_FXP_STATUS.) s
-5 459 M
-(6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths) s
-5 437 M
-( The client SHOULD treat the results of SSH_FXP_REALPATH as a) s
-5 426 M
-( canonical absolute path, even if the path does not appear to be) s
-5 415 M
-( absolute. A client that use REALPATH\("."\) and treats the result as) s
-5 404 M
-( absolute, even if there is no leading slash, will continue to) s
-5 393 M
-( function correctly, even when talking to a Windows NT or VMS style) s
-5 382 M
-( system, where absolute paths may not begin with a slash.) s
-5 360 M
-( For example, if the client wishes to change directory up, and the) s
-5 349 M
-( server has returned "c:/x/y/z" from REALPATH, the client SHOULD use) s
-5 338 M
-( "c:/x/y/z/..".) s
-5 316 M
-( As a second example, if the client wishes to open the file "x.txt" in) s
-5 305 M
-( the current directory, and server has returned "dka100:/x/y/z" as the) s
-5 294 M
-( canonical path of the directory, the client SHOULD open "dka100:/x/y/) s
-5 283 M
-( z/x.txt") s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 23]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(7. Responses from the Server to the Client) s
-5 668 M
-( The server responds to the client using one of a few response) s
-5 657 M
-( packets. All requests can return a SSH_FXP_STATUS response upon) s
-5 646 M
-( failure. When the operation is successful, any of the responses may) s
-5 635 M
-( be returned \(depending on the operation\). If no data needs to be) s
-5 624 M
-( returned to the client, the SSH_FXP_STATUS response with SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 613 M
-( status is appropriate. Otherwise, the SSH_FXP_HANDLE message is used) s
-5 602 M
-( to return a file handle \(for SSH_FXP_OPEN and SSH_FXP_OPENDIR) s
-5 591 M
-( requests\), SSH_FXP_DATA is used to return data from SSH_FXP_READ,) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_FXP_NAME is used to return one or more file names from a) s
-5 569 M
-( SSH_FXP_READDIR or SSH_FXP_REALPATH request, and SSH_FXP_ATTRS is) s
-5 558 M
-( used to return file attributes from SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT, and) s
-5 547 M
-( SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.) s
-5 525 M
-( Exactly one response will be returned for each request. Each) s
-5 514 M
-( response packet contains a request identifier which can be used to) s
-5 503 M
-( match each response with the corresponding request. Note that it is) s
-5 492 M
-( legal to have several requests outstanding simultaneously, and the) s
-5 481 M
-( server is allowed to send responses to them in a different order from) s
-5 470 M
-( the order in which the requests were sent \(the result of their) s
-5 459 M
-( execution, however, is guaranteed to be as if they had been processed) s
-5 448 M
-( one at a time in the order in which the requests were sent\).) s
-5 426 M
-( Response packets are of the same general format as request packets.) s
-5 415 M
-( Each response packet begins with the request identifier.) s
-5 393 M
-( The format of the data portion of the SSH_FXP_STATUS response is as) s
-5 382 M
-( follows:) s
-5 360 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 349 M
-( uint32 error/status code) s
-5 338 M
-( string error message \(ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC-2279]\)) s
-5 327 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC-1766]\)) s
-5 305 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `error/status code') s
-5 294 M
-( indicates the result of the requested operation. The value SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 283 M
-( indicates success, and all other values indicate failure.) s
-5 261 M
-( Currently, the following values are defined \(other values may be) s
-5 250 M
-( defined by future versions of this protocol\):) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 24]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( #define SSH_FX_OK 0) s
-5 679 M
-( #define SSH_FX_EOF 1) s
-5 668 M
-( #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE 2) s
-5 657 M
-( #define SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED 3) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_FX_FAILURE 4) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE 5) s
-5 624 M
-( #define SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION 6) s
-5 613 M
-( #define SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST 7) s
-5 602 M
-( #define SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED 8) s
-5 591 M
-( #define SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE 9) s
-5 580 M
-( #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH 10) s
-5 569 M
-( #define SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS 11) s
-5 558 M
-( #define SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT 12) s
-5 536 M
-( SSH_FX_OK) s
-5 525 M
-( Indicates successful completion of the operation.) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_FX_EOF) s
-5 492 M
-( indicates end-of-file condition; for SSH_FX_READ it means that no) s
-5 481 M
-( more data is available in the file, and for SSH_FX_READDIR it) s
-5 470 M
-( indicates that no more files are contained in the directory.) s
-5 448 M
-( SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE) s
-5 437 M
-( is returned when a reference is made to a file which does not) s
-5 426 M
-( exist.) s
-5 404 M
-( SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED) s
-5 393 M
-( is returned when the authenticated user does not have sufficient) s
-5 382 M
-( permissions to perform the operation.) s
-5 360 M
-( SSH_FX_FAILURE) s
-5 349 M
-( is a generic catch-all error message; it should be returned if an) s
-5 338 M
-( error occurs for which there is no more specific error code) s
-5 327 M
-( defined.) s
-5 305 M
-( SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE) s
-5 294 M
-( may be returned if a badly formatted packet or protocol) s
-5 283 M
-( incompatibility is detected.) s
-5 261 M
-( SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION) s
-5 250 M
-( is a pseudo-error which indicates that the client has no) s
-5 239 M
-( connection to the server \(it can only be generated locally by the) s
-5 228 M
-( client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers\).) s
-5 206 M
-( SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST) s
-5 195 M
-( is a pseudo-error which indicates that the connection to the) s
-5 184 M
-( server has been lost \(it can only be generated locally by the) s
-5 173 M
-( client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers\).) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 25]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED) s
-5 679 M
-( indicates that an attempt was made to perform an operation which) s
-5 668 M
-( is not supported for the server \(it may be generated locally by) s
-5 657 M
-( the client if e.g. the version number exchange indicates that a) s
-5 646 M
-( required feature is not supported by the server, or it may be) s
-5 635 M
-( returned by the server if the server does not implement an) s
-5 624 M
-( operation\).) s
-5 602 M
-( SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE) s
-5 591 M
-( The handle value was invalid.) s
-5 569 M
-( SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH) s
-5 558 M
-( The file path does not exist or is invalid.) s
-5 536 M
-( SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS) s
-5 525 M
-( The file already exists.) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT) s
-5 492 M
-( The file is on read only media, or the media is write protected.) s
-5 470 M
-( The SSH_FXP_HANDLE response has the following format:) s
-5 448 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 437 M
-( string handle) s
-5 415 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is an arbitrary) s
-5 404 M
-( string that identifies an open file or directory on the server. The) s
-5 393 M
-( handle is opaque to the client; the client MUST NOT attempt to) s
-5 382 M
-( interpret or modify it in any way. The length of the handle string) s
-5 371 M
-( MUST NOT exceed 256 data bytes.) s
-5 349 M
-( The SSH_FXP_DATA response has the following format:) s
-5 327 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 316 M
-( string data) s
-5 294 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `data' is an arbitrary byte) s
-5 283 M
-( string containing the requested data. The data string may be at most) s
-5 272 M
-( the number of bytes requested in a SSH_FXP_READ request, but may also) s
-5 261 M
-( be shorter if end of file is reached or if the read is from something) s
-5 250 M
-( other than a regular file.) s
-5 228 M
-( The SSH_FXP_NAME response has the following format:) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 26]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 679 M
-( uint32 count) s
-5 668 M
-( repeats count times:) s
-5 657 M
-( string filename [UTF-8]) s
-5 646 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 624 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, `count' is the number of names) s
-5 613 M
-( returned in this response, and the remaining fields repeat `count') s
-5 602 M
-( times \(so that all three fields are first included for the first) s
-5 591 M
-( file, then for the second file, etc\). In the repeated part,) s
-5 580 M
-( `filename' is a file name being returned \(for SSH_FXP_READDIR, it) s
-5 569 M
-( will be a relative name within the directory, without any path) s
-5 558 M
-( components; for SSH_FXP_REALPATH it will be an absolute path name\),) s
-5 547 M
-( and `attrs' is the attributes of the file as described in Section) s
-5 536 M
-( ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 514 M
-( The SSH_FXP_ATTRS response has the following format:) s
-5 492 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 481 M
-( ATTRS attrs) s
-5 459 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `attrs' is the returned) s
-5 448 M
-( file attributes as described in Section ``File Attributes''.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 27]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(8. Vendor-Specific Extensions) s
-5 668 M
-( The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED request provides a generic extension mechanism) s
-5 657 M
-( for adding vendor-specific commands. The request has the following) s
-5 646 M
-( format:) s
-5 624 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 613 M
-( string extended-request) s
-5 602 M
-( ... any request-specific data ...) s
-5 580 M
-( where `id' is the request identifier, and `extended-request' is a) s
-5 569 M
-( string of the format "name@domain", where domain is an internet) s
-5 558 M
-( domain name of the vendor defining the request. The rest of the) s
-5 547 M
-( request is completely vendor-specific, and servers should only) s
-5 536 M
-( attempt to interpret it if they recognize the `extended-request') s
-5 525 M
-( name.) s
-5 503 M
-( The server may respond to such requests using any of the response) s
-5 492 M
-( packets defined in Section ``Responses from the Server to the) s
-5 481 M
-( Client''. Additionally, the server may also respond with a) s
-5 470 M
-( SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet, as defined below. If the server does) s
-5 459 M
-( not recognize the `extended-request' name, then the server MUST) s
-5 448 M
-( respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS with error/status set to) s
-5 437 M
-( SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED.) s
-5 415 M
-( The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet can be used to carry arbitrary) s
-5 404 M
-( extension-specific data from the server to the client. It is of the) s
-5 393 M
-( following format:) s
-5 371 M
-( uint32 id) s
-5 360 M
-( ... any request-specific data ...) s
-5 338 M
-( There is a range of packet types reserved for use by extensions. In) s
-5 327 M
-( order to avoid collision, extensions that turn on the use of) s
-5 316 M
-( additional packet types should determine those numbers dynamically.) s
-5 294 M
-( The suggested way of doing this is have an extension request from the) s
-5 283 M
-( client to the server that enables the extension; the extension) s
-5 272 M
-( response from the server to the client would specify the actual type) s
-5 261 M
-( values to use, in additional to any other data.) s
-5 239 M
-( Extension authors should be mindful of the limited range of packet) s
-5 228 M
-( types available \(there are only 45 values available\) and avoid) s
-5 217 M
-( requiring a new packet type where possible.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 28]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(9. Security Considerations) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol assumes that it is run over a secure channel and that) s
-5 657 M
-( the endpoints of the channel have been authenticated. Thus, this) s
-5 646 M
-( protocol assumes that it is externally protected from network-level) s
-5 635 M
-( attacks.) s
-5 613 M
-( This protocol provides file system access to arbitrary files on the) s
-5 602 M
-( server \(only constrained by the server implementation\). It is the) s
-5 591 M
-( responsibility of the server implementation to enforce any access) s
-5 580 M
-( controls that may be required to limit the access allowed for any) s
-5 569 M
-( particular user \(the user being authenticated externally to this) s
-5 558 M
-( protocol, typically using the SSH User Authentication Protocol [8].) s
-5 536 M
-( Care must be taken in the server implementation to check the validity) s
-5 525 M
-( of received file handle strings. The server should not rely on them) s
-5 514 M
-( directly; it MUST check the validity of each handle before relying on) s
-5 503 M
-( it.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 29]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(10. Changes from previous protocol versions) s
-5 668 M
-( The SSH File Transfer Protocol has changed over time, before it's) s
-5 657 M
-( standardization. The following is a description of the incompatible) s
-5 646 M
-( changes between different versions.) s
-5 624 M
-(10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3) s
-5 602 M
-( Many of the changes between version 4 and version 3 are to the) s
-5 591 M
-( attribute structure to make it more flexible for non-unix platforms.) s
-5 569 M
-( o Make all filenames UTF-8.) s
-5 547 M
-( o Added 'newline' extension.) s
-5 525 M
-( o Made file attribute owner and group strings so they can actually) s
-5 514 M
-( be used on disparate systems.) s
-5 492 M
-( o Added createtime field, and added separate flags for atime,) s
-5 481 M
-( createtime, and mtime so they can be set separately.) s
-5 459 M
-( o Split the file type out of the permissions field and into it's own) s
-5 448 M
-( field \(which is always present.\)) s
-5 426 M
-( o Added acl attribute.) s
-5 404 M
-( o Added SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag.) s
-5 382 M
-( o Added flags field to the get stat commands so that the client can) s
-5 371 M
-( specifically request information the server might not normally) s
-5 360 M
-( included for performance reasons.) s
-5 338 M
-( o Removed the long filename from the names structure-- it can now be) s
-5 327 M
-( built from information available in the attrs structure.) s
-5 305 M
-( o Added reserved range of packet numbers for extensions.) s
-5 283 M
-( o Added several additional error codes.) s
-5 261 M
-( o Change the way version negotiate works slightly. Previously, if) s
-5 250 M
-( the client version were higher than the server version, the server) s
-5 239 M
-( was supposed to 'echo back' the clients version. The server now) s
-5 228 M
-( sends it's own version and the lower of the two is considered to) s
-5 217 M
-( be the one in use.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 30]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2) s
-5 668 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_READLINK and SSH_FXP_SYMLINK messages were added.) s
-5 646 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY messages were) s
-5 635 M
-( added.) s
-5 613 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_STATUS message was changed to include fields `error) s
-5 602 M
-( message' and `language tag'.) s
-5 569 M
-(10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1) s
-5 547 M
-( o The SSH_FXP_RENAME message was added.) s
-5 514 M
-(10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0) s
-5 492 M
-( o Implementation changes, no actual protocol changes.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 31]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(11. Trademark Issues) s
-5 668 M
-( "ssh" is a registered trademark of SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 657 M
-( in the United States and/or other countries.) s
-5 129 M
-(Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 32]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(References) s
-5 668 M
-( [1] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A. and) s
-5 657 M
-( P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January) s
-5 646 M
-( 1999.) s
-5 624 M
-( [2] Alvestrand, H., "IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages",) s
-5 613 M
-( BCP 18, RFC 2277, January 1998.) s
-5 591 M
-( [3] Shepler, S., Callaghan, B., Robinson, D., Thurlow, R., Beame,) s
-5 580 M
-( C., Eisler, M. and D. Noveck, "NFS version 4 Protocol", RFC) s
-5 569 M
-( 3010, December 2000.) s
-5 547 M
-( [4] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information) s
-5 536 M
-( Technology - Portable Operating System Interface \(POSIX\) - Part) s
-5 525 M
-( 1: System Application Program Interface \(API\) [C Language]",) s
-5 514 M
-( IEEE Standard 1003.2, 1996.) s
-5 492 M
-( [5] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 481 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Architecture", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 470 M
-( architecture-13 \(work in progress\), September 2002.) s
-5 448 M
-( [6] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 437 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Transport Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 426 M
-( transport-15 \(work in progress\), September 2002.) s
-5 404 M
-( [7] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 393 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Connection Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-connect-16) s
-5 382 M
-( \(work in progress\), September 2002.) s
-5 360 M
-( [8] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.) s
-5 349 M
-( Lehtinen, "SSH Authentication Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-) s
-5 338 M
-( userauth-16 \(work in progress\), September 2002.) s
-5 305 M
-(Authors' Addresses) s
-5 283 M
-( Joseph Galbraith) s
-5 272 M
-( VanDyke Software) s
-5 261 M
-( 4848 Tramway Ridge Blvd) s
-5 250 M
-( Suite 101) s
-5 239 M
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-5 228 M
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-5 206 M
-( Phone: +1 505 332 5700) s
-5 195 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 129 M
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-_R
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( Tatu Ylonen) s
-5 679 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 668 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 657 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 646 M
-( Finland) s
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-( EMail: [email protected]) s
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-( Sami Lehtinen) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 569 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 558 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 547 M
-( Finland) s
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-( EMail: [email protected]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(Full Copyright Statement) s
-5 668 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2002\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 646 M
-( This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to) s
-5 635 M
-( others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it) s
-5 624 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
-5 613 M
-( and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any) s
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-( document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing) s
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-5 558 M
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-5 547 M
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-5 536 M
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-5 525 M
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-5 382 M
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-5 360 M
-( Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the) s
-5 349 M
-( Internet Society.) s
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-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 83960ae976..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1962 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Secure Shell Working Group J. Galbraith
-Internet-Draft VanDyke Software
-Expires: April 16, 2003 T. Ylonen
- S. Lehtinen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- October 16, 2002
-
-
- SSH File Transfer Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-03.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
- other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
- Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on April 16, 2003.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol provides secure file transfer
- functionality over any reliable data stream. It is the standard file
- transfer protocol for use with the SSH2 protocol. This document
- describes the file transfer protocol and its interface to the SSH2
- protocol suite.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 3. General Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 4. Protocol Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 4.1 Client Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 4.2 Server Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 5. File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 5.1 Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 5.2 Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.3 Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.4 Owner and Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.5 Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.6 Times . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.7 ACL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.8 Extended attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 6. Requests From the Client to the Server . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 6.2 File Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 6.4 Reading and Writing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- 6.5 Removing and Renaming Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 6.7 Scanning Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 6.8 Retrieving File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 6.9 Setting File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name . . . . . . . . . 23
- 6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 7. Responses from the Server to the Client . . . . . . . . . 24
- 8. Vendor-Specific Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
- 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
- 10. Changes from previous protocol versions . . . . . . . . . 30
- 10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
- 10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 11. Trademark Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
-1. Introduction
-
- This protocol provides secure file transfer (and more generally file
- system access) functionality over a reliable data stream, such as a
- channel in the SSH2 protocol [5].
-
- This protocol is designed so that it could be used to implement a
- secure remote file system service, as well as a secure file transfer
- service.
-
- This protocol assumes that it runs over a secure channel, and that
- the server has already authenticated the user at the client end, and
- that the identity of the client user is externally available to the
- server implementation.
-
- In general, this protocol follows a simple request-response model.
- Each request and response contains a sequence number and multiple
- requests may be pending simultaneously. There are a relatively large
- number of different request messages, but a small number of possible
- response messages. Each request has one or more response messages
- that may be returned in result (e.g., a read either returns data or
- reports error status).
-
- The packet format descriptions in this specification follow the
- notation presented in the secsh architecture draft. [5]
-
- Even though this protocol is described in the context of the SSH2
- protocol, this protocol is general and independent of the rest of the
- SSH2 protocol suite. It could be used in a number of different
- applications, such as secure file transfer over TLS RFC 2246 [1] and
- transfer of management information in VPN applications.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol
-
- When used with the SSH2 Protocol suite, this protocol is intended to
- be used from the SSH Connection Protocol [7] as a subsystem, as
- described in section ``Starting a Shell or a Command''. The
- subsystem name used with this protocol is "sftp".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 4]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
-3. General Packet Format
-
- All packets transmitted over the secure connection are of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 length
- byte type
- byte[length - 1] data payload
-
- That is, they are just data preceded by 32-bit length and 8-bit type
- fields. The `length' is the length of the data area, and does not
- include the `length' field itself. The format and interpretation of
- the data area depends on the packet type.
-
- All packet descriptions below only specify the packet type and the
- data that goes into the data field. Thus, they should be prefixed by
- the `length' and `type' fields.
-
- The maximum size of a packet is in practice determined by the client
- (the maximum size of read or write requests that it sends, plus a few
- bytes of packet overhead). All servers SHOULD support packets of at
- least 34000 bytes (where the packet size refers to the full length,
- including the header above). This should allow for reads and writes
- of at most 32768 bytes.
-
- There is no limit on the number of outstanding (non-acknowledged)
- requests that the client may send to the server. In practice this is
- limited by the buffering available on the data stream and the queuing
- performed by the server. If the server's queues are full, it should
- not read any more data from the stream, and flow control will prevent
- the client from sending more requests. Note, however, that while
- there is no restriction on the protocol level, the client's API may
- provide a limit in order to prevent infinite queuing of outgoing
- requests at the client.
-
- The following values are defined for packet types.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires April 16, 2003 [Page 5]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
- #define SSH_FXP_INIT 1
- #define SSH_FXP_VERSION 2
- #define SSH_FXP_OPEN 3
- #define SSH_FXP_CLOSE 4
- #define SSH_FXP_READ 5
- #define SSH_FXP_WRITE 6
- #define SSH_FXP_LSTAT 7
- #define SSH_FXP_FSTAT 8
- #define SSH_FXP_SETSTAT 9
- #define SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT 10
- #define SSH_FXP_OPENDIR 11
- #define SSH_FXP_READDIR 12
- #define SSH_FXP_REMOVE 13
- #define SSH_FXP_MKDIR 14
- #define SSH_FXP_RMDIR 15
- #define SSH_FXP_REALPATH 16
- #define SSH_FXP_STAT 17
- #define SSH_FXP_RENAME 18
- #define SSH_FXP_READLINK 19
- #define SSH_FXP_SYMLINK 20
-
- #define SSH_FXP_STATUS 101
- #define SSH_FXP_HANDLE 102
- #define SSH_FXP_DATA 103
- #define SSH_FXP_NAME 104
- #define SSH_FXP_ATTRS 105
-
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED 200
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY 201
-
- RESERVED_FOR_EXTENSIONS 210-255
-
- Additional packet types should only be defined if the protocol
- version number (see Section ``Protocol Initialization'') is
- incremented, and their use MUST be negotiated using the version
- number. However, the SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY
- packets can be used to implement vendor-specific extensions. See
- Section ``Vendor-Specific-Extensions'' for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-4. Protocol Initialization
-
- When the file transfer protocol starts, the client first sends a
- SSH_FXP_INIT (including its version number) packet to the server.
- The server responds with a SSH_FXP_VERSION packet, supplying the
- lowest of its own and the client's version number. Both parties
- should from then on adhere to particular version of the protocol.
-
- The version number of the protocol specified in this document is 4.
- The version number should be incremented for each incompatible
- revision of this protocol.
-
-4.1 Client Initialization
-
- The SSH_FXP_INIT packet (from client to server) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
-
- Version 3 of this protocol allowed clients to include extensions in
- the SSH_FXP_INIT packet; however, this can cause interoperability
- problems with version 1 and version 2 servers because the client must
- send this packet before knowing the servers version.
-
- In this version of the protocol, clients MUST use the
- SSH_FXP_EXTENDED packet to send extensions to the server after
- version exchange has completed. Clients MUST NOT include extensions
- in the version packet. This will prevent interoperability problems
- with older servers
-
-4.2 Server Initialization
-
- The SSH_FXP_VERSION packet (from server to client) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
- <extension data>
-
- 'version' is the lower of the protocol version supported by the
- server and the version number received from the client.
-
- The extension data may be empty, or may be a sequence of
-
- string extension_name
- string extension_data
-
- pairs (both strings MUST always be present if one is, but the
- `extension_data' string may be of zero length). If present, these
-
-
-
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-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
- strings indicate extensions to the baseline protocol. The
- `extension_name' field(s) identify the name of the extension. The
- name should be of the form "name@domain", where the domain is the DNS
- domain name of the organization defining the extension. Additional
- names that are not of this format may be defined later by the IETF.
- Implementations MUST silently ignore any extensions whose name they
- do not recognize.
-
-4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention
-
- In order to correctly process text files in a cross platform
- compatible way, the newline convention must be converted from that of
- the server to that of the client, or, during an upload, from that of
- the client to that of the server.
-
- Versions 3 and prior of this protocol made no provisions for
- processing text files. Many clients implemented some sort of
- conversion algorithm, but without either a 'canonical' on the wire
- format or knowledge of the servers newline convention, correct
- conversion was not always possible.
-
- Starting with Version 4, the SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag (Section
- 6.3) makes it possible to request that the server translate a file to
- a 'canonical' on the wire format. This format uses \r\n as the line
- separator.
-
- Servers for systems using multiple newline characters (for example,
- Mac OS X or VMS) or systems using counted records, MUST translate to
- the canonical form.
-
- However, to ease the burden of implementation on servers that use a
- single, simple separator sequence, the following extension allows the
- canonical format to be changed.
-
- string "newline"
- string new-canonical-separator (usually "\r" or "\n" or "\r\n")
-
- All clients MUST support this extension.
-
- When processing text files, clients SHOULD NOT translate any
- character or sequence that is not an exact match of the servers
- newline separator.
-
- In particular, if the newline sequence being used is the canonical
- "\r\n" sequence, a lone \r or a lone \n SHOULD be written through
- without change.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-5. File Attributes
-
- A new compound data type is defined for encoding file attributes.
- The same encoding is used both when returning file attributes from
- the server and when sending file attributes to the server. When
- sending it to the server, the flags field specifies which attributes
- are included, and the server will use default values for the
- remaining attributes (or will not modify the values of remaining
- attributes). When receiving attributes from the server, the flags
- specify which attributes are included in the returned data. The
- server normally returns all attributes it knows about.
-
- uint32 flags
- byte type always present
- uint64 size present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE
- string owner present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP
- string group present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP
- uint32 permissions present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS
- uint32 atime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACCESSTIME
- uint32 createtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_CREATETIME
- uint32 mtime present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_MODIFYTIME
- string acl present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACL
- uint32 extended_count present only if flag SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED
- string extended_type
- string extended_data
- ... more extended data (extended_type - extended_data pairs),
- so that number of pairs equals extended_count
-
-
-5.1 Flags
-
- The `flags' specify which of the fields are present. Those fields
- for which the corresponding flag is not set are not present (not
- included in the packet). New flags can only be added by incrementing
- the protocol version number (or by using the extension mechanism
- described below).
-
- The flags bits are defined to have the following values:
-
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS 0x00000004
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACCESSTIME 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_CREATETIME 0x00000010
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_MODIFYTIME 0x00000020
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACL 0x00000040
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP 0x00000080
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED 0x80000000
-
-
-
-
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-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol October 2002
-
-
- In previous versions of this protocol flags value 0x00000002 was
- SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID. This value is now unused, and OWNERGROUP
- was given a new value in order to ease implementation burden.
- 0x00000002 MUST NOT appear in the mask. Some future version of this
- protocol may reuse flag 0x00000002.
-
-5.2 Type
-
- The type field is always present. The following types are defined:
-
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_REGULAR 1
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_DIRECTORY 2
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SYMLINK 3
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SPECIAL 4
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_UNKNOWN 5
-
- On a POSIX system, these values would be derived from the permission
- field.
-
-5.3 Size
-
- The `size' field specifies the size of the file on disk, in bytes.
- If it is present during file creation, it should be considered a hint
- as to the files eventual size.
-
- Files opened with the SSH_FXF_TEXT flag may have a size that is
- greater or less than the value of the size field.
-
-5.4 Owner and Group
-
- The `owner' and `group' fields are represented as UTF-8 strings; this
- is the form used by NFS v4. See NFS version 4 Protocol. [3] The
- following text is selected quotations from section 5.6.
-
- To avoid a representation that is tied to a particular underlying
- implementation at the client or server, the use of UTF-8 strings has
- been chosen. The string should be of the form user@dns_domain".
- This will allow for a client and server that do not use the same
- local representation the ability to translate to a common syntax that
- can be interpreted by both. In the case where there is no
- translation available to the client or server, the attribute value
- must be constructed without the "@". Therefore, the absence of the @
- from the owner or owner_group attribute signifies that no translation
- was available and the receiver of the attribute should not place any
- special meaning with the attribute value. Even though the attribute
- value can not be translated, it may still be useful. In the case of
- a client, the attribute string may be used for local display of
- ownership.
-
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-
-5.5 Permissions
-
- The `permissions' field contains a bit mask of file permissions as
- defined by POSIX [1].
-
-5.6 Times
-
- The 'atime', 'createtime', and 'mtime' contain the access, creation,
- and modification times of the files, respectively. They are
- represented as seconds from Jan 1, 1970 in UTC.
-
-5.7 ACL
-
- The 'ACL' field contains an ACL similar to that defined in section
- 5.9 of NFS version 4 Protocol [3].
-
- uint32 ace-count
-
- repeated ace-count time:
- uint32 ace-type
- uint32 ace-flag
- uint32 ace-mask
- string who [UTF-8]
-
- ace-type is one of the following four values (taken from NFS Version
- 4 Protocol [3]:
-
- const ACE4_ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000000;
- const ACE4_ACCESS_DENIED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000003;
-
- ace-flag is a combination of the following flag values. See NFS
- Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.2:
-
- const ACE4_FILE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_DIRECTORY_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_INHERIT_ONLY_ACE = 0x00000008;
- const ACE4_SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000010;
- const ACE4_FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000020;
- const ACE4_IDENTIFIER_GROUP = 0x00000040;
-
- ace-mask is any combination of the following flags (taken from NFS
- Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.3:
-
-
-
-
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- const ACE4_READ_DATA = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_LIST_DIRECTORY = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_WRITE_DATA = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_ADD_FILE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_APPEND_DATA = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_READ_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000008;
- const ACE4_WRITE_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000010;
- const ACE4_EXECUTE = 0x00000020;
- const ACE4_DELETE_CHILD = 0x00000040;
- const ACE4_READ_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000080;
- const ACE4_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000100;
- const ACE4_DELETE = 0x00010000;
- const ACE4_READ_ACL = 0x00020000;
- const ACE4_WRITE_ACL = 0x00040000;
- const ACE4_WRITE_OWNER = 0x00080000;
- const ACE4_SYNCHRONIZE = 0x00100000;
-
- who is a UTF-8 string of the form described in 'Owner and Group'
- (Section 5.4)
-
-5.8 Extended attributes
-
- The SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED flag provides a general extension
- mechanism for vendor-specific extensions. If the flag is specified,
- then the `extended_count' field is present. It specifies the number
- of extended_type-extended_data pairs that follow. Each of these
- pairs specifies an extended attribute. For each of the attributes,
- the extended_type field should be a string of the format
- "name@domain", where "domain" is a valid, registered domain name and
- "name" identifies the method. The IETF may later standardize certain
- names that deviate from this format (e.g., that do not contain the
- "@" sign). The interpretation of `extended_data' depends on the
- type. Implementations SHOULD ignore extended data fields that they
- do not understand.
-
- Additional fields can be added to the attributes by either defining
- additional bits to the flags field to indicate their presence, or by
- defining extended attributes for them. The extended attributes
- mechanism is recommended for most purposes; additional flags bits
- should only be defined by an IETF standards action that also
- increments the protocol version number. The use of such new fields
- MUST be negotiated by the version number in the protocol exchange.
- It is a protocol error if a packet with unsupported protocol bits is
- received.
-
-
-
-
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-
-6. Requests From the Client to the Server
-
- Requests from the client to the server represent the various file
- system operations. Each request begins with an `id' field, which is
- a 32-bit identifier identifying the request (selected by the client).
- The same identifier will be returned in the response to the request.
- One possible implementation is a monotonically increasing request
- sequence number (modulo 2^32).
-
- Many operations in the protocol operate on open files. The
- SSH_FXP_OPEN request can return a file handle (which is an opaque
- variable-length string) which may be used to access the file later
- (e.g. in a read operation). The client MUST NOT send requests the
- server with bogus or closed handles. However, the server MUST
- perform adequate checks on the handle in order to avoid security
- risks due to fabricated handles.
-
- This design allows either stateful and stateless server
- implementation, as well as an implementation which caches state
- between requests but may also flush it. The contents of the file
- handle string are entirely up to the server and its design. The
- client should not modify or attempt to interpret the file handle
- strings.
-
- The file handle strings MUST NOT be longer than 256 bytes.
-
-6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering
-
- The protocol and implementations MUST process requests relating to
- the same file in the order in which they are received. In other
- words, if an application submits multiple requests to the server, the
- results in the responses will be the same as if it had sent the
- requests one at a time and waited for the response in each case. For
- example, the server may process non-overlapping read/write requests
- to the same file in parallel, but overlapping reads and writes cannot
- be reordered or parallelized. However, there are no ordering
- restrictions on the server for processing requests from two different
- file transfer connections. The server may interleave and parallelize
- them at will.
-
- There are no restrictions on the order in which responses to
- outstanding requests are delivered to the client, except that the
- server must ensure fairness in the sense that processing of no
- request will be indefinitely delayed even if the client is sending
- other requests so that there are multiple outstanding requests all
- the time.
-
-
-
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-
-6.2 File Names
-
- This protocol represents file names as strings. File names are
- assumed to use the slash ('/') character as a directory separator.
-
- File names starting with a slash are "absolute", and are relative to
- the root of the file system. Names starting with any other character
- are relative to the user's default directory (home directory). Note
- that identifying the user is assumed to take place outside of this
- protocol.
-
- Servers SHOULD interpret a path name component ".." as referring to
- the parent directory, and "." as referring to the current directory.
- If the server implementation limits access to certain parts of the
- file system, it must be extra careful in parsing file names when
- enforcing such restrictions. There have been numerous reported
- security bugs where a ".." in a path name has allowed access outside
- the intended area.
-
- An empty path name is valid, and it refers to the user's default
- directory (usually the user's home directory).
-
- Otherwise, no syntax is defined for file names by this specification.
- Clients should not make any other assumptions; however, they can
- splice path name components returned by SSH_FXP_READDIR together
- using a slash ('/') as the separator, and that will work as expected.
-
- In order to comply with IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages
- [2], all filenames are to be encoded in UTF-8. The shortest valid
- UTF-8 encoding of the UNICODE data MUST be used. The server is
- responsible for converting the UNICODE data to whatever canonical
- form it requires.
-
- For example, if the server requires that precomposed characters
- always be used, the server MUST NOT assume the filename as sent by
- the client has this attribute, but must do this normalization itself.
-
- It is understood that the lack of well-defined semantics for file
- names may cause interoperability problems between clients and servers
- using radically different operating systems. However, this approach
- is known to work acceptably with most systems, and alternative
- approaches that e.g. treat file names as sequences of structured
- components are quite complicated.
-
-6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files
-
- Files are opened and created using the SSH_FXP_OPEN message, whose
- data part is as follows:
-
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- uint32 id
- string filename [UTF-8]
- uint32 pflags
- ATTRS attrs
-
- The `id' field is the request identifier as for all requests.
-
- The `filename' field specifies the file name. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information.
-
- The `pflags' field is a bitmask. The following bits have been
- defined.
-
- #define SSH_FXF_READ 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FXF_WRITE 0x00000002
- #define SSH_FXF_APPEND 0x00000004
- #define SSH_FXF_CREAT 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FXF_TRUNC 0x00000010
- #define SSH_FXF_EXCL 0x00000020
- #define SSH_FXF_TEXT 0x00000040
-
- These have the following meanings:
-
- SSH_FXF_READ
- Open the file for reading.
-
- SSH_FXF_WRITE
- Open the file for writing. If both this and SSH_FXF_READ are
- specified, the file is opened for both reading and writing.
-
- SSH_FXF_APPEND
- Force all writes to append data at the end of the file. The
- offset parameter to write will be ignored.
-
- SSH_FXF_CREAT
- If this flag is specified, then a new file will be created if one
- does not already exist (if O_TRUNC is specified, the new file will
- be truncated to zero length if it previously exists).
-
- SSH_FXF_TRUNC
- Forces an existing file with the same name to be truncated to zero
- length when creating a file by specifying SSH_FXF_CREAT.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
- SSH_FXF_EXCL
- Causes the request to fail if the named file already exists.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
-
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- SSH_FXF_TEXT
- Indicates that the server should treat the file as text and
- convert it to the canonical newline convention in use. (See
- Determining Server Newline Convention. (Section 4.3)
-
- When a file is opened with the FXF_TEXT flag, the offset field in
- both the read and write function are ignored.
-
- Servers MUST correctly process multiple parallel reads and writes
- correctly in this mode. Naturally, it is permissible for them to
- do this by serializing the requests. It would not be possible for
- a client to reliably detect a server that does not implement
- parallel writes in time to prevent damage.
-
- Clients SHOULD use the SSH_FXF_APPEND flag to append data to a
- text file rather then using write with a calculated offset.
-
- To support seeks on text file the following SSH_FXP_EXTENDED
- packet is defined.
-
-
-
- string "text-seek"
- string file-handle
- uint64 line-number
-
- line-number is the index of the line number to seek to, where byte
- 0 in the file is line number 0, and the byte directly following
- the first newline sequence in the file is line number 1 and so on.
-
- The response to a "text-seek" request is an SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
- An attempt to seek past the end-of-file should result in a
- SSH_FX_EOF status.
-
- Servers SHOULD support at least one "text-seek" in order to
- support resume. However, a client MUST be prepared to receive
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED when attempting a "text-seek" operation.
- The client can then try a fall-back strategy, if it has one.
-
- Clients MUST be prepared to handle SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED returned
- for read or write operations that are not sequential.
-
- The `attrs' field specifies the initial attributes for the file.
- Default values will be used for those attributes that are not
- specified. See Section ``File Attributes'' for more information.
-
-
-
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-
- The response to this message will be either SSH_FXP_HANDLE (if the
- operation is successful) or SSH_FXP_STATUS (if the operation fails).
-
- A file is closed by using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request. Its data field
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- previously returned in the response to SSH_FXP_OPEN or
- SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. The handle becomes invalid immediately after this
- request has been sent.
-
- The response to this request will be a SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One
- should note that on some server platforms even a close can fail.
- This can happen e.g. if the server operating system caches writes,
- and an error occurs while flushing cached writes during the close.
-
-6.4 Reading and Writing
-
- Once a file has been opened, it can be read using the SSH_FXP_READ
- message, which has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- uint32 len
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' is an open file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) relative
- to the beginning of the file from where to start reading, and `len'
- is the maximum number of bytes to read.
-
- In response to this request, the server will read as many bytes as it
- can from the file (up to `len'), and return them in a SSH_FXP_DATA
- message. If an error occurs or EOF is encountered before reading any
- data, the server will respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS. For normal disk
- files, it is guaranteed that this will read the specified number of
- bytes, or up to end of file. For e.g. device files this may return
- fewer bytes than requested.
-
- Writing to a file is achieved using the SSH_FXP_WRITE message, which
- has the following format:
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- string data
-
- where `id' is a request identifier, `handle' is a file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) from the
- beginning of the file where to start writing, and `data' is the data
- to be written.
-
- The write will extend the file if writing beyond the end of the file.
- It is legal to write way beyond the end of the file; the semantics
- are to write zeroes from the end of the file to the specified offset
- and then the data. On most operating systems, such writes do not
- allocate disk space but instead leave "holes" in the file.
-
- The server responds to a write request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
-6.5 Removing and Renaming Files
-
- Files can be removed using the SSH_FXP_REMOVE message. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string filename [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `filename' is the name of
- the file to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information. This request cannot be used to remove directories.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
- Files (and directories) can be renamed using the SSH_FXP_RENAME
- message. Its data is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string oldpath [UTF-8]
- string newpath [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `oldpath' is the name of an
- existing file or directory, and `newpath' is the new name for the
- file or directory. It is an error if there already exists a file
- with the name specified by newpath. The server may also fail rename
- requests in other situations, for example if `oldpath' and `newpath'
- point to different file systems on the server.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
-
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- message.
-
-6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories
-
- New directories can be created using the SSH_FXP_MKDIR request. It
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier.
-
- `path' specifies the directory to be created. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information on file names.
-
- `attrs' specifies the attributes that should be applied to it upon
- creation. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section ``File
- Attributes''.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message. If a file or directory with the specified path already
- exists, an error will be returned.
-
- Directories can be removed using the SSH_FXP_RMDIR request, which has
- the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the
- directory to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information on file names.
-
- The server responds to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
- Errors may be returned from this operation for various reasons,
- including, but not limited to, the path does not exist, the path does
- not refer to a directory object, the directory is not empty, or the
- user has insufficient access or permission to perform the requested
- operation.
-
-6.7 Scanning Directories
-
- The files in a directory can be listed using the SSH_FXP_OPENDIR and
- SSH_FXP_READDIR requests. Each SSH_FXP_READDIR request returns one
- or more file names with full file attributes for each file. The
- client should call SSH_FXP_READDIR repeatedly until it has found the
- file it is looking for or until the server responds with a
-
-
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- SSH_FXP_STATUS message indicating an error (normally SSH_FX_EOF if
- there are no more files in the directory). The client should then
- close the handle using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request.
-
- The SSH_FXP_OPENDIR opens a directory for reading. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' is the path name of
- the directory to be listed (without any trailing slash). See Section
- ``File Names'' for more information on file names. This will return
- an error if the path does not specify a directory or if the directory
- is not readable. The server will respond to this request with either
- a SSH_FXP_HANDLE or a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- Once the directory has been successfully opened, files (and
- directories) contained in it can be listed using SSH_FXP_READDIR
- requests. These are of the format
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. (It is a protocol error to attempt to
- use an ordinary file handle returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN.)
-
- The server responds to this request with either a SSH_FXP_NAME or a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One or more names may be returned at a time.
- Full status information is returned for each name in order to speed
- up typical directory listings.
-
- If there are no more names available to be read, the server MUST
- respond with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message with error code of SSH_FX_EOF.
-
- When the client no longer wishes to read more names from the
- directory, it SHOULD call SSH_FXP_CLOSE for the handle. The handle
- should be closed regardless of whether an error has occurred or not.
-
-6.8 Retrieving File Attributes
-
- Very often, file attributes are automatically returned by
- SSH_FXP_READDIR. However, sometimes there is need to specifically
- retrieve the attributes for a named file. This can be done using the
- SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT and SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- SSH_FXP_STAT and SSH_FXP_LSTAT only differ in that SSH_FXP_STAT
-
-
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- follows symbolic links on the server, whereas SSH_FXP_LSTAT does not
- follow symbolic links. Both have the same format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- uint32 flags
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the file
- system object for which status is to be returned. The server
- responds to this request with either SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- The flags field specify the attribute flags in which the client has
- particular interest. This is a hint to the server. For example,
- because retrieving owner / group and acl information can be an
- expensive operation under some operating systems, the server may
- choose not to retrieve this information unless the client expresses a
- specific interest in it.
-
- The client has no guarantee the server will provide all the fields
- that it has expressed an interest in.
-
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT differs from the others in that it returns status
- information for an open file (identified by the file handle). Its
- format is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint32 flags
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `handle' is a file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN. The server responds to this request with
- SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.9 Setting File Attributes
-
- File attributes may be modified using the SSH_FXP_SETSTAT and
- SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT requests. These requests are used for operations
- such as changing the ownership, permissions or access times, as well
- as for truncating a file.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SETSTAT request is of the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `path' specifies the file
- system object (e.g. file or directory) whose attributes are to be
-
-
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- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''.
-
- An error will be returned if the specified file system object does
- not exist or the user does not have sufficient rights to modify the
- specified attributes. The server responds to this request with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- The SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT request modifies the attributes of a file which
- is already open. It has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' (MUST be returned by
- SSH_FXP_OPEN) identifies the file whose attributes are to be
- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''. The server will respond to this request with
- SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links
-
- The SSH_FXP_READLINK request may be used to read the target of a
- symbolic link. It would have a data part as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be read.
-
- The server will respond with a SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only
- one name and a dummy attributes value. The name in the returned
- packet contains the target of the link. If an error occurs, the
- server may respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SYMLINK request will create a symbolic link on the
- server. It is of the following format
-
- uint32 id
- string linkpath [UTF-8]
- string targetpath [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `linkpath' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be created and `targetpath' specifies the
-
-
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- target of the symlink. The server shall respond with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS indicating either success (SSH_FX_OK) or an error
- condition.
-
-6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name
-
- The SSH_FXP_REALPATH request can be used to have the server
- canonicalize any given path name to an absolute path. This is useful
- for converting path names containing ".." components or relative
- pathnames without a leading slash into absolute paths. The format of
- the request is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name to be canonicalized. The server will respond with a
- SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing the name in canonical form and a dummy
- attributes value. If an error occurs, the server may also respond
- with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths
-
- The client SHOULD treat the results of SSH_FXP_REALPATH as a
- canonical absolute path, even if the path does not appear to be
- absolute. A client that use REALPATH(".") and treats the result as
- absolute, even if there is no leading slash, will continue to
- function correctly, even when talking to a Windows NT or VMS style
- system, where absolute paths may not begin with a slash.
-
- For example, if the client wishes to change directory up, and the
- server has returned "c:/x/y/z" from REALPATH, the client SHOULD use
- "c:/x/y/z/..".
-
- As a second example, if the client wishes to open the file "x.txt" in
- the current directory, and server has returned "dka100:/x/y/z" as the
- canonical path of the directory, the client SHOULD open "dka100:/x/y/
- z/x.txt"
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-7. Responses from the Server to the Client
-
- The server responds to the client using one of a few response
- packets. All requests can return a SSH_FXP_STATUS response upon
- failure. When the operation is successful, any of the responses may
- be returned (depending on the operation). If no data needs to be
- returned to the client, the SSH_FXP_STATUS response with SSH_FX_OK
- status is appropriate. Otherwise, the SSH_FXP_HANDLE message is used
- to return a file handle (for SSH_FXP_OPEN and SSH_FXP_OPENDIR
- requests), SSH_FXP_DATA is used to return data from SSH_FXP_READ,
- SSH_FXP_NAME is used to return one or more file names from a
- SSH_FXP_READDIR or SSH_FXP_REALPATH request, and SSH_FXP_ATTRS is
- used to return file attributes from SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT, and
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- Exactly one response will be returned for each request. Each
- response packet contains a request identifier which can be used to
- match each response with the corresponding request. Note that it is
- legal to have several requests outstanding simultaneously, and the
- server is allowed to send responses to them in a different order from
- the order in which the requests were sent (the result of their
- execution, however, is guaranteed to be as if they had been processed
- one at a time in the order in which the requests were sent).
-
- Response packets are of the same general format as request packets.
- Each response packet begins with the request identifier.
-
- The format of the data portion of the SSH_FXP_STATUS response is as
- follows:
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 error/status code
- string error message (ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC-2279])
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC-1766])
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `error/status code'
- indicates the result of the requested operation. The value SSH_FX_OK
- indicates success, and all other values indicate failure.
-
- Currently, the following values are defined (other values may be
- defined by future versions of this protocol):
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- #define SSH_FX_OK 0
- #define SSH_FX_EOF 1
- #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE 2
- #define SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED 3
- #define SSH_FX_FAILURE 4
- #define SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE 5
- #define SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION 6
- #define SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST 7
- #define SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED 8
- #define SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE 9
- #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH 10
- #define SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS 11
- #define SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT 12
-
- SSH_FX_OK
- Indicates successful completion of the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_EOF
- indicates end-of-file condition; for SSH_FX_READ it means that no
- more data is available in the file, and for SSH_FX_READDIR it
- indicates that no more files are contained in the directory.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE
- is returned when a reference is made to a file which does not
- exist.
-
- SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED
- is returned when the authenticated user does not have sufficient
- permissions to perform the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_FAILURE
- is a generic catch-all error message; it should be returned if an
- error occurs for which there is no more specific error code
- defined.
-
- SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE
- may be returned if a badly formatted packet or protocol
- incompatibility is detected.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the client has no
- connection to the server (it can only be generated locally by the
- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
- SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the connection to the
- server has been lost (it can only be generated locally by the
- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
-
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-
-
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED
- indicates that an attempt was made to perform an operation which
- is not supported for the server (it may be generated locally by
- the client if e.g. the version number exchange indicates that a
- required feature is not supported by the server, or it may be
- returned by the server if the server does not implement an
- operation).
-
- SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE
- The handle value was invalid.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH
- The file path does not exist or is invalid.
-
- SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS
- The file already exists.
-
- SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT
- The file is on read only media, or the media is write protected.
-
- The SSH_FXP_HANDLE response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is an arbitrary
- string that identifies an open file or directory on the server. The
- handle is opaque to the client; the client MUST NOT attempt to
- interpret or modify it in any way. The length of the handle string
- MUST NOT exceed 256 data bytes.
-
- The SSH_FXP_DATA response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string data
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `data' is an arbitrary byte
- string containing the requested data. The data string may be at most
- the number of bytes requested in a SSH_FXP_READ request, but may also
- be shorter if end of file is reached or if the read is from something
- other than a regular file.
-
- The SSH_FXP_NAME response has the following format:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 count
- repeats count times:
- string filename [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `count' is the number of names
- returned in this response, and the remaining fields repeat `count'
- times (so that all three fields are first included for the first
- file, then for the second file, etc). In the repeated part,
- `filename' is a file name being returned (for SSH_FXP_READDIR, it
- will be a relative name within the directory, without any path
- components; for SSH_FXP_REALPATH it will be an absolute path name),
- and `attrs' is the attributes of the file as described in Section
- ``File Attributes''.
-
- The SSH_FXP_ATTRS response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `attrs' is the returned
- file attributes as described in Section ``File Attributes''.
-
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-
-
-8. Vendor-Specific Extensions
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED request provides a generic extension mechanism
- for adding vendor-specific commands. The request has the following
- format:
-
- uint32 id
- string extended-request
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `extended-request' is a
- string of the format "name@domain", where domain is an internet
- domain name of the vendor defining the request. The rest of the
- request is completely vendor-specific, and servers should only
- attempt to interpret it if they recognize the `extended-request'
- name.
-
- The server may respond to such requests using any of the response
- packets defined in Section ``Responses from the Server to the
- Client''. Additionally, the server may also respond with a
- SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet, as defined below. If the server does
- not recognize the `extended-request' name, then the server MUST
- respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS with error/status set to
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED.
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet can be used to carry arbitrary
- extension-specific data from the server to the client. It is of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
- There is a range of packet types reserved for use by extensions. In
- order to avoid collision, extensions that turn on the use of
- additional packet types should determine those numbers dynamically.
-
- The suggested way of doing this is have an extension request from the
- client to the server that enables the extension; the extension
- response from the server to the client would specify the actual type
- values to use, in additional to any other data.
-
- Extension authors should be mindful of the limited range of packet
- types available (there are only 45 values available) and avoid
- requiring a new packet type where possible.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-9. Security Considerations
-
- This protocol assumes that it is run over a secure channel and that
- the endpoints of the channel have been authenticated. Thus, this
- protocol assumes that it is externally protected from network-level
- attacks.
-
- This protocol provides file system access to arbitrary files on the
- server (only constrained by the server implementation). It is the
- responsibility of the server implementation to enforce any access
- controls that may be required to limit the access allowed for any
- particular user (the user being authenticated externally to this
- protocol, typically using the SSH User Authentication Protocol [8].
-
- Care must be taken in the server implementation to check the validity
- of received file handle strings. The server should not rely on them
- directly; it MUST check the validity of each handle before relying on
- it.
-
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-
-
-10. Changes from previous protocol versions
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol has changed over time, before it's
- standardization. The following is a description of the incompatible
- changes between different versions.
-
-10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3
-
- Many of the changes between version 4 and version 3 are to the
- attribute structure to make it more flexible for non-unix platforms.
-
- o Make all filenames UTF-8.
-
- o Added 'newline' extension.
-
- o Made file attribute owner and group strings so they can actually
- be used on disparate systems.
-
- o Added createtime field, and added separate flags for atime,
- createtime, and mtime so they can be set separately.
-
- o Split the file type out of the permissions field and into it's own
- field (which is always present.)
-
- o Added acl attribute.
-
- o Added SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag.
-
- o Added flags field to the get stat commands so that the client can
- specifically request information the server might not normally
- included for performance reasons.
-
- o Removed the long filename from the names structure-- it can now be
- built from information available in the attrs structure.
-
- o Added reserved range of packet numbers for extensions.
-
- o Added several additional error codes.
-
- o Change the way version negotiate works slightly. Previously, if
- the client version were higher than the server version, the server
- was supposed to 'echo back' the clients version. The server now
- sends it's own version and the lower of the two is considered to
- be the one in use.
-
-
-
-
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-
-10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2
-
- o The SSH_FXP_READLINK and SSH_FXP_SYMLINK messages were added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY messages were
- added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_STATUS message was changed to include fields `error
- message' and `language tag'.
-
-
-10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1
-
- o The SSH_FXP_RENAME message was added.
-
-
-10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0
-
- o Implementation changes, no actual protocol changes.
-
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-
-11. Trademark Issues
-
- "ssh" is a registered trademark of SSH Communications Security Corp
- in the United States and/or other countries.
-
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-
-References
-
- [1] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A. and
- P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January
- 1999.
-
- [2] Alvestrand, H., "IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages",
- BCP 18, RFC 2277, January 1998.
-
- [3] Shepler, S., Callaghan, B., Robinson, D., Thurlow, R., Beame,
- C., Eisler, M. and D. Noveck, "NFS version 4 Protocol", RFC
- 3010, December 2000.
-
- [4] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information
- Technology - Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part
- 1: System Application Program Interface (API) [C Language]",
- IEEE Standard 1003.2, 1996.
-
- [5] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Architecture", draft-ietf-secsh-
- architecture-13 (work in progress), September 2002.
-
- [6] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Transport Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-
- transport-15 (work in progress), September 2002.
-
- [7] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Connection Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-connect-16
- (work in progress), September 2002.
-
- [8] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Authentication Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-
- userauth-16 (work in progress), September 2002.
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Joseph Galbraith
- VanDyke Software
- 4848 Tramway Ridge Blvd
- Suite 101
- Albuquerque, NM 87111
- US
-
- Phone: +1 505 332 5700
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Sami Lehtinen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
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-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
- and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
- kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
- included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
- document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
- the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
- Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
- developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
- copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
- followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
- English.
-
- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
- revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
- HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-Acknowledgement
-
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
-
-
-
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diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-04.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-04.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9f51883cd2..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-04.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2130 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Secure Shell Working Group J. Galbraith
-Internet-Draft VanDyke Software
-Expires: June 18, 2003 T. Ylonen
- S. Lehtinen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- December 18, 2002
-
-
- SSH File Transfer Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-04.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
- other groups may also distribute working documents as
- Internet-Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on June 18, 2003.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol provides secure file transfer
- functionality over any reliable data stream. It is the standard file
- transfer protocol for use with the SSH2 protocol. This document
- describes the file transfer protocol and its interface to the SSH2
- protocol suite.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 3. General Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 3.1 The use of stderr in the server . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 4. Protocol Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 4.1 Client Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 4.2 Server Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- 4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 5. File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.1 Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.2 Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.3 Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.4 Owner and Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 5.5 Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 5.6 Times . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 5.7 ACL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 5.8 Extended attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 6. Requests From the Client to the Server . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 6.2 File Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.4 Reading and Writing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 6.5 Removing and Renaming Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 6.7 Scanning Directories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 6.8 Retrieving File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 6.9 Setting File Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- 6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name . . . . . . . . . 25
- 6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- 7. Responses from the Server to the Client . . . . . . . . . 26
- 8. Vendor-Specific Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
- 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 10. Changes from previous protocol versions . . . . . . . . . 32
- 10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- 10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- 10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- 10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- 11. Trademark Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
- References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
- Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . 37
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-1. Introduction
-
- This protocol provides secure file transfer (and more generally file
- system access) functionality over a reliable data stream, such as a
- channel in the SSH2 protocol [5].
-
- This protocol is designed so that it could be used to implement a
- secure remote file system service, as well as a secure file transfer
- service.
-
- This protocol assumes that it runs over a secure channel, and that
- the server has already authenticated the user at the client end, and
- that the identity of the client user is externally available to the
- server implementation.
-
- In general, this protocol follows a simple request-response model.
- Each request and response contains a sequence number and multiple
- requests may be pending simultaneously. There are a relatively large
- number of different request messages, but a small number of possible
- response messages. Each request has one or more response messages
- that may be returned in result (e.g., a read either returns data or
- reports error status).
-
- The packet format descriptions in this specification follow the
- notation presented in the secsh architecture draft. [5]
-
- Even though this protocol is described in the context of the SSH2
- protocol, this protocol is general and independent of the rest of the
- SSH2 protocol suite. It could be used in a number of different
- applications, such as secure file transfer over TLS RFC 2246 [1] and
- transfer of management information in VPN applications.
-
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-2. Use with the SSH Connection Protocol
-
- When used with the SSH2 Protocol suite, this protocol is intended to
- be used from the SSH Connection Protocol [7] as a subsystem, as
- described in section ``Starting a Shell or a Command''. The
- subsystem name used with this protocol is "sftp".
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-3. General Packet Format
-
- All packets transmitted over the secure connection are of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 length
- byte type
- byte[length - 1] data payload
-
- That is, they are just data preceded by 32-bit length and 8-bit type
- fields. The `length' is the length of the data area, and does not
- include the `length' field itself. The format and interpretation of
- the data area depends on the packet type.
-
- All packet descriptions below only specify the packet type and the
- data that goes into the data field. Thus, they should be prefixed by
- the `length' and `type' fields.
-
- The maximum size of a packet is in practice determined by the client
- (the maximum size of read or write requests that it sends, plus a few
- bytes of packet overhead). All servers SHOULD support packets of at
- least 34000 bytes (where the packet size refers to the full length,
- including the header above). This should allow for reads and writes
- of at most 32768 bytes.
-
- There is no limit on the number of outstanding (non-acknowledged)
- requests that the client may send to the server. In practice this is
- limited by the buffering available on the data stream and the queuing
- performed by the server. If the server's queues are full, it should
- not read any more data from the stream, and flow control will prevent
- the client from sending more requests. Note, however, that while
- there is no restriction on the protocol level, the client's API may
- provide a limit in order to prevent infinite queuing of outgoing
- requests at the client.
-
- The following values are defined for packet types.
-
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-
- #define SSH_FXP_INIT 1
- #define SSH_FXP_VERSION 2
- #define SSH_FXP_OPEN 3
- #define SSH_FXP_CLOSE 4
- #define SSH_FXP_READ 5
- #define SSH_FXP_WRITE 6
- #define SSH_FXP_LSTAT 7
- #define SSH_FXP_FSTAT 8
- #define SSH_FXP_SETSTAT 9
- #define SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT 10
- #define SSH_FXP_OPENDIR 11
- #define SSH_FXP_READDIR 12
- #define SSH_FXP_REMOVE 13
- #define SSH_FXP_MKDIR 14
- #define SSH_FXP_RMDIR 15
- #define SSH_FXP_REALPATH 16
- #define SSH_FXP_STAT 17
- #define SSH_FXP_RENAME 18
- #define SSH_FXP_READLINK 19
- #define SSH_FXP_SYMLINK 20
-
- #define SSH_FXP_STATUS 101
- #define SSH_FXP_HANDLE 102
- #define SSH_FXP_DATA 103
- #define SSH_FXP_NAME 104
- #define SSH_FXP_ATTRS 105
-
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED 200
- #define SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY 201
-
- RESERVED_FOR_EXTENSIONS 210-255
-
- Additional packet types should only be defined if the protocol
- version number (see Section ``Protocol Initialization'') is
- incremented, and their use MUST be negotiated using the version
- number. However, the SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY
- packets can be used to implement vendor-specific extensions. See
- Section ``Vendor-Specific-Extensions'' for more details.
-
-3.1 The use of stderr in the server
-
- Packets are sent and received on stdout and stdin. Data sent on
- stderr by the server SHOULD be considered debug or supplemental error
- information, and MAY be displayed to the user.
-
- For example, during initialization, there is no client request
- active, so errors or warning information cannot be sent to the client
- as part of the SFTP protocol at this early stage. However, the
-
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- errors or warnings MAY be sent as stderr text.
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-4. Protocol Initialization
-
- When the file transfer protocol starts, the client first sends a
- SSH_FXP_INIT (including its version number) packet to the server.
- The server responds with a SSH_FXP_VERSION packet, supplying the
- lowest of its own and the client's version number. Both parties
- should from then on adhere to particular version of the protocol.
-
- The version number of the protocol specified in this document is 4.
- The version number should be incremented for each incompatible
- revision of this protocol.
-
-4.1 Client Initialization
-
- The SSH_FXP_INIT packet (from client to server) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
-
- Version 3 of this protocol allowed clients to include extensions in
- the SSH_FXP_INIT packet; however, this can cause interoperability
- problems with version 1 and version 2 servers because the client must
- send this packet before knowing the servers version.
-
- In this version of the protocol, clients MUST use the
- SSH_FXP_EXTENDED packet to send extensions to the server after
- version exchange has completed. Clients MUST NOT include extensions
- in the version packet. This will prevent interoperability problems
- with older servers
-
-4.2 Server Initialization
-
- The SSH_FXP_VERSION packet (from server to client) has the following
- data:
-
- uint32 version
- <extension data>
-
- 'version' is the lower of the protocol version supported by the
- server and the version number received from the client.
-
- The extension data may be empty, or may be a sequence of
-
- string extension_name
- string extension_data
-
- pairs (both strings MUST always be present if one is, but the
- `extension_data' string may be of zero length). If present, these
-
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- strings indicate extensions to the baseline protocol. The
- `extension_name' field(s) identify the name of the extension. The
- name should be of the form "name@domain", where the domain is the DNS
- domain name of the organization defining the extension. Additional
- names that are not of this format may be defined later by the IETF.
- Implementations MUST silently ignore any extensions whose name they
- do not recognize.
-
-4.3 Determining Server Newline Convention
-
- In order to correctly process text files in a cross platform
- compatible way, the newline convention must be converted from that of
- the server to that of the client, or, during an upload, from that of
- the client to that of the server.
-
- Versions 3 and prior of this protocol made no provisions for
- processing text files. Many clients implemented some sort of
- conversion algorithm, but without either a 'canonical' on the wire
- format or knowledge of the servers newline convention, correct
- conversion was not always possible.
-
- Starting with Version 4, the SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag (Section
- 6.3) makes it possible to request that the server translate a file to
- a 'canonical' on the wire format. This format uses \r\n as the line
- separator.
-
- Servers for systems using multiple newline characters (for example,
- Mac OS X or VMS) or systems using counted records, MUST translate to
- the canonical form.
-
- However, to ease the burden of implementation on servers that use a
- single, simple separator sequence, the following extension allows the
- canonical format to be changed.
-
- string "newline"
- string new-canonical-separator (usually "\r" or "\n" or "\r\n")
-
- All clients MUST support this extension.
-
- When processing text files, clients SHOULD NOT translate any
- character or sequence that is not an exact match of the servers
- newline separator.
-
- In particular, if the newline sequence being used is the canonical
- "\r\n" sequence, a lone \r or a lone \n SHOULD be written through
- without change.
-
-
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-5. File Attributes
-
- A new compound data type is defined for encoding file attributes.
- The same encoding is used both when returning file attributes from
- the server and when sending file attributes to the server. When
- sending it to the server, the flags field specifies which attributes
- are included, and the server will use default values for the
- remaining attributes (or will not modify the values of remaining
- attributes). When receiving attributes from the server, the flags
- specify which attributes are included in the returned data. The
- server normally returns all attributes it knows about.
-
- uint32 flags
- byte type always present
- uint64 size present only if flag SIZE
- string owner present only if flag OWNERGROUP
- string group present only if flag OWNERGROUP
- uint32 permissions present only if flag PERMISSIONS
- uint64 atime present only if flag ACCESSTIME
- uint32 atime_nseconds present only if flag SUBSECOND_TIMES
- uint64 createtime present only if flag CREATETIME
- uint32 createtime_nseconds present only if flag SUBSECOND_TIMES
- uint64 mtime present only if flag MODIFYTIME
- uint32 mtime_nseconds present only if flag SUBSECOND_TIMES
- string acl present only if flag ACL
- uint32 extended_count present only if flag EXTENDED
- string extended_type
- string extended_data
- ... more extended data (extended_type - extended_data pairs),
- so that number of pairs equals extended_count
-
-
-5.1 Flags
-
- The `flags' specify which of the fields are present. Those fields
- for which the corresponding flag is not set are not present (not
- included in the packet). New flags can only be added by incrementing
- the protocol version number (or by using the extension mechanism
- described below).
-
- The flags bits are defined to have the following values:
-
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- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SIZE 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_PERMISSIONS 0x00000040
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACCESSTIME 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_CREATETIME 0x00000010
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_MODIFYTIME 0x00000020
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_ACL 0x00000040
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_OWNERGROUP 0x00000080
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SUBSECOND_TIMES 0x00000100
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED 0x80000000
-
- In previous versions of this protocol flags value 0x00000002 was
- SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_UIDGID. This value is now unused, and OWNERGROUP
- was given a new value in order to ease implementation burden.
- 0x00000002 MUST NOT appear in the mask. Some future version of this
- protocol may reuse flag 0x00000002.
-
-5.2 Type
-
- The type field is always present. The following types are defined:
-
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_REGULAR 1
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_DIRECTORY 2
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SYMLINK 3
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_SPECIAL 4
- #define SSH_FILEXFER_TYPE_UNKNOWN 5
-
- On a POSIX system, these values would be derived from the permission
- field.
-
-5.3 Size
-
- The `size' field specifies the size of the file on disk, in bytes.
- If it is present during file creation, it should be considered a hint
- as to the files eventual size.
-
- Files opened with the SSH_FXF_TEXT flag may have a size that is
- greater or less than the value of the size field.
-
-5.4 Owner and Group
-
- The `owner' and `group' fields are represented as UTF-8 strings; this
- is the form used by NFS v4. See NFS version 4 Protocol. [3] The
- following text is selected quotations from section 5.6.
-
- To avoid a representation that is tied to a particular underlying
- implementation at the client or server, the use of UTF-8 strings has
- been chosen. The string should be of the form user@dns_domain".
- This will allow for a client and server that do not use the same
-
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- local representation the ability to translate to a common syntax that
- can be interpreted by both. In the case where there is no
- translation available to the client or server, the attribute value
- must be constructed without the "@". Therefore, the absence of the @
- from the owner or owner_group attribute signifies that no translation
- was available and the receiver of the attribute should not place any
- special meaning with the attribute value. Even though the attribute
- value can not be translated, it may still be useful. In the case of
- a client, the attribute string may be used for local display of
- ownership.
-
-5.5 Permissions
-
- The `permissions' field contains a bit mask of file permissions as
- defined by POSIX [1].
-
-5.6 Times
-
- The 'atime', 'createtime', and 'mtime' contain the access, creation,
- and modification times of the files, respectively. They are
- represented as seconds from Jan 1, 1970 in UTC.
-
- A negative value indicates number of seconds before Jan 1, 1970. In
- both cases, if the SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_SUBSECOND_TIMES flag is set, the
- nseconds field is to be added to the seconds field for the final time
- representation. For example, if the time to be represented is
- one-half second before 0 hour January 1, 1970, the seconds field
- would have a value of negative one (-1) and the nseconds fields would
- have a value of one-half second (500000000). Values greater than
- 999,999,999 for nseconds are considered invalid.
-
-5.7 ACL
-
- The 'ACL' field contains an ACL similar to that defined in section
- 5.9 of NFS version 4 Protocol [3].
-
- uint32 ace-count
-
- repeated ace-count time:
- uint32 ace-type
- uint32 ace-flag
- uint32 ace-mask
- string who [UTF-8]
-
- ace-type is one of the following four values (taken from NFS Version
- 4 Protocol [3]:
-
-
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- const ACE4_ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000000;
- const ACE4_ACCESS_DENIED_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE_TYPE = 0x00000003;
-
- ace-flag is a combination of the following flag values. See NFS
- Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.2:
-
- const ACE4_FILE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_DIRECTORY_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_INHERIT_ONLY_ACE = 0x00000008;
- const ACE4_SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000010;
- const ACE4_FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x00000020;
- const ACE4_IDENTIFIER_GROUP = 0x00000040;
-
- ace-mask is any combination of the following flags (taken from NFS
- Version 4 Protocol [3] section 5.9.3:
-
- const ACE4_READ_DATA = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_LIST_DIRECTORY = 0x00000001;
- const ACE4_WRITE_DATA = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_ADD_FILE = 0x00000002;
- const ACE4_APPEND_DATA = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY = 0x00000004;
- const ACE4_READ_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000008;
- const ACE4_WRITE_NAMED_ATTRS = 0x00000010;
- const ACE4_EXECUTE = 0x00000020;
- const ACE4_DELETE_CHILD = 0x00000040;
- const ACE4_READ_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000080;
- const ACE4_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES = 0x00000100;
- const ACE4_DELETE = 0x00010000;
- const ACE4_READ_ACL = 0x00020000;
- const ACE4_WRITE_ACL = 0x00040000;
- const ACE4_WRITE_OWNER = 0x00080000;
- const ACE4_SYNCHRONIZE = 0x00100000;
-
- who is a UTF-8 string of the form described in 'Owner and Group'
- (Section 5.4)
-
- Also, as per '5.9.4 ACE who' [3] there are several identifiers that
- need to be understood universally. Some of these identifiers cannot
- be understood when an client access the server, but have meaning when
- a local process accesses the file. The ability to display and modify
- these permissions is permitted over SFTP.
-
- OWNER The owner of the file.
-
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- GROUP The group associated with the file.
-
- EVERYONE The world.
-
- INTERACTIVE Accessed from an interactive terminal.
-
- NETWORK Accessed via the network.
-
- DIALUP Accessed as a dialup user to the server.
-
- BATCH Accessed from a batch job.
-
- ANONYMOUS Accessed without any authentication.
-
- AUTHENTICATED Any authenticated user (opposite of ANONYMOUS).
-
- SERVICE Access from a system service.
-
- To avoid conflict, these special identifiers are distinguish by an
- appended "@" and should appear in the form "xxxx@" (note: no domain
- name after the "@"). For example: ANONYMOUS@.
-
-5.8 Extended attributes
-
- The SSH_FILEXFER_ATTR_EXTENDED flag provides a general extension
- mechanism for vendor-specific extensions. If the flag is specified,
- then the `extended_count' field is present. It specifies the number
- of extended_type-extended_data pairs that follow. Each of these
- pairs specifies an extended attribute. For each of the attributes,
- the extended_type field should be a string of the format
- "name@domain", where "domain" is a valid, registered domain name and
- "name" identifies the method. The IETF may later standardize certain
- names that deviate from this format (e.g., that do not contain the
- "@" sign). The interpretation of `extended_data' depends on the
- type. Implementations SHOULD ignore extended data fields that they
- do not understand.
-
- Additional fields can be added to the attributes by either defining
- additional bits to the flags field to indicate their presence, or by
- defining extended attributes for them. The extended attributes
- mechanism is recommended for most purposes; additional flags bits
- should only be defined by an IETF standards action that also
- increments the protocol version number. The use of such new fields
- MUST be negotiated by the version number in the protocol exchange.
- It is a protocol error if a packet with unsupported protocol bits is
- received.
-
-
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-6. Requests From the Client to the Server
-
- Requests from the client to the server represent the various file
- system operations. Each request begins with an `id' field, which is
- a 32-bit identifier identifying the request (selected by the client).
- The same identifier will be returned in the response to the request.
- One possible implementation is a monotonically increasing request
- sequence number (modulo 2^32).
-
- Many operations in the protocol operate on open files. The
- SSH_FXP_OPEN request can return a file handle (which is an opaque
- variable-length string) which may be used to access the file later
- (e.g. in a read operation). The client MUST NOT send requests the
- server with bogus or closed handles. However, the server MUST
- perform adequate checks on the handle in order to avoid security
- risks due to fabricated handles.
-
- This design allows either stateful and stateless server
- implementation, as well as an implementation which caches state
- between requests but may also flush it. The contents of the file
- handle string are entirely up to the server and its design. The
- client should not modify or attempt to interpret the file handle
- strings.
-
- The file handle strings MUST NOT be longer than 256 bytes.
-
-6.1 Request Synchronization and Reordering
-
- The protocol and implementations MUST process requests relating to
- the same file in the order in which they are received. In other
- words, if an application submits multiple requests to the server, the
- results in the responses will be the same as if it had sent the
- requests one at a time and waited for the response in each case. For
- example, the server may process non-overlapping read/write requests
- to the same file in parallel, but overlapping reads and writes cannot
- be reordered or parallelized. However, there are no ordering
- restrictions on the server for processing requests from two different
- file transfer connections. The server may interleave and parallelize
- them at will.
-
- There are no restrictions on the order in which responses to
- outstanding requests are delivered to the client, except that the
- server must ensure fairness in the sense that processing of no
- request will be indefinitely delayed even if the client is sending
- other requests so that there are multiple outstanding requests all
- the time.
-
-
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-6.2 File Names
-
- This protocol represents file names as strings. File names are
- assumed to use the slash ('/') character as a directory separator.
-
- File names starting with a slash are "absolute", and are relative to
- the root of the file system. Names starting with any other character
- are relative to the user's default directory (home directory). Note
- that identifying the user is assumed to take place outside of this
- protocol.
-
- Servers SHOULD interpret a path name component ".." as referring to
- the parent directory, and "." as referring to the current directory.
- If the server implementation limits access to certain parts of the
- file system, it must be extra careful in parsing file names when
- enforcing such restrictions. There have been numerous reported
- security bugs where a ".." in a path name has allowed access outside
- the intended area.
-
- An empty path name is valid, and it refers to the user's default
- directory (usually the user's home directory).
-
- Otherwise, no syntax is defined for file names by this specification.
- Clients should not make any other assumptions; however, they can
- splice path name components returned by SSH_FXP_READDIR together
- using a slash ('/') as the separator, and that will work as expected.
-
- In order to comply with IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages
- [2], all filenames are to be encoded in UTF-8. The shortest valid
- UTF-8 encoding of the UNICODE data MUST be used. The server is
- responsible for converting the UNICODE data to whatever canonical
- form it requires.
-
- For example, if the server requires that precomposed characters
- always be used, the server MUST NOT assume the filename as sent by
- the client has this attribute, but must do this normalization itself.
-
- It is understood that the lack of well-defined semantics for file
- names may cause interoperability problems between clients and servers
- using radically different operating systems. However, this approach
- is known to work acceptably with most systems, and alternative
- approaches that e.g. treat file names as sequences of structured
- components are quite complicated.
-
-6.3 Opening, Creating, and Closing Files
-
- Files are opened and created using the SSH_FXP_OPEN message, whose
- data part is as follows:
-
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- uint32 id
- string filename [UTF-8]
- uint32 pflags
- ATTRS attrs
-
- The `id' field is the request identifier as for all requests.
-
- The `filename' field specifies the file name. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information.
-
- The `pflags' field is a bitmask. The following bits have been
- defined.
-
- #define SSH_FXF_READ 0x00000001
- #define SSH_FXF_WRITE 0x00000002
- #define SSH_FXF_APPEND 0x00000004
- #define SSH_FXF_CREAT 0x00000008
- #define SSH_FXF_TRUNC 0x00000010
- #define SSH_FXF_EXCL 0x00000020
- #define SSH_FXF_TEXT 0x00000040
-
- These have the following meanings:
-
- SSH_FXF_READ
- Open the file for reading.
-
- SSH_FXF_WRITE
- Open the file for writing. If both this and SSH_FXF_READ are
- specified, the file is opened for both reading and writing.
-
- SSH_FXF_APPEND
- Force all writes to append data at the end of the file. The
- offset parameter to write will be ignored.
-
- SSH_FXF_CREAT
- If this flag is specified, then a new file will be created if one
- does not already exist (if O_TRUNC is specified, the new file will
- be truncated to zero length if it previously exists).
-
- SSH_FXF_TRUNC
- Forces an existing file with the same name to be truncated to zero
- length when creating a file by specifying SSH_FXF_CREAT.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
- SSH_FXF_EXCL
- Causes the request to fail if the named file already exists.
- SSH_FXF_CREAT MUST also be specified if this flag is used.
-
-
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- SSH_FXF_TEXT
- Indicates that the server should treat the file as text and
- convert it to the canonical newline convention in use. (See
- Determining Server Newline Convention. (Section 4.3)
-
- When a file is opened with the FXF_TEXT flag, the offset field in
- both the read and write function are ignored.
-
- Servers MUST correctly process multiple parallel reads and writes
- correctly in this mode. Naturally, it is permissible for them to
- do this by serializing the requests. It would not be possible for
- a client to reliably detect a server that does not implement
- parallel writes in time to prevent damage.
-
- Clients SHOULD use the SSH_FXF_APPEND flag to append data to a
- text file rather then using write with a calculated offset.
-
- To support seeks on text file the following SSH_FXP_EXTENDED
- packet is defined.
-
-
-
- string "text-seek"
- string file-handle
- uint64 line-number
-
- line-number is the index of the line number to seek to, where byte
- 0 in the file is line number 0, and the byte directly following
- the first newline sequence in the file is line number 1 and so on.
-
- The response to a "text-seek" request is an SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
- An attempt to seek past the end-of-file should result in a
- SSH_FX_EOF status.
-
- Servers SHOULD support at least one "text-seek" in order to
- support resume. However, a client MUST be prepared to receive
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED when attempting a "text-seek" operation.
- The client can then try a fall-back strategy, if it has one.
-
- Clients MUST be prepared to handle SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED returned
- for read or write operations that are not sequential.
-
- The `attrs' field specifies the initial attributes for the file.
- Default values will be used for those attributes that are not
- specified. See Section ``File Attributes'' for more information.
-
-
-
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-
- The response to this message will be either SSH_FXP_HANDLE (if the
- operation is successful) or SSH_FXP_STATUS (if the operation fails).
-
- A file is closed by using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request. Its data field
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- previously returned in the response to SSH_FXP_OPEN or
- SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. The handle becomes invalid immediately after this
- request has been sent.
-
- The response to this request will be a SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One
- should note that on some server platforms even a close can fail.
- This can happen e.g. if the server operating system caches writes,
- and an error occurs while flushing cached writes during the close.
-
-6.4 Reading and Writing
-
- Once a file has been opened, it can be read using the following
- message:
-
- byte SSH_FXP_READ
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- uint32 len
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' is an open file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) relative
- to the beginning of the file from where to start reading, and `len'
- is the maximum number of bytes to read.
-
- In response to this request, the server will read as many bytes as it
- can from the file (up to `len'), and return them in a SSH_FXP_DATA
- message. If an error occurs or EOF is encountered before reading any
- data, the server will respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- For normal disk files, it is normally guaranteed that this will read
- the specified number of bytes, or up to end of file. However, if the
- read length is very long, the server may truncate it if it doesn't
- support packets of that length. See General Packet Format (Section
- 3).
-
- For e.g. device files this may return fewer bytes than requested.
-
-
-
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-
- Writing to a file is achieved using the following message:
-
- byte SSH_FXP_WRITE
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint64 offset
- string data
-
- where `id' is a request identifier, `handle' is a file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN, `offset' is the offset (in bytes) from the
- beginning of the file where to start writing, and `data' is the data
- to be written.
-
- The write will extend the file if writing beyond the end of the file.
- It is legal to write way beyond the end of the file; the semantics
- are to write zeroes from the end of the file to the specified offset
- and then the data. On most operating systems, such writes do not
- allocate disk space but instead leave "holes" in the file.
-
- The server responds to a write request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
-6.5 Removing and Renaming Files
-
- Files can be removed using the SSH_FXP_REMOVE message. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string filename [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `filename' is the name of
- the file to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information. This request cannot be used to remove directories.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
- Files (and directories) can be renamed using the SSH_FXP_RENAME
- message. Its data is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string oldpath [UTF-8]
- string newpath [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `oldpath' is the name of an
- existing file or directory, and `newpath' is the new name for the
- file or directory. It is an error if there already exists a file
- with the name specified by newpath. The server may also fail rename
- requests in other situations, for example if `oldpath' and `newpath'
-
-
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-
- point to different file systems on the server.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message.
-
-6.6 Creating and Deleting Directories
-
- New directories can be created using the SSH_FXP_MKDIR request. It
- has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier.
-
- `path' specifies the directory to be created. See Section ``File
- Names'' for more information on file names.
-
- `attrs' specifies the attributes that should be applied to it upon
- creation. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section ``File
- Attributes''.
-
- The server will respond to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS
- message. If a file or directory with the specified path already
- exists, an error will be returned.
-
- Directories can be removed using the SSH_FXP_RMDIR request, which has
- the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the
- directory to be removed. See Section ``File Names'' for more
- information on file names.
-
- The server responds to this request with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
- Errors may be returned from this operation for various reasons,
- including, but not limited to, the path does not exist, the path does
- not refer to a directory object, the directory is not empty, or the
- user has insufficient access or permission to perform the requested
- operation.
-
-6.7 Scanning Directories
-
- The files in a directory can be listed using the SSH_FXP_OPENDIR and
- SSH_FXP_READDIR requests. Each SSH_FXP_READDIR request returns one
-
-
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-
- or more file names with full file attributes for each file. The
- client should call SSH_FXP_READDIR repeatedly until it has found the
- file it is looking for or until the server responds with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message indicating an error (normally SSH_FX_EOF if
- there are no more files in the directory). The client should then
- close the handle using the SSH_FXP_CLOSE request.
-
- The SSH_FXP_OPENDIR opens a directory for reading. It has the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' is the path name of
- the directory to be listed (without any trailing slash). See Section
- ``File Names'' for more information on file names. This will return
- an error if the path does not specify a directory or if the directory
- is not readable. The server will respond to this request with either
- a SSH_FXP_HANDLE or a SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- Once the directory has been successfully opened, files (and
- directories) contained in it can be listed using SSH_FXP_READDIR
- requests. These are of the format
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is a handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPENDIR. (It is a protocol error to attempt to
- use an ordinary file handle returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN.)
-
- The server responds to this request with either a SSH_FXP_NAME or a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message. One or more names may be returned at a time.
- Full status information is returned for each name in order to speed
- up typical directory listings.
-
- If there are no more names available to be read, the server MUST
- respond with a SSH_FXP_STATUS message with error code of SSH_FX_EOF.
-
- When the client no longer wishes to read more names from the
- directory, it SHOULD call SSH_FXP_CLOSE for the handle. The handle
- should be closed regardless of whether an error has occurred or not.
-
-6.8 Retrieving File Attributes
-
- Very often, file attributes are automatically returned by
- SSH_FXP_READDIR. However, sometimes there is need to specifically
- retrieve the attributes for a named file. This can be done using the
-
-
-
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-
- SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT and SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- SSH_FXP_STAT and SSH_FXP_LSTAT only differ in that SSH_FXP_STAT
- follows symbolic links on the server, whereas SSH_FXP_LSTAT does not
- follow symbolic links. Both have the same format:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- uint32 flags
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `path' specifies the file
- system object for which status is to be returned. The server
- responds to this request with either SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- The flags field specify the attribute flags in which the client has
- particular interest. This is a hint to the server. For example,
- because retrieving owner / group and acl information can be an
- expensive operation under some operating systems, the server may
- choose not to retrieve this information unless the client expresses a
- specific interest in it.
-
- The client has no guarantee the server will provide all the fields
- that it has expressed an interest in.
-
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT differs from the others in that it returns status
- information for an open file (identified by the file handle). Its
- format is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- uint32 flags
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `handle' is a file handle
- returned by SSH_FXP_OPEN. The server responds to this request with
- SSH_FXP_ATTRS or SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.9 Setting File Attributes
-
- File attributes may be modified using the SSH_FXP_SETSTAT and
- SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT requests. These requests are used for operations
- such as changing the ownership, permissions or access times, as well
- as for truncating a file.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SETSTAT request is of the following format:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `path' specifies the file
- system object (e.g. file or directory) whose attributes are to be
- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''.
-
- An error will be returned if the specified file system object does
- not exist or the user does not have sufficient rights to modify the
- specified attributes. The server responds to this request with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS message.
-
- The SSH_FXP_FSETSTAT request modifies the attributes of a file which
- is already open. It has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `handle' (MUST be returned by
- SSH_FXP_OPEN) identifies the file whose attributes are to be
- modified, and `attrs' specifies the modifications to be made to its
- attributes. Attributes are discussed in more detail in Section
- ``File Attributes''. The server will respond to this request with
- SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.10 Dealing with Symbolic links
-
- The SSH_FXP_READLINK request may be used to read the target of a
- symbolic link. It would have a data part as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be read.
-
- The server will respond with a SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing only
- one name and a dummy attributes value. The name in the returned
- packet contains the target of the link. If an error occurs, the
- server may respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
- The SSH_FXP_SYMLINK request will create a symbolic link on the
- server. It is of the following format
-
-
-
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-
- uint32 id
- string linkpath [UTF-8]
- string targetpath [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `linkpath' specifies the path
- name of the symlink to be created and `targetpath' specifies the
- target of the symlink. The server shall respond with a
- SSH_FXP_STATUS indicating either success (SSH_FX_OK) or an error
- condition.
-
-6.11 Canonicalizing the Server-Side Path Name
-
- The SSH_FXP_REALPATH request can be used to have the server
- canonicalize any given path name to an absolute path. This is useful
- for converting path names containing ".." components or relative
- pathnames without a leading slash into absolute paths. The format of
- the request is as follows:
-
- uint32 id
- string path [UTF-8]
-
- where `id' is the request identifier and `path' specifies the path
- name to be canonicalized. The server will respond with a
- SSH_FXP_NAME packet containing the name in canonical form and a dummy
- attributes value. If an error occurs, the server may also respond
- with SSH_FXP_STATUS.
-
-6.11.1 Best practice for dealing with paths
-
- The client SHOULD treat the results of SSH_FXP_REALPATH as a
- canonical absolute path, even if the path does not appear to be
- absolute. A client that use REALPATH(".") and treats the result as
- absolute, even if there is no leading slash, will continue to
- function correctly, even when talking to a Windows NT or VMS style
- system, where absolute paths may not begin with a slash.
-
- For example, if the client wishes to change directory up, and the
- server has returned "c:/x/y/z" from REALPATH, the client SHOULD use
- "c:/x/y/z/..".
-
- As a second example, if the client wishes to open the file "x.txt" in
- the current directory, and server has returned "dka100:/x/y/z" as the
- canonical path of the directory, the client SHOULD open "dka100:/x/y/
- z/x.txt"
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-7. Responses from the Server to the Client
-
- The server responds to the client using one of a few response
- packets. All requests can return a SSH_FXP_STATUS response upon
- failure. When the operation is successful, any of the responses may
- be returned (depending on the operation). If no data needs to be
- returned to the client, the SSH_FXP_STATUS response with SSH_FX_OK
- status is appropriate. Otherwise, the SSH_FXP_HANDLE message is used
- to return a file handle (for SSH_FXP_OPEN and SSH_FXP_OPENDIR
- requests), SSH_FXP_DATA is used to return data from SSH_FXP_READ,
- SSH_FXP_NAME is used to return one or more file names from a
- SSH_FXP_READDIR or SSH_FXP_REALPATH request, and SSH_FXP_ATTRS is
- used to return file attributes from SSH_FXP_STAT, SSH_FXP_LSTAT, and
- SSH_FXP_FSTAT requests.
-
- Exactly one response will be returned for each request. Each
- response packet contains a request identifier which can be used to
- match each response with the corresponding request. Note that it is
- legal to have several requests outstanding simultaneously, and the
- server is allowed to send responses to them in a different order from
- the order in which the requests were sent (the result of their
- execution, however, is guaranteed to be as if they had been processed
- one at a time in the order in which the requests were sent).
-
- Response packets are of the same general format as request packets.
- Each response packet begins with the request identifier.
-
- The format of the data portion of the SSH_FXP_STATUS response is as
- follows:
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 error/status code
- string error message (ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC-2279])
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC-1766])
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `error/status code'
- indicates the result of the requested operation. The value SSH_FX_OK
- indicates success, and all other values indicate failure.
-
- Currently, the following values are defined (other values may be
- defined by future versions of this protocol):
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- #define SSH_FX_OK 0
- #define SSH_FX_EOF 1
- #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE 2
- #define SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED 3
- #define SSH_FX_FAILURE 4
- #define SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE 5
- #define SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION 6
- #define SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST 7
- #define SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED 8
- #define SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE 9
- #define SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH 10
- #define SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS 11
- #define SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT 12
- #define SSH_FX_NO_MEDIA 13
-
- SSH_FX_OK
- Indicates successful completion of the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_EOF
- indicates end-of-file condition; for SSH_FX_READ it means that no
- more data is available in the file, and for SSH_FX_READDIR it
- indicates that no more files are contained in the directory.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_FILE
- is returned when a reference is made to a file which does not
- exist.
-
- SSH_FX_PERMISSION_DENIED
- is returned when the authenticated user does not have sufficient
- permissions to perform the operation.
-
- SSH_FX_FAILURE
- is a generic catch-all error message; it should be returned if an
- error occurs for which there is no more specific error code
- defined.
-
- SSH_FX_BAD_MESSAGE
- may be returned if a badly formatted packet or protocol
- incompatibility is detected.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_CONNECTION
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the client has no
- connection to the server (it can only be generated locally by the
- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
- SSH_FX_CONNECTION_LOST
- is a pseudo-error which indicates that the connection to the
- server has been lost (it can only be generated locally by the
-
-
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- client, and MUST NOT be returned by servers).
-
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED
- indicates that an attempt was made to perform an operation which
- is not supported for the server (it may be generated locally by
- the client if e.g. the version number exchange indicates that a
- required feature is not supported by the server, or it may be
- returned by the server if the server does not implement an
- operation).
-
- SSH_FX_INVALID_HANDLE
- The handle value was invalid.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_SUCH_PATH
- The file path does not exist or is invalid.
-
- SSH_FX_FILE_ALREADY_EXISTS
- The file already exists.
-
- SSH_FX_WRITE_PROTECT
- The file is on read only media, or the media is write protected.
-
- SSH_FX_NO_MEDIA
- The requested operation can not be completed because there is no
- media available in the drive.
-
- The SSH_FXP_HANDLE response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string handle
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `handle' is an arbitrary
- string that identifies an open file or directory on the server. The
- handle is opaque to the client; the client MUST NOT attempt to
- interpret or modify it in any way. The length of the handle string
- MUST NOT exceed 256 data bytes.
-
- The SSH_FXP_DATA response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- string data
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `data' is an arbitrary byte
- string containing the requested data. The data string may be at most
- the number of bytes requested in a SSH_FXP_READ request, but may also
- be shorter if end of file is reached or if the read is from something
- other than a regular file.
-
-
-
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-
- The SSH_FXP_NAME response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- uint32 count
- repeats count times:
- string filename [UTF-8]
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, `count' is the number of names
- returned in this response, and the remaining fields repeat `count'
- times (so that all three fields are first included for the first
- file, then for the second file, etc). In the repeated part,
- `filename' is a file name being returned (for SSH_FXP_READDIR, it
- will be a relative name within the directory, without any path
- components; for SSH_FXP_REALPATH it will be an absolute path name),
- and `attrs' is the attributes of the file as described in Section
- ``File Attributes''.
-
- The SSH_FXP_ATTRS response has the following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ATTRS attrs
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `attrs' is the returned
- file attributes as described in Section ``File Attributes''.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-8. Vendor-Specific Extensions
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED request provides a generic extension mechanism
- for adding vendor-specific commands. The request has the following
- format:
-
- uint32 id
- string extended-request
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
- where `id' is the request identifier, and `extended-request' is a
- string of the format "name@domain", where domain is an internet
- domain name of the vendor defining the request. The rest of the
- request is completely vendor-specific, and servers should only
- attempt to interpret it if they recognize the `extended-request'
- name.
-
- The server may respond to such requests using any of the response
- packets defined in Section ``Responses from the Server to the
- Client''. Additionally, the server may also respond with a
- SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet, as defined below. If the server does
- not recognize the `extended-request' name, then the server MUST
- respond with SSH_FXP_STATUS with error/status set to
- SSH_FX_OP_UNSUPPORTED.
-
- The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY packet can be used to carry arbitrary
- extension-specific data from the server to the client. It is of the
- following format:
-
- uint32 id
- ... any request-specific data ...
-
- There is a range of packet types reserved for use by extensions. In
- order to avoid collision, extensions that turn on the use of
- additional packet types should determine those numbers dynamically.
-
- The suggested way of doing this is have an extension request from the
- client to the server that enables the extension; the extension
- response from the server to the client would specify the actual type
- values to use, in additional to any other data.
-
- Extension authors should be mindful of the limited range of packet
- types available (there are only 45 values available) and avoid
- requiring a new packet type where possible.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-9. Security Considerations
-
- This protocol assumes that it is run over a secure channel and that
- the endpoints of the channel have been authenticated. Thus, this
- protocol assumes that it is externally protected from network-level
- attacks.
-
- This protocol provides file system access to arbitrary files on the
- server (only constrained by the server implementation). It is the
- responsibility of the server implementation to enforce any access
- controls that may be required to limit the access allowed for any
- particular user (the user being authenticated externally to this
- protocol, typically using the SSH User Authentication Protocol [8].
-
- Care must be taken in the server implementation to check the validity
- of received file handle strings. The server should not rely on them
- directly; it MUST check the validity of each handle before relying on
- it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-10. Changes from previous protocol versions
-
- The SSH File Transfer Protocol has changed over time, before it's
- standardization. The following is a description of the incompatible
- changes between different versions.
-
-10.1 Changes between versions 4 and 3
-
- Many of the changes between version 4 and version 3 are to the
- attribute structure to make it more flexible for non-unix platforms.
-
- o Clarify the use of stderr by the server.
-
- o Clarify handling of very large read requests by the server.
-
- o Make all filenames UTF-8.
-
- o Added 'newline' extension.
-
- o Made time fields 64 bit, and optionally have nanosecond resultion.
-
- o Made file attribute owner and group strings so they can actually
- be used on disparate systems.
-
- o Added createtime field, and added separate flags for atime,
- createtime, and mtime so they can be set separately.
-
- o Split the file type out of the permissions field and into it's own
- field (which is always present.)
-
- o Added acl attribute.
-
- o Added SSH_FXF_TEXT file open flag.
-
- o Added flags field to the get stat commands so that the client can
- specifically request information the server might not normally
- included for performance reasons.
-
- o Removed the long filename from the names structure-- it can now be
- built from information available in the attrs structure.
-
- o Added reserved range of packet numbers for extensions.
-
- o Added several additional error codes.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-10.2 Changes between versions 3 and 2
-
- o The SSH_FXP_READLINK and SSH_FXP_SYMLINK messages were added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_EXTENDED and SSH_FXP_EXTENDED_REPLY messages were
- added.
-
- o The SSH_FXP_STATUS message was changed to include fields `error
- message' and `language tag'.
-
-
-10.3 Changes between versions 2 and 1
-
- o The SSH_FXP_RENAME message was added.
-
-
-10.4 Changes between versions 1 and 0
-
- o Implementation changes, no actual protocol changes.
-
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-Galbraith, et al. Expires June 18, 2003 [Page 33]
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-
-11. Trademark Issues
-
- "ssh" is a registered trademark of SSH Communications Security Corp
- in the United States and/or other countries.
-
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-Galbraith, et al. Expires June 18, 2003 [Page 34]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol December 2002
-
-
-References
-
- [1] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P., Freier, A. and
- P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January
- 1999.
-
- [2] Alvestrand, H., "IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages",
- BCP 18, RFC 2277, January 1998.
-
- [3] Shepler, S., Callaghan, B., Robinson, D., Thurlow, R., Beame,
- C., Eisler, M. and D. Noveck, "NFS version 4 Protocol", RFC
- 3010, December 2000.
-
- [4] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information
- Technology - Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part
- 1: System Application Program Interface (API) [C Language]",
- IEEE Standard 1003.2, 1996.
-
- [5] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Architecture",
- draft-ietf-secsh-architecture-13 (work in progress), September
- 2002.
-
- [6] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Protocol Transport Protocol",
- draft-ietf-secsh-transport-15 (work in progress), September
- 2002.
-
- [7] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Connection Protocol", draft-ietf-secsh-connect-16
- (work in progress), September 2002.
-
- [8] Rinne, T., Ylonen, T., Kivinen, T., Saarinen, M. and S.
- Lehtinen, "SSH Authentication Protocol",
- draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-16 (work in progress), September 2002.
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Joseph Galbraith
- VanDyke Software
- 4848 Tramway Ridge Blvd
- Suite 101
- Albuquerque, NM 87111
- US
-
- Phone: +1 505 332 5700
-
-
-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires June 18, 2003 [Page 35]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol December 2002
-
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Sami Lehtinen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
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-Galbraith, et al. Expires June 18, 2003 [Page 36]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol December 2002
-
-
-Intellectual Property Statement
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
- copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
- rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
- this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
- Director.
-
-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
- and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
- kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
- included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
- document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
- the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
- Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
- developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
- copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
- followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
- English.
-
- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
- revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
-
-
-
-Galbraith, et al. Expires June 18, 2003 [Page 37]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH File Transfer Protocol December 2002
-
-
- HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-
-Acknowledgement
-
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
-
-
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diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.2.ps b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.2.ps
deleted file mode 100644
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-(Network Working Group T. Ylonen) s
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-(Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Editor, Ed.) s
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-5 514 M
-( groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.) s
-5 492 M
-( Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months) s
-5 481 M
-( and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any) s
-5 470 M
-( time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference) s
-5 459 M
-( material or to cite them other than as "work in progress.") s
-5 437 M
-( The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://) s
-5 426 M
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-5 404 M
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-( http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.) s
-5 371 M
-( This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.) s
-5 349 M
-(Copyright Notice) s
-5 327 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 305 M
-(Abstract) s
-5 283 M
-( SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network) s
-5 272 M
-( services over an insecure network.) s
-5 250 M
-( This document describes the SSH transport layer protocol which) s
-5 239 M
-( typically runs on top of TCP/IP. The protocol can be used as a basis) s
-5 228 M
-( for a number of secure network services. It provides strong) s
-5 217 M
-( encryption, server authentication, and integrity protection. It may) s
-5 206 M
-( also provide compression.) s
-5 184 M
-( Key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption) s
-5 173 M
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-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]) s
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-( all negotiated.) s
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-( This document also describes the Diffie-Hellman key exchange method) s
-5 657 M
-( and the minimal set of algorithms that are needed to implement the) s
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-(Table of Contents) s
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-( 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
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-( 3. Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
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-( 4. Connection Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
-5 558 M
-( 4.1 Use over TCP/IP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
-5 547 M
-( 4.2 Protocol Version Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
-5 536 M
-( 4.3 Compatibility With Old SSH Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
-5 525 M
-( 4.3.1 Old Client, New Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
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-( 4.3.2 New Client, Old Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
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-( 5. Binary Packet Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
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-( 5.1 Maximum Packet Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6) s
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-( 5.2 Compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 470 M
-( 5.3 Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
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-( 5.4 Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9) s
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-( 5.5 Key Exchange Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
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-( 5.6 Public Key Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
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-( 6. Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
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-( 6.1 Algorithm Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
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-( 6.2 Output from Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16) s
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-( 6.3 Taking Keys Into Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17) s
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-( 7. Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18) s
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-( 7.1 diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19) s
-5 360 M
-( 8. Key Re-Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20) s
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-( 9. Service Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
-5 338 M
-( 10. Additional Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21) s
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-( 10.1 Disconnection Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22) s
-5 316 M
-( 10.2 Ignored Data Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22) s
-5 305 M
-( 10.3 Debug Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 294 M
-( 10.4 Reserved Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 283 M
-( 11. Summary of Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23) s
-5 272 M
-( 12. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 261 M
-( 13. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 250 M
-( 14. Intellectual Property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 239 M
-( 15. Additional Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24) s
-5 228 M
-( Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26) s
-5 217 M
-( Normative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25) s
-5 206 M
-( Informative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25) s
-5 195 M
-( A. Contibutors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27) s
-5 184 M
-( Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 28) s
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-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 2]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(1. Contributors) s
-5 668 M
-( The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,) s
-5 657 M
-( Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen \(all of SSH Communications) s
-5 646 M
-( Security Corp\), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen \(University of) s
-5 635 M
-( Jyvaskyla\)) s
-5 613 M
-( The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this) s
-5 602 M
-( internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,) s
-5 591 M
-( details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html) s
-5 569 M
-(2. Introduction) s
-5 547 M
-( The SSH transport layer is a secure low level transport protocol. It) s
-5 536 M
-( provides strong encryption, cryptographic host authentication, and) s
-5 525 M
-( integrity protection.) s
-5 503 M
-( Authentication in this protocol level is host-based; this protocol) s
-5 492 M
-( does not perform user authentication. A higher level protocol for) s
-5 481 M
-( user authentication can be designed on top of this protocol.) s
-5 459 M
-( The protocol has been designed to be simple, flexible, to allow) s
-5 448 M
-( parameter negotiation, and to minimize the number of round-trips.) s
-5 437 M
-( Key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption) s
-5 426 M
-( algorithm, message authentication algorithm, and hash algorithm are) s
-5 415 M
-( all negotiated. It is expected that in most environments, only 2) s
-5 404 M
-( round-trips will be needed for full key exchange, server) s
-5 393 M
-( authentication, service request, and acceptance notification of) s
-5 382 M
-( service request. The worst case is 3 round-trips.) s
-5 360 M
-(3. Conventions Used in This Document) s
-5 338 M
-( The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",) s
-5 327 M
-( and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as) s
-5 316 M
-( described in [RFC2119].) s
-5 294 M
-( The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture) s
-5 283 M
-( document [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 261 M
-( The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming) s
-5 250 M
-( conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.) s
-5 228 M
-(4. Connection Setup) s
-5 206 M
-( SSH works over any 8-bit clean, binary-transparent transport. The) s
-5 195 M
-( underlying transport SHOULD protect against transmission errors as) s
-5 184 M
-( such errors cause the SSH connection to terminate.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 3]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( The client initiates the connection.) s
-5 668 M
-(4.1 Use over TCP/IP) s
-5 646 M
-( When used over TCP/IP, the server normally listens for connections on) s
-5 635 M
-( port 22. This port number has been registered with the IANA, and has) s
-5 624 M
-( been officially assigned for SSH.) s
-5 602 M
-(4.2 Protocol Version Exchange) s
-5 580 M
-( When the connection has been established, both sides MUST send an) s
-5 569 M
-( identification string of the form "SSH-protoversion-softwareversion) s
-5 558 M
-( comments", followed by carriage return and newline characters \(ASCII) s
-5 547 M
-( 13 and 10, respectively\). Both sides MUST be able to process) s
-5 536 M
-( identification strings without carriage return character. No null) s
-5 525 M
-( character is sent. The maximum length of the string is 255) s
-5 514 M
-( characters, including the carriage return and newline.) s
-5 492 M
-( The part of the identification string preceding carriage return and) s
-5 481 M
-( newline is used in the Diffie-Hellman key exchange \(see Section) s
-5 470 M
-( Section 7\).) s
-5 448 M
-( The server MAY send other lines of data before sending the version) s
-5 437 M
-( string. Each line SHOULD be terminated by a carriage return and) s
-5 426 M
-( newline. Such lines MUST NOT begin with "SSH-", and SHOULD be) s
-5 415 M
-( encoded in ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC2279] \(language is not specified\).) s
-5 404 M
-( Clients MUST be able to process such lines; they MAY be silently) s
-5 393 M
-( ignored, or MAY be displayed to the client user; if they are) s
-5 382 M
-( displayed, control character filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] SHOULD) s
-5 371 M
-( be used. The primary use of this feature is to allow TCP-wrappers to) s
-5 360 M
-( display an error message before disconnecting.) s
-5 338 M
-( Version strings MUST consist of printable US-ASCII characters, not) s
-5 327 M
-( including whitespaces or a minus sign \(-\). The version string is) s
-5 316 M
-( primarily used to trigger compatibility extensions and to indicate) s
-5 305 M
-( the capabilities of an implementation. The comment string should) s
-5 294 M
-( contain additional information that might be useful in solving user) s
-5 283 M
-( problems.) s
-5 261 M
-( The protocol version described in this document is 2.0.) s
-5 239 M
-( Key exchange will begin immediately after sending this identifier.) s
-5 228 M
-( All packets following the identification string SHALL use the binary) s
-5 217 M
-( packet protocol, to be described below.) s
-5 195 M
-(4.3 Compatibility With Old SSH Versions) s
-5 173 M
-( During the transition period, it is important to be able to work in a) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 4]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( way that is compatible with the installed SSH clients and servers) s
-5 679 M
-( that use an older version of the protocol. Information in this) s
-5 668 M
-( section is only relevant for implementations supporting compatibility) s
-5 657 M
-( with SSH versions 1.x. There is no standards track or informational) s
-5 646 M
-( draft available that defines the SSH 1.x protocol. The only known) s
-5 635 M
-( documentation of the 1.x protocol is contained in README files that) s
-5 624 M
-( are shipped along with the source code.) s
-5 602 M
-(4.3.1 Old Client, New Server) s
-5 580 M
-( Server implementations MAY support a configurable "compatibility") s
-5 569 M
-( flag that enables compatibility with old versions. When this flag is) s
-5 558 M
-( on, the server SHOULD identify its protocol version as "1.99".) s
-5 547 M
-( Clients using protocol 2.0 MUST be able to identify this as identical) s
-5 536 M
-( to "2.0". In this mode the server SHOULD NOT send the carriage) s
-5 525 M
-( return character \(ASCII 13\) after the version identification string.) s
-5 503 M
-( In the compatibility mode the server SHOULD NOT send any further data) s
-5 492 M
-( after its initialization string until it has received an) s
-5 481 M
-( identification string from the client. The server can then determine) s
-5 470 M
-( whether the client is using an old protocol, and can revert to the) s
-5 459 M
-( old protocol if required. In the compatibility mode, the server MUST) s
-5 448 M
-( NOT send additional data before the version string.) s
-5 426 M
-( When compatibility with old clients is not needed, the server MAY) s
-5 415 M
-( send its initial key exchange data immediately after the) s
-5 404 M
-( identification string.) s
-5 382 M
-(4.3.2 New Client, Old Server) s
-5 360 M
-( Since the new client MAY immediately send additional data after its) s
-5 349 M
-( identification string \(before receiving server's identification\), the) s
-5 338 M
-( old protocol may already have been corrupted when the client learns) s
-5 327 M
-( that the server is old. When this happens, the client SHOULD close) s
-5 316 M
-( the connection to the server, and reconnect using the old protocol.) s
-5 294 M
-(5. Binary Packet Protocol) s
-5 272 M
-( Each packet is in the following format:) s
-5 250 M
-( uint32 packet_length) s
-5 239 M
-( byte padding_length) s
-5 228 M
-( byte[n1] payload; n1 = packet_length - padding_length - 1) s
-5 217 M
-( byte[n2] random padding; n2 = padding_length) s
-5 206 M
-( byte[m] mac \(message authentication code\); m = mac_length) s
-5 184 M
-( packet_length) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 5]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( The length of the packet \(bytes\), not including MAC or the) s
-5 679 M
-( packet_length field itself.) s
-5 657 M
-( padding_length) s
-5 646 M
-( Length of padding \(bytes\).) s
-5 624 M
-( payload) s
-5 613 M
-( The useful contents of the packet. If compression has been) s
-5 602 M
-( negotiated, this field is compressed. Initially, compression) s
-5 591 M
-( MUST be "none".) s
-5 569 M
-( random padding) s
-5 558 M
-( Arbitrary-length padding, such that the total length of) s
-5 547 M
-( \(packet_length || padding_length || payload || padding\) is a) s
-5 536 M
-( multiple of the cipher block size or 8, whichever is larger.) s
-5 525 M
-( There MUST be at least four bytes of padding. The padding) s
-5 514 M
-( SHOULD consist of random bytes. The maximum amount of padding) s
-5 503 M
-( is 255 bytes.) s
-5 481 M
-( mac) s
-5 470 M
-( Message authentication code. If message authentication has) s
-5 459 M
-( been negotiated, this field contains the MAC bytes. Initially,) s
-5 448 M
-( the MAC algorithm MUST be "none".) s
-5 415 M
-( Note that length of the concatenation of packet length, padding) s
-5 404 M
-( length, payload, and padding MUST be a multiple of the cipher block) s
-5 393 M
-( size or 8, whichever is larger. This constraint MUST be enforced) s
-5 382 M
-( even when using stream ciphers. Note that the packet length field is) s
-5 371 M
-( also encrypted, and processing it requires special care when sending) s
-5 360 M
-( or receiving packets.) s
-5 338 M
-( The minimum size of a packet is 16 \(or the cipher block size,) s
-5 327 M
-( whichever is larger\) bytes \(plus MAC\); implementations SHOULD decrypt) s
-5 316 M
-( the length after receiving the first 8 \(or cipher block size,) s
-5 305 M
-( whichever is larger\) bytes of a packet.) s
-5 283 M
-(5.1 Maximum Packet Length) s
-5 261 M
-( All implementations MUST be able to process packets with uncompressed) s
-5 250 M
-( payload length of 32768 bytes or less and total packet size of 35000) s
-5 239 M
-( bytes or less \(including length, padding length, payload, padding,) s
-5 228 M
-( and MAC.\). The maximum of 35000 bytes is an arbitrary chosen value) s
-5 217 M
-( larger than uncompressed size. Implementations SHOULD support longer) s
-5 206 M
-( packets, where they might be needed, e.g. if an implementation wants) s
-5 195 M
-( to send a very large number of certificates. Such packets MAY be) s
-5 184 M
-( sent if the version string indicates that the other party is able to) s
-5 173 M
-( process them. However, implementations SHOULD check that the packet) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 6]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( length is reasonable for the implementation to avoid) s
-5 679 M
-( denial-of-service and/or buffer overflow attacks.) s
-5 657 M
-(5.2 Compression) s
-5 635 M
-( If compression has been negotiated, the payload field \(and only it\)) s
-5 624 M
-( will be compressed using the negotiated algorithm. The length field) s
-5 613 M
-( and MAC will be computed from the compressed payload. Encryption will) s
-5 602 M
-( be done after compression.) s
-5 580 M
-( Compression MAY be stateful, depending on the method. Compression) s
-5 569 M
-( MUST be independent for each direction, and implementations MUST) s
-5 558 M
-( allow independently choosing the algorithm for each direction.) s
-5 536 M
-( The following compression methods are currently defined:) s
-5 514 M
-( none REQUIRED no compression) s
-5 503 M
-( zlib OPTIONAL ZLIB \(LZ77\) compression) s
-5 481 M
-( The "zlib" compression is described in [RFC1950] and in [RFC1951].) s
-5 470 M
-( The compression context is initialized after each key exchange, and) s
-5 459 M
-( is passed from one packet to the next with only a partial flush being) s
-5 448 M
-( performed at the end of each packet. A partial flush means that the) s
-5 437 M
-( current compressed block is ended and all data will be output. If the) s
-5 426 M
-( current block is not a stored block, one or more empty blocks are) s
-5 415 M
-( added after the current block to ensure that there are at least 8) s
-5 404 M
-( bits counting from the start of the end-of-block code of the current) s
-5 393 M
-( block to the end of the packet payload.) s
-5 371 M
-( Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 349 M
-(5.3 Encryption) s
-5 327 M
-( An encryption algorithm and a key will be negotiated during the key) s
-5 316 M
-( exchange. When encryption is in effect, the packet length, padding) s
-5 305 M
-( length, payload and padding fields of each packet MUST be encrypted) s
-5 294 M
-( with the given algorithm.) s
-5 272 M
-( The encrypted data in all packets sent in one direction SHOULD be) s
-5 261 M
-( considered a single data stream. For example, initialization vectors) s
-5 250 M
-( SHOULD be passed from the end of one packet to the beginning of the) s
-5 239 M
-( next packet. All ciphers SHOULD use keys with an effective key length) s
-5 228 M
-( of 128 bits or more.) s
-5 206 M
-( The ciphers in each direction MUST run independently of each other,) s
-5 195 M
-( and implementations MUST allow independently choosing the algorithm) s
-5 184 M
-( for each direction \(if multiple algorithms are allowed by local) s
-5 173 M
-( policy\).) s
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-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 7]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( The following ciphers are currently defined:) s
-5 668 M
-( 3des-cbc REQUIRED three-key 3DES in CBC mode) s
-5 657 M
-( blowfish-cbc OPTIONALi Blowfish in CBC mode) s
-5 646 M
-( twofish256-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish in CBC mode,) s
-5 635 M
-( with 256-bit key) s
-5 624 M
-( twofish-cbc OPTIONAL alias for "twofish256-cbc" \(this) s
-5 613 M
-( is being retained for) s
-5 602 M
-( historical reasons\)) s
-5 591 M
-( twofish192-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish with 192-bit key) s
-5 580 M
-( twofish128-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish with 128-bit key) s
-5 569 M
-( aes256-cbc OPTIONAL AES \(Rijndael\) in CBC mode,) s
-5 558 M
-( with 256-bit key) s
-5 547 M
-( aes192-cbc OPTIONAL AES with 192-bit key) s
-5 536 M
-( aes128-cbc RECOMMENDED AES with 128-bit key) s
-5 525 M
-( serpent256-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent in CBC mode, with) s
-5 514 M
-( 256-bit key) s
-5 503 M
-( serpent192-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent with 192-bit key) s
-5 492 M
-( serpent128-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent with 128-bit key) s
-5 481 M
-( arcfour OPTIONAL the ARCFOUR stream cipher) s
-5 470 M
-( idea-cbc OPTIONAL IDEA in CBC mode) s
-5 459 M
-( cast128-cbc OPTIONAL CAST-128 in CBC mode) s
-5 448 M
-( none OPTIONAL no encryption; NOT RECOMMENDED) s
-5 426 M
-( The "3des-cbc" cipher is three-key triple-DES) s
-5 415 M
-( \(encrypt-decrypt-encrypt\), where the first 8 bytes of the key are) s
-5 404 M
-( used for the first encryption, the next 8 bytes for the decryption,) s
-5 393 M
-( and the following 8 bytes for the final encryption. This requires 24) s
-5 382 M
-( bytes of key data \(of which 168 bits are actually used\). To) s
-5 371 M
-( implement CBC mode, outer chaining MUST be used \(i.e., there is only) s
-5 360 M
-( one initialization vector\). This is a block cipher with 8 byte) s
-5 349 M
-( blocks. This algorithm is defined in [FIPS-46-3]) s
-5 327 M
-( The "blowfish-cbc" cipher is Blowfish in CBC mode, with 128 bit keys) s
-5 316 M
-( [SCHNEIER]. This is a block cipher with 8 byte blocks.) s
-5 294 M
-( The "twofish-cbc" or "twofish256-cbc" cipher is Twofish in CBC mode,) s
-5 283 M
-( with 256 bit keys as described [TWOFISH]. This is a block cipher with) s
-5 272 M
-( 16 byte blocks.) s
-5 250 M
-( The "twofish192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.) s
-5 228 M
-( The "twofish128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.) s
-5 206 M
-( The "aes256-cbc" cipher is AES \(Advanced Encryption Standard\)) s
-5 195 M
-( [FIPS-197], formerly Rijndael, in CBC mode. This version uses 256-bit) s
-5 184 M
-( key.) s
-5 129 M
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( The "aes192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.) s
-5 668 M
-( The "aes128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.) s
-5 646 M
-( The "serpent256-cbc" cipher in CBC mode, with 256-bit key as) s
-5 635 M
-( described in the Serpent AES submission.) s
-5 613 M
-( The "serpent192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.) s
-5 591 M
-( The "serpent128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.) s
-5 569 M
-( The "arcfour" is the Arcfour stream cipher with 128 bit keys. The) s
-5 558 M
-( Arcfour cipher is believed to be compatible with the RC4 cipher) s
-5 547 M
-( [SCHNEIER]. RC4 is a registered trademark of RSA Data Security Inc.) s
-5 536 M
-( Arcfour \(and RC4\) has problems with weak keys, and should be used) s
-5 525 M
-( with caution.) s
-5 503 M
-( The "idea-cbc" cipher is the IDEA cipher in CBC mode [SCHNEIER].) s
-5 481 M
-( The "cast128-cbc" cipher is the CAST-128 cipher in CBC mode) s
-5 470 M
-( [RFC2144].) s
-5 448 M
-( The "none" algorithm specifies that no encryption is to be done.) s
-5 437 M
-( Note that this method provides no confidentiality protection, and it) s
-5 426 M
-( is not recommended. Some functionality \(e.g. password) s
-5 415 M
-( authentication\) may be disabled for security reasons if this cipher) s
-5 404 M
-( is chosen.) s
-5 382 M
-( Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 360 M
-(5.4 Data Integrity) s
-5 338 M
-( Data integrity is protected by including with each packet a message) s
-5 327 M
-( authentication code \(MAC\) that is computed from a shared secret,) s
-5 316 M
-( packet sequence number, and the contents of the packet.) s
-5 294 M
-( The message authentication algorithm and key are negotiated during) s
-5 283 M
-( key exchange. Initially, no MAC will be in effect, and its length) s
-5 272 M
-( MUST be zero. After key exchange, the selected MAC will be computed) s
-5 261 M
-( before encryption from the concatenation of packet data:) s
-5 239 M
-( mac = MAC\(key, sequence_number || unencrypted_packet\)) s
-5 217 M
-( where unencrypted_packet is the entire packet without MAC \(the length) s
-5 206 M
-( fields, payload and padding\), and sequence_number is an implicit) s
-5 195 M
-( packet sequence number represented as uint32. The sequence number is) s
-5 184 M
-( initialized to zero for the first packet, and is incremented after) s
-5 173 M
-( every packet \(regardless of whether encryption or MAC is in use\). It) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 9]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( is never reset, even if keys/algorithms are renegotiated later. It) s
-5 679 M
-( wraps around to zero after every 2^32 packets. The packet sequence) s
-5 668 M
-( number itself is not included in the packet sent over the wire.) s
-5 646 M
-( The MAC algorithms for each direction MUST run independently, and) s
-5 635 M
-( implementations MUST allow choosing the algorithm independently for) s
-5 624 M
-( both directions.) s
-5 602 M
-( The MAC bytes resulting from the MAC algorithm MUST be transmitted) s
-5 591 M
-( without encryption as the last part of the packet. The number of MAC) s
-5 580 M
-( bytes depends on the algorithm chosen.) s
-5 558 M
-( The following MAC algorithms are currently defined:) s
-5 536 M
-( hmac-sha1 REQUIRED HMAC-SHA1 \(digest length = key) s
-5 525 M
-( length = 20\)) s
-5 514 M
-( hmac-sha1-96 RECOMMENDED first 96 bits of HMAC-SHA1 \(digest) s
-5 503 M
-( length = 12, key length = 20\)) s
-5 492 M
-( hmac-md5 OPTIONAL HMAC-MD5 \(digest length = key) s
-5 481 M
-( length = 16\)) s
-5 470 M
-( hmac-md5-96 OPTIONAL first 96 bits of HMAC-MD5 \(digest) s
-5 459 M
-( length = 12, key length = 16\)) s
-5 448 M
-( none OPTIONAL no MAC; NOT RECOMMENDED) s
-5 426 M
-( Figure 1) s
-5 404 M
-( The "hmac-*" algorithms are described in [RFC2104] The "*-n" MACs use) s
-5 393 M
-( only the first n bits of the resulting value.) s
-5 371 M
-( The hash algorithms are described in [SCHNEIER].) s
-5 349 M
-( Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 327 M
-(5.5 Key Exchange Methods) s
-5 305 M
-( The key exchange method specifies how one-time session keys are) s
-5 294 M
-( generated for encryption and for authentication, and how the server) s
-5 283 M
-( authentication is done.) s
-5 261 M
-( Only one REQUIRED key exchange method has been defined:) s
-5 239 M
-( diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 REQUIRED) s
-5 217 M
-( This method is described later in this document.) s
-5 195 M
-( Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 10]) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(5.6 Public Key Algorithms) s
-5 668 M
-( This protocol has been designed to be able to operate with almost any) s
-5 657 M
-( public key format, encoding, and algorithm \(signature and/or) s
-5 646 M
-( encryption\).) s
-5 624 M
-( There are several aspects that define a public key type:) s
-5 613 M
-( o Key format: how is the key encoded and how are certificates) s
-5 602 M
-( represented. The key blobs in this protocol MAY contain) s
-5 591 M
-( certificates in addition to keys.) s
-5 580 M
-( o Signature and/or encryption algorithms. Some key types may not) s
-5 569 M
-( support both signing and encryption. Key usage may also be) s
-5 558 M
-( restricted by policy statements in e.g. certificates. In this) s
-5 547 M
-( case, different key types SHOULD be defined for the different) s
-5 536 M
-( policy alternatives.) s
-5 525 M
-( o Encoding of signatures and/or encrypted data. This includes but is) s
-5 514 M
-( not limited to padding, byte order, and data formats.) s
-5 492 M
-( The following public key and/or certificate formats are currently defined:) s
-5 470 M
-( ssh-dss REQUIRED sign Raw DSS Key) s
-5 459 M
-( ssh-rsa RECOMMENDED sign Raw RSA Key) s
-5 448 M
-( x509v3-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign X.509 certificates \(RSA key\)) s
-5 437 M
-( x509v3-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign X.509 certificates \(DSS key\)) s
-5 426 M
-( spki-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign SPKI certificates \(RSA key\)) s
-5 415 M
-( spki-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign SPKI certificates \(DSS key\)) s
-5 404 M
-( pgp-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign OpenPGP certificates \(RSA key\)) s
-5 393 M
-( pgp-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign OpenPGP certificates \(DSS key\)) s
-5 371 M
-( Additional key types may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 349 M
-( The key type MUST always be explicitly known \(from algorithm) s
-5 338 M
-( negotiation or some other source\). It is not normally included in) s
-5 327 M
-( the key blob.) s
-5 305 M
-( Certificates and public keys are encoded as follows:) s
-5 283 M
-( string certificate or public key format identifier) s
-5 272 M
-( byte[n] key/certificate data) s
-5 250 M
-( The certificate part may have be a zero length string, but a public) s
-5 239 M
-( key is required. This is the public key that will be used for) s
-5 228 M
-( authentication; the certificate sequence contained in the certificate) s
-5 217 M
-( blob can be used to provide authorization.) s
-5 195 M
-( Public key / certifcate formats that do not explicitly specify a) s
-5 184 M
-( signature format identifier MUST use the public key / certificate) s
-5 173 M
-( format identifier as the signature identifier.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 11]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( Signatures are encoded as follows:) s
-5 679 M
-( string signature format identifier \(as specified by the) s
-5 668 M
-( public key / cert format\)) s
-5 657 M
-( byte[n] signature blob in format specific encoding.) s
-5 624 M
-( The "ssh-dss" key format has the following specific encoding:) s
-5 602 M
-( string "ssh-dss") s
-5 591 M
-( mpint p) s
-5 580 M
-( mpint q) s
-5 569 M
-( mpint g) s
-5 558 M
-( mpint y) s
-5 536 M
-( Here the p, q, g, and y parameters form the signature key blob.) s
-5 514 M
-( Signing and verifying using this key format is done according to the) s
-5 503 M
-( Digital Signature Standard [FIPS-186] using the SHA-1 hash. A) s
-5 492 M
-( description can also be found in [SCHNEIER].) s
-5 470 M
-( The resulting signature is encoded as follows:) s
-5 448 M
-( string "ssh-dss") s
-5 437 M
-( string dss_signature_blob) s
-5 415 M
-( dss_signature_blob is encoded as a string containing r followed by s) s
-5 404 M
-( \(which are 160 bits long integers, without lengths or padding,) s
-5 393 M
-( unsigned and in network byte order\).) s
-5 371 M
-( The "ssh-rsa" key format has the following specific encoding:) s
-5 349 M
-( string "ssh-rsa") s
-5 338 M
-( mpint e) s
-5 327 M
-( mpint n) s
-5 305 M
-( Here the e and n parameters form the signature key blob.) s
-5 283 M
-( Signing and verifying using this key format is done according to) s
-5 272 M
-( [SCHNEIER] and [PKCS1] using the SHA-1 hash.) s
-5 250 M
-( The resulting signature is encoded as follows:) s
-5 228 M
-( string "ssh-rsa") s
-5 217 M
-( string rsa_signature_blob) s
-5 195 M
-( rsa_signature_blob is encoded as a string containing s \(which is an) s
-5 184 M
-( integer, without lengths or padding, unsigned and in network byte) s
-5 173 M
-( order\).) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 12]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
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-/pagenum 13 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( The "spki-sign-rsa" method indicates that the certificate blob) s
-5 679 M
-( contains a sequence of SPKI certificates. The format of SPKI) s
-5 668 M
-( certificates is described in [RFC2693]. This method indicates that) s
-5 657 M
-( the key \(or one of the keys in the certificate\) is an RSA-key.) s
-5 635 M
-( The "spki-sign-dss". As above, but indicates that the key \(or one of) s
-5 624 M
-( the keys in the certificate\) is a DSS-key.) s
-5 602 M
-( The "pgp-sign-rsa" method indicates the certificates, the public key,) s
-5 591 M
-( and the signature are in OpenPGP compatible binary format) s
-5 580 M
-( \([RFC2440]\). This method indicates that the key is an RSA-key.) s
-5 558 M
-( The "pgp-sign-dss". As above, but indicates that the key is a) s
-5 547 M
-( DSS-key.) s
-5 525 M
-(6. Key Exchange) s
-5 503 M
-( Key exchange begins by each side sending lists of supported) s
-5 492 M
-( algorithms. Each side has a preferred algorithm in each category, and) s
-5 481 M
-( it is assumed that most implementations at any given time will use) s
-5 470 M
-( the same preferred algorithm. Each side MAY guess which algorithm) s
-5 459 M
-( the other side is using, and MAY send an initial key exchange packet) s
-5 448 M
-( according to the algorithm if appropriate for the preferred method.) s
-5 426 M
-( Guess is considered wrong, if:) s
-5 415 M
-( o the kex algorithm and/or the host key algorithm is guessed wrong) s
-5 404 M
-( \(server and client have different preferred algorithm\), or) s
-5 393 M
-( o if any of the other algorithms cannot be agreed upon \(the) s
-5 382 M
-( procedure is defined below in Section Section 6.1\).) s
-5 360 M
-( Otherwise, the guess is considered to be right and the optimistically) s
-5 349 M
-( sent packet MUST be handled as the first key exchange packet.) s
-5 327 M
-( However, if the guess was wrong, and a packet was optimistically sent) s
-5 316 M
-( by one or both parties, such packets MUST be ignored \(even if the) s
-5 305 M
-( error in the guess would not affect the contents of the initial) s
-5 294 M
-( packet\(s\)\), and the appropriate side MUST send the correct initial) s
-5 283 M
-( packet.) s
-5 261 M
-( Server authentication in the key exchange MAY be implicit. After a) s
-5 250 M
-( key exchange with implicit server authentication, the client MUST) s
-5 239 M
-( wait for response to its service request message before sending any) s
-5 228 M
-( further data.) s
-5 206 M
-(6.1 Algorithm Negotiation) s
-5 184 M
-( Key exchange begins by each side sending the following packet:) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 13]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_KEXINIT) s
-5 679 M
-( byte[16] cookie \(random bytes\)) s
-5 668 M
-( string kex_algorithms) s
-5 657 M
-( string server_host_key_algorithms) s
-5 646 M
-( string encryption_algorithms_client_to_server) s
-5 635 M
-( string encryption_algorithms_server_to_client) s
-5 624 M
-( string mac_algorithms_client_to_server) s
-5 613 M
-( string mac_algorithms_server_to_client) s
-5 602 M
-( string compression_algorithms_client_to_server) s
-5 591 M
-( string compression_algorithms_server_to_client) s
-5 580 M
-( string languages_client_to_server) s
-5 569 M
-( string languages_server_to_client) s
-5 558 M
-( boolean first_kex_packet_follows) s
-5 547 M
-( uint32 0 \(reserved for future extension\)) s
-5 525 M
-( Each of the algorithm strings MUST be a comma-separated list of) s
-5 514 M
-( algorithm names \(see ''Algorithm Naming'' in [SSH-ARCH]\). Each) s
-5 503 M
-( supported \(allowed\) algorithm MUST be listed in order of preference.) s
-5 481 M
-( The first algorithm in each list MUST be the preferred \(guessed\)) s
-5 470 M
-( algorithm. Each string MUST contain at least one algorithm name.) s
-5 437 M
-( cookie) s
-5 426 M
-( The cookie MUST be a random value generated by the sender. Its) s
-5 415 M
-( purpose is to make it impossible for either side to fully) s
-5 404 M
-( determine the keys and the session identifier.) s
-5 382 M
-( kex_algorithms) s
-5 371 M
-( Key exchange algorithms were defined above. The first) s
-5 360 M
-( algorithm MUST be the preferred \(and guessed\) algorithm. If) s
-5 349 M
-( both sides make the same guess, that algorithm MUST be used.) s
-5 338 M
-( Otherwise, the following algorithm MUST be used to choose a key) s
-5 327 M
-( exchange method: iterate over client's kex algorithms, one at a) s
-5 316 M
-( time. Choose the first algorithm that satisfies the following) s
-5 305 M
-( conditions:) s
-5 294 M
-( + the server also supports the algorithm,) s
-5 283 M
-( + if the algorithm requires an encryption-capable host key,) s
-5 272 M
-( there is an encryption-capable algorithm on the server's) s
-5 261 M
-( server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the) s
-5 250 M
-( client, and) s
-5 239 M
-( + if the algorithm requires a signature-capable host key,) s
-5 228 M
-( there is a signature-capable algorithm on the server's) s
-5 217 M
-( server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the) s
-5 206 M
-( client.) s
-5 195 M
-( + If no algorithm satisfying all these conditions can be) s
-5 184 M
-( found, the connection fails, and both sides MUST disconnect.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 14]) s
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
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-/pagenum 15 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( server_host_key_algorithms) s
-5 679 M
-( List of the algorithms supported for the server host key. The) s
-5 668 M
-( server lists the algorithms for which it has host keys; the) s
-5 657 M
-( client lists the algorithms that it is willing to accept.) s
-5 646 M
-( \(There MAY be multiple host keys for a host, possibly with) s
-5 635 M
-( different algorithms.\)) s
-5 613 M
-( Some host keys may not support both signatures and encryption) s
-5 602 M
-( \(this can be determined from the algorithm\), and thus not all) s
-5 591 M
-( host keys are valid for all key exchange methods.) s
-5 569 M
-( Algorithm selection depends on whether the chosen key exchange) s
-5 558 M
-( algorithm requires a signature or encryption capable host key.) s
-5 547 M
-( It MUST be possible to determine this from the public key) s
-5 536 M
-( algorithm name. The first algorithm on the client's list that) s
-5 525 M
-( satisfies the requirements and is also supported by the server) s
-5 514 M
-( MUST be chosen. If there is no such algorithm, both sides MUST) s
-5 503 M
-( disconnect.) s
-5 481 M
-( encryption_algorithms) s
-5 470 M
-( Lists the acceptable symmetric encryption algorithms in order) s
-5 459 M
-( of preference. The chosen encryption algorithm to each) s
-5 448 M
-( direction MUST be the first algorithm on the client's list) s
-5 437 M
-( that is also on the server's list. If there is no such) s
-5 426 M
-( algorithm, both sides MUST disconnect.) s
-5 404 M
-( Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be) s
-5 393 M
-( acceptable. The defined algorithm names are listed in Section) s
-5 382 M
-( Section 5.3.) s
-5 360 M
-( mac_algorithms) s
-5 349 M
-( Lists the acceptable MAC algorithms in order of preference.) s
-5 338 M
-( The chosen MAC algorithm MUST be the first algorithm on the) s
-5 327 M
-( client's list that is also on the server's list. If there is) s
-5 316 M
-( no such algorithm, both sides MUST disconnect.) s
-5 294 M
-( Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be) s
-5 283 M
-( acceptable. The MAC algorithm names are listed in Section) s
-5 272 M
-( Figure 1.) s
-5 250 M
-( compression_algorithms) s
-5 239 M
-( Lists the acceptable compression algorithms in order of) s
-5 228 M
-( preference. The chosen compression algorithm MUST be the first) s
-5 217 M
-( algorithm on the client's list that is also on the server's) s
-5 206 M
-( list. If there is no such algorithm, both sides MUST) s
-5 195 M
-( disconnect.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 15]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be) s
-5 679 M
-( acceptable. The compression algorithm names are listed in) s
-5 668 M
-( Section Section 5.2.) s
-5 646 M
-( languages) s
-5 635 M
-( This is a comma-separated list of language tags in order of) s
-5 624 M
-( preference [RFC3066]. Both parties MAY ignore this list. If) s
-5 613 M
-( there are no language preferences, this list SHOULD be empty.) s
-5 602 M
-( Language tags SHOULD NOT be present unless they are known to be) s
-5 591 M
-( needed by the sending party.) s
-5 569 M
-( first_kex_packet_follows) s
-5 558 M
-( Indicates whether a guessed key exchange packet follows. If a) s
-5 547 M
-( guessed packet will be sent, this MUST be TRUE. If no guessed) s
-5 536 M
-( packet will be sent, this MUST be FALSE.) s
-5 514 M
-( After receiving the SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet from the other side,) s
-5 503 M
-( each party will know whether their guess was right. If the) s
-5 492 M
-( other party's guess was wrong, and this field was TRUE, the) s
-5 481 M
-( next packet MUST be silently ignored, and both sides MUST then) s
-5 470 M
-( act as determined by the negotiated key exchange method. If) s
-5 459 M
-( the guess was right, key exchange MUST continue using the) s
-5 448 M
-( guessed packet.) s
-5 426 M
-( After the KEXINIT packet exchange, the key exchange algorithm is run.) s
-5 415 M
-( It may involve several packet exchanges, as specified by the key) s
-5 404 M
-( exchange method.) s
-5 382 M
-(6.2 Output from Key Exchange) s
-5 360 M
-( The key exchange produces two values: a shared secret K, and an) s
-5 349 M
-( exchange hash H. Encryption and authentication keys are derived from) s
-5 338 M
-( these. The exchange hash H from the first key exchange is) s
-5 327 M
-( additionally used as the session identifier, which is a unique) s
-5 316 M
-( identifier for this connection. It is used by authentication methods) s
-5 305 M
-( as a part of the data that is signed as a proof of possession of a) s
-5 294 M
-( private key. Once computed, the session identifier is not changed,) s
-5 283 M
-( even if keys are later re-exchanged.) s
-5 250 M
-( Each key exchange method specifies a hash function that is used in) s
-5 239 M
-( the key exchange. The same hash algorithm MUST be used in key) s
-5 228 M
-( derivation. Here, we'll call it HASH.) s
-5 195 M
-( Encryption keys MUST be computed as HASH of a known value and K as) s
-5 184 M
-( follows:) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 16]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 17 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( o Initial IV client to server: HASH\(K || H || "A" || session_id\)) s
-5 679 M
-( \(Here K is encoded as mpint and "A" as byte and session_id as raw) s
-5 668 M
-( data."A" means the single character A, ASCII 65\).) s
-5 657 M
-( o Initial IV server to client: HASH\(K || H || "B" || session_id\)) s
-5 646 M
-( o Encryption key client to server: HASH\(K || H || "C" || session_id\)) s
-5 635 M
-( o Encryption key server to client: HASH\(K || H || "D" || session_id\)) s
-5 624 M
-( o Integrity key client to server: HASH\(K || H || "E" || session_id\)) s
-5 613 M
-( o Integrity key server to client: HASH\(K || H || "F" || session_id\)) s
-5 591 M
-( Key data MUST be taken from the beginning of the hash output. 128) s
-5 580 M
-( bits \(16 bytes\) MUST be used for algorithms with variable-length) s
-5 569 M
-( keys. The only variable key length algorithm defined in this document) s
-5 558 M
-( is arcfour\). For other algorithms, as many bytes as are needed are) s
-5 547 M
-( taken from the beginning of the hash value. If the key length needed) s
-5 536 M
-( is longer than the output of the HASH, the key is extended by) s
-5 525 M
-( computing HASH of the concatenation of K and H and the entire key so) s
-5 514 M
-( far, and appending the resulting bytes \(as many as HASH generates\) to) s
-5 503 M
-( the key. This process is repeated until enough key material is) s
-5 492 M
-( available; the key is taken from the beginning of this value. In) s
-5 481 M
-( other words:) s
-5 459 M
-( K1 = HASH\(K || H || X || session_id\) \(X is e.g. "A"\)) s
-5 448 M
-( K2 = HASH\(K || H || K1\)) s
-5 437 M
-( K3 = HASH\(K || H || K1 || K2\)) s
-5 426 M
-( ...) s
-5 415 M
-( key = K1 || K2 || K3 || ...) s
-5 393 M
-( This process will lose entropy if the amount of entropy in K is) s
-5 382 M
-( larger than the internal state size of HASH.) s
-5 360 M
-(6.3 Taking Keys Into Use) s
-5 338 M
-( Key exchange ends by each side sending an SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS message.) s
-5 327 M
-( This message is sent with the old keys and algorithms. All messages) s
-5 316 M
-( sent after this message MUST use the new keys and algorithms.) s
-5 283 M
-( When this message is received, the new keys and algorithms MUST be) s
-5 272 M
-( taken into use for receiving.) s
-5 239 M
-( This message is the only valid message after key exchange, in) s
-5 228 M
-( addition to SSH_MSG_DEBUG, SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT and SSH_MSG_IGNORE) s
-5 217 M
-( messages. The purpose of this message is to ensure that a party is) s
-5 206 M
-( able to respond with a disconnect message that the other party can) s
-5 195 M
-( understand if something goes wrong with the key exchange.) s
-5 184 M
-( Implementations MUST NOT accept any other messages after key exchange) s
-5 173 M
-( before receiving SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 17]) s
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-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 18 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS) s
-5 657 M
-(7. Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange) s
-5 635 M
-( The Diffie-Hellman key exchange provides a shared secret that can not) s
-5 624 M
-( be determined by either party alone. The key exchange is combined) s
-5 613 M
-( with a signature with the host key to provide host authentication.) s
-5 580 M
-( In the following description \(C is the client, S is the server; p is) s
-5 569 M
-( a large safe prime, g is a generator for a subgroup of GF\(p\), and q) s
-5 558 M
-( is the order of the subgroup; V_S is S's version string; V_C is C's) s
-5 547 M
-( version string; K_S is S's public host key; I_C is C's KEXINIT) s
-5 536 M
-( message and I_S S's KEXINIT message which have been exchanged before) s
-5 525 M
-( this part begins\):) s
-5 492 M
-( 1. C generates a random number x \(1 < x < q\) and computes e = g^x) s
-5 481 M
-( mod p. C sends "e" to S.) s
-5 459 M
-( 2. S generates a random number y \(0 < y < q\) and computes f = g^y) s
-5 448 M
-( mod p. S receives "e". It computes K = e^y mod p, H = hash\(V_C) s
-5 437 M
-( || V_S || I_C || I_S || K_S || e || f || K\) \(these elements are) s
-5 426 M
-( encoded according to their types; see below\), and signature s on) s
-5 415 M
-( H with its private host key. S sends "K_S || f || s" to C. The) s
-5 404 M
-( signing operation may involve a second hashing operation.) s
-5 382 M
-( 3. C verifies that K_S really is the host key for S \(e.g. using) s
-5 371 M
-( certificates or a local database\). C is also allowed to accept) s
-5 360 M
-( the key without verification; however, doing so will render the) s
-5 349 M
-( protocol insecure against active attacks \(but may be desirable) s
-5 338 M
-( for practical reasons in the short term in many environments\). C) s
-5 327 M
-( then computes K = f^x mod p, H = hash\(V_C || V_S || I_C || I_S ||) s
-5 316 M
-( K_S || e || f || K\), and verifies the signature s on H.) s
-5 294 M
-( Either side MUST NOT send or accept e or f values that are not in the) s
-5 283 M
-( range [1, p-1]. If this condition is violated, the key exchange) s
-5 272 M
-( fails.) s
-5 239 M
-( This is implemented with the following messages. The hash algorithm) s
-5 228 M
-( for computing the exchange hash is defined by the method name, and is) s
-5 217 M
-( called HASH. The public key algorithm for signing is negotiated with) s
-5 206 M
-( the KEXINIT messages.) s
-5 184 M
-( First, the client sends the following:) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 18]) s
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_KEXDH_INIT) s
-5 679 M
-( mpint e) s
-5 646 M
-( The server responds with the following:) s
-5 624 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_KEXDH_REPLY) s
-5 613 M
-( string server public host key and certificates \(K_S\)) s
-5 602 M
-( mpint f) s
-5 591 M
-( string signature of H) s
-5 569 M
-( The hash H is computed as the HASH hash of the concatenation of the) s
-5 558 M
-( following:) s
-5 536 M
-( string V_C, the client's version string \(CR and NL excluded\)) s
-5 525 M
-( string V_S, the server's version string \(CR and NL excluded\)) s
-5 514 M
-( string I_C, the payload of the client's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT) s
-5 503 M
-( string I_S, the payload of the server's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT) s
-5 492 M
-( string K_S, the host key) s
-5 481 M
-( mpint e, exchange value sent by the client) s
-5 470 M
-( mpint f, exchange value sent by the server) s
-5 459 M
-( mpint K, the shared secret) s
-5 437 M
-( This value is called the exchange hash, and it is used to) s
-5 426 M
-( authenticate the key exchange. The exchange hash SHOULD be kept) s
-5 415 M
-( secret.) s
-5 382 M
-( The signature algorithm MUST be applied over H, not the original) s
-5 371 M
-( data. Most signature algorithms include hashing and additional) s
-5 360 M
-( padding. For example, "ssh-dss" specifies SHA-1 hashing; in that) s
-5 349 M
-( case, the data is first hashed with HASH to compute H, and H is then) s
-5 338 M
-( hashed with SHA-1 as part of the signing operation.) s
-5 316 M
-(7.1 diffie-hellman-group1-sha1) s
-5 294 M
-( The "diffie-hellman-group1-sha1" method specifies Diffie-Hellman key) s
-5 283 M
-( exchange with SHA-1 as HASH, and Oakley group 14 [RFC3526] \(2048-bit) s
-5 272 M
-( MODP Group\). It is included below in hexadecimal and decimal.) s
-5 250 M
-( The prime p is equal to 2^1024 - 2^960 - 1 + 2^64 * floor\( 2^894 Pi +) s
-5 239 M
-( 129093 \). Its hexadecimal value is:) s
-5 217 M
-( FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF C90FDAA2 2168C234 C4C6628B 80DC1CD1) s
-5 206 M
-( 29024E08 8A67CC74 020BBEA6 3B139B22 514A0879 8E3404DD) s
-5 195 M
-( EF9519B3 CD3A431B 302B0A6D F25F1437 4FE1356D 6D51C245) s
-5 184 M
-( E485B576 625E7EC6 F44C42E9 A637ED6B 0BFF5CB6 F406B7ED) s
-5 173 M
-( EE386BFB 5A899FA5 AE9F2411 7C4B1FE6 49286651 ECE65381) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 19]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 20 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF.) s
-5 668 M
-( In decimal, this value is:) s
-5 646 M
-( 179769313486231590770839156793787453197860296048756011706444) s
-5 635 M
-( 423684197180216158519368947833795864925541502180565485980503) s
-5 624 M
-( 646440548199239100050792877003355816639229553136239076508735) s
-5 613 M
-( 759914822574862575007425302077447712589550957937778424442426) s
-5 602 M
-( 617334727629299387668709205606050270810842907692932019128194) s
-5 591 M
-( 467627007.) s
-5 569 M
-( The generator used with this prime is g = 2. The group order q is \(p) s
-5 558 M
-( - 1\) / 2.) s
-5 536 M
-(8. Key Re-Exchange) s
-5 514 M
-( Key re-exchange is started by sending an SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet when) s
-5 503 M
-( not already doing a key exchange \(as described in Section Section) s
-5 492 M
-( 6.1\). When this message is received, a party MUST respond with its) s
-5 481 M
-( own SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message except when the received SSH_MSG_KEXINIT) s
-5 470 M
-( already was a reply. Either party MAY initiate the re-exchange, but) s
-5 459 M
-( roles MUST NOT be changed \(i.e., the server remains the server, and) s
-5 448 M
-( the client remains the client\).) s
-5 415 M
-( Key re-exchange is performed using whatever encryption was in effect) s
-5 404 M
-( when the exchange was started. Encryption, compression, and MAC) s
-5 393 M
-( methods are not changed before a new SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS is sent after) s
-5 382 M
-( the key exchange \(as in the initial key exchange\). Re-exchange is) s
-5 371 M
-( processed identically to the initial key exchange, except for the) s
-5 360 M
-( session identifier that will remain unchanged. It is permissible to) s
-5 349 M
-( change some or all of the algorithms during the re-exchange. Host) s
-5 338 M
-( keys can also change. All keys and initialization vectors are) s
-5 327 M
-( recomputed after the exchange. Compression and encryption contexts) s
-5 316 M
-( are reset.) s
-5 283 M
-( It is recommended that the keys are changed after each gigabyte of) s
-5 272 M
-( transmitted data or after each hour of connection time, whichever) s
-5 261 M
-( comes sooner. However, since the re-exchange is a public key) s
-5 250 M
-( operation, it requires a fair amount of processing power and should) s
-5 239 M
-( not be performed too often.) s
-5 206 M
-( More application data may be sent after the SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS packet) s
-5 195 M
-( has been sent; key exchange does not affect the protocols that lie) s
-5 184 M
-( above the SSH transport layer.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 20]) s
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
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-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 21 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(9. Service Request) s
-5 668 M
-( After the key exchange, the client requests a service. The service is) s
-5 657 M
-( identified by a name. The format of names and procedures for defining) s
-5 646 M
-( new names are defined in [SSH-ARCH].) s
-5 613 M
-( Currently, the following names have been reserved:) s
-5 591 M
-( ssh-userauth) s
-5 580 M
-( ssh-connection) s
-5 558 M
-( Similar local naming policy is applied to the service names, as is) s
-5 547 M
-( applied to the algorithm names; a local service should use the) s
-5 536 M
-( "servicename@domain" syntax.) s
-5 514 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST) s
-5 503 M
-( string service name) s
-5 481 M
-( If the server rejects the service request, it SHOULD send an) s
-5 470 M
-( appropriate SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT message and MUST disconnect.) s
-5 437 M
-( When the service starts, it may have access to the session identifier) s
-5 426 M
-( generated during the key exchange.) s
-5 393 M
-( If the server supports the service \(and permits the client to use) s
-5 382 M
-( it\), it MUST respond with the following:) s
-5 360 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT) s
-5 349 M
-( string service name) s
-5 327 M
-( Message numbers used by services should be in the area reserved for) s
-5 316 M
-( them \(see Section 6 in [SSH-ARCH]\). The transport level will) s
-5 305 M
-( continue to process its own messages.) s
-5 272 M
-( Note that after a key exchange with implicit server authentication,) s
-5 261 M
-( the client MUST wait for response to its service request message) s
-5 250 M
-( before sending any further data.) s
-5 228 M
-(10. Additional Messages) s
-5 206 M
-( Either party may send any of the following messages at any time.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 21]) s
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- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/pagenum 22 def
-/fname () def
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-/ftail () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(10.1 Disconnection Message) s
-5 668 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT) s
-5 657 M
-( uint32 reason code) s
-5 646 M
-( string description [RFC2279]) s
-5 635 M
-( string language tag [RFC3066]) s
-5 613 M
-( This message causes immediate termination of the connection. All) s
-5 602 M
-( implementations MUST be able to process this message; they SHOULD be) s
-5 591 M
-( able to send this message.) s
-5 569 M
-( The sender MUST NOT send or receive any data after this message, and) s
-5 558 M
-( the recipient MUST NOT accept any data after receiving this message.) s
-5 547 M
-( The description field gives a more specific explanation in a) s
-5 536 M
-( human-readable form. The error code gives the reason in a more) s
-5 525 M
-( machine-readable format \(suitable for localization\), and can have the) s
-5 514 M
-( following values:) s
-5 492 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_NOT_ALLOWED_TO_CONNECT 1) s
-5 481 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_ERROR 2) s
-5 470 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_KEY_EXCHANGE_FAILED 3) s
-5 459 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_RESERVED 4) s
-5 448 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_MAC_ERROR 5) s
-5 437 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_COMPRESSION_ERROR 6) s
-5 426 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_SERVICE_NOT_AVAILABLE 7) s
-5 415 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED 8) s
-5 404 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_KEY_NOT_VERIFIABLE 9) s
-5 393 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_CONNECTION_LOST 10) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_BY_APPLICATION 11) s
-5 371 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_TOO_MANY_CONNECTIONS 12) s
-5 360 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER 13) s
-5 349 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_NO_MORE_AUTH_METHODS_AVAILABLE 14) s
-5 338 M
-( #define SSH_DISCONNECT_ILLEGAL_USER_NAME 15) s
-5 316 M
-( If the description string is displayed, control character filtering) s
-5 305 M
-( discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by sending) s
-5 294 M
-( terminal control characters.) s
-5 272 M
-(10.2 Ignored Data Message) s
-5 250 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_IGNORE) s
-5 239 M
-( string data) s
-5 217 M
-( All implementations MUST understand \(and ignore\) this message at any) s
-5 206 M
-( time \(after receiving the protocol version\). No implementation is) s
-5 195 M
-( required to send them. This message can be used as an additional) s
-5 184 M
-( protection measure against advanced traffic analysis techniques.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 22]) s
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-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
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-/pagenum 23 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(10.3 Debug Message) s
-5 668 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_DEBUG) s
-5 657 M
-( boolean always_display) s
-5 646 M
-( string message [RFC2279]) s
-5 635 M
-( string language tag [RFC3066]) s
-5 613 M
-( All implementations MUST understand this message, but they are) s
-5 602 M
-( allowed to ignore it. This message is used to pass the other side) s
-5 591 M
-( information that may help debugging. If always_display is TRUE, the) s
-5 580 M
-( message SHOULD be displayed. Otherwise, it SHOULD NOT be displayed) s
-5 569 M
-( unless debugging information has been explicitly requested by the) s
-5 558 M
-( user.) s
-5 525 M
-( The message doesn't need to contain a newline. It is, however,) s
-5 514 M
-( allowed to consist of multiple lines separated by CRLF \(Carriage) s
-5 503 M
-( Return - Line Feed\) pairs.) s
-5 470 M
-( If the message string is displayed, terminal control character) s
-5 459 M
-( filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by) s
-5 448 M
-( sending terminal control characters.) s
-5 426 M
-(10.4 Reserved Messages) s
-5 404 M
-( An implementation MUST respond to all unrecognized messages with an) s
-5 393 M
-( SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED message in the order in which the messages were) s
-5 382 M
-( received. Such messages MUST be otherwise ignored. Later protocol) s
-5 371 M
-( versions may define other meanings for these message types.) s
-5 349 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED) s
-5 338 M
-( uint32 packet sequence number of rejected message) s
-5 305 M
-(11. Summary of Message Numbers) s
-5 283 M
-( The following message numbers have been defined in this protocol:) s
-5 261 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT 1) s
-5 250 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_IGNORE 2) s
-5 239 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED 3) s
-5 228 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_DEBUG 4) s
-5 217 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST 5) s
-5 206 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT 6) s
-5 184 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_KEXINIT 20) s
-5 173 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS 21) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 23]) s
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 24 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( /* Numbers 30-49 used for kex packets.) s
-5 679 M
-( Different kex methods may reuse message numbers in) s
-5 668 M
-( this range. */) s
-5 646 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_KEXDH_INIT 30) s
-5 635 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_KEXDH_REPLY 31) s
-5 602 M
-(12. IANA Considerations) s
-5 580 M
-( This document is part of a set, the IANA considerations for the SSH) s
-5 569 M
-( protocol as defined in [SSH-ARCH], [SSH-TRANS], [SSH-USERAUTH],) s
-5 558 M
-( [SSH-CONNECT] are detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].) s
-5 536 M
-(13. Security Considerations) s
-5 514 M
-( This protocol provides a secure encrypted channel over an insecure) s
-5 503 M
-( network. It performs server host authentication, key exchange,) s
-5 492 M
-( encryption, and integrity protection. It also derives a unique) s
-5 481 M
-( session id that may be used by higher-level protocols.) s
-5 459 M
-( Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in) s
-5 448 M
-( Section 8 of [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 426 M
-(14. Intellectual Property) s
-5 404 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 393 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
-5 382 M
-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
-5 371 M
-( this document or the extent to which any license under such rights) s
-5 360 M
-( might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it) s
-5 349 M
-( has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the) s
-5 338 M
-( IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and) s
-5 327 M
-( standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of) s
-5 316 M
-( claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of) s
-5 305 M
-( licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to) s
-5 294 M
-( obtain a general license or permission for the use of such) s
-5 283 M
-( proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can) s
-5 272 M
-( be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.) s
-5 250 M
-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
-5 239 M
-( regard to some or all of the specification contained in this) s
-5 228 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 217 M
-( rights.) s
-5 195 M
-(15. Additional Information) s
-5 173 M
-( The current document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 24]) s
-_R
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-595.000000 0.271378 translate
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 25 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( this internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,) s
-5 679 M
-( details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html) s
-5 657 M
-(Normative) s
-5 635 M
-( [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 624 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D) s
-5 613 M
-( draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 591 M
-( [SSH-TRANS]) s
-5 580 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D) s
-5 569 M
-( draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 547 M
-( [SSH-USERAUTH]) s
-5 536 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D) s
-5 525 M
-( draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 503 M
-( [SSH-CONNECT]) s
-5 492 M
-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D) s
-5 481 M
-( draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 459 M
-( [SSH-NUMBERS]) s
-5 448 M
-( Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned) s
-5 437 M
-( Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct) s
-5 426 M
-( 2003.) s
-5 404 M
-( [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate) s
-5 393 M
-( Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.) s
-5 371 M
-(Informative) s
-5 349 M
-( [FIPS-186]) s
-5 338 M
-( Federal Information Processing Standards Publication,) s
-5 327 M
-( "FIPS PUB 186, Digital Signature Standard", May 1994.) s
-5 305 M
-( [FIPS-197]) s
-5 294 M
-( NIST, "FIPS PUB 197 Advanced Encryption Standard \(AES\)",) s
-5 283 M
-( November 2001.) s
-5 261 M
-( [FIPS-46-3]) s
-5 250 M
-( U.S. Dept. of Commerce, "FIPS PUB 46-3, Data Encryption) s
-5 239 M
-( Standard \(DES\)", October 1999.) s
-5 217 M
-( [RFC2459] Housley, R., Ford, W., Polk, T. and D. Solo, "Internet) s
-5 206 M
-( X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and CRL) s
-5 195 M
-( Profile", RFC 2459, January 1999.) s
-5 173 M
-( [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 25]) s
-_R
-S
-PStoPSsaved restore
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-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 26 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.) s
-5 668 M
-( [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of) s
-5 657 M
-( Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.) s
-5 635 M
-( [RFC1950] Deutsch, L. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data Format) s
-5 624 M
-( Specification version 3.3", RFC 1950, May 1996.) s
-5 602 M
-( [RFC1951] Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification) s
-5 591 M
-( version 1.3", RFC 1951, May 1996.) s
-5 569 M
-( [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO) s
-5 558 M
-( 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.) s
-5 536 M
-( [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC:) s
-5 525 M
-( Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,) s
-5 514 M
-( February 1997.) s
-5 492 M
-( [RFC2144] Adams, C., "The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm", RFC 2144,) s
-5 481 M
-( May 1997.) s
-5 459 M
-( [RFC2440] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H. and R. Thayer,) s
-5 448 M
-( "OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 2440, November 1998.) s
-5 426 M
-( [RFC2693] Ellison, C., Frantz, B., Lampson, B., Rivest, R., Thomas,) s
-5 415 M
-( B. and T. Ylonen, "SPKI Certificate Theory", RFC 2693,) s
-5 404 M
-( September 1999.) s
-5 382 M
-( [RFC3526] Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo, "More Modular Exponential \(MODP\)) s
-5 371 M
-( Diffie-Hellman groups for Internet Key Exchange \(IKE\)",) s
-5 360 M
-( RFC 3526, May 2003.) s
-5 338 M
-( [SCHNEIER]) s
-5 327 M
-( Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography Second Edition:) s
-5 316 M
-( protocols algorithms and source in code in C", 1996.) s
-5 294 M
-( [TWOFISH] Schneier, B., "The Twofish Encryptions Algorithm: A) s
-5 283 M
-( 128-Bit Block Cipher, 1st Edition", March 1999.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 26]) s
-_R
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
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-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
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- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 27 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(Authors' Addresses) s
-5 668 M
-( Tatu Ylonen) s
-5 657 M
-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 646 M
-( Fredrikinkatu 42) s
-5 635 M
-( HELSINKI FIN-00100) s
-5 624 M
-( Finland) s
-5 602 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 569 M
-( Darren J. Moffat \(editor\)) s
-5 558 M
-( Sun Microsystems, Inc) s
-5 547 M
-( 17 Network Circle) s
-5 536 M
-( Menlo Park 95025) s
-5 525 M
-( USA) s
-5 503 M
-( EMail: [email protected]) s
-5 481 M
-(Appendix A. Contibutors) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 27]) s
-_R
-S
-PStoPSsaved restore
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 28 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-(Intellectual Property Statement) s
-5 668 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 657 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
-5 646 M
-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
-5 635 M
-( this document or the extent to which any license under such rights) s
-5 624 M
-( might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it) s
-5 613 M
-( has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the) s
-5 602 M
-( IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and) s
-5 591 M
-( standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of) s
-5 580 M
-( claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of) s
-5 569 M
-( licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to) s
-5 558 M
-( obtain a general license or permission for the use of such) s
-5 547 M
-( proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can) s
-5 536 M
-( be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.) s
-5 514 M
-( The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any) s
-5 503 M
-( copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary) s
-5 492 M
-( rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice) s
-5 481 M
-( this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive) s
-5 470 M
-( Director.) s
-5 448 M
-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
-5 437 M
-( regard to some or all of the specification contained in this) s
-5 426 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 415 M
-( rights.) s
-5 382 M
-(Full Copyright Statement) s
-5 360 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2003\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 338 M
-( This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to) s
-5 327 M
-( others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it) s
-5 316 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
-5 305 M
-( and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any) s
-5 294 M
-( kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are) s
-5 283 M
-( included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this) s
-5 272 M
-( document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing) s
-5 261 M
-( the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other) s
-5 250 M
-( Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of) s
-5 239 M
-( developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for) s
-5 228 M
-( copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be) s
-5 217 M
-( followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than) s
-5 206 M
-( English.) s
-5 184 M
-( The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be) s
-5 173 M
-( revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 28]) s
-_R
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-userdict/PStoPSsaved save put
-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 0.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-/showpage{}def/copypage{}def/erasepage{}def
-PStoPSxform concat
-%%BeginPageSetup
-_S
-75 0 translate
-/pagenum 29 def
-/fname () def
-/fdir () def
-/ftail () def
-/user_header_p false def
-%%EndPageSetup
-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003) s
-5 690 M
-( This document and the information contained herein is provided on an) s
-5 679 M
-( "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING) s
-5 668 M
-( TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING) s
-5 657 M
-( BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION) s
-5 646 M
-( HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF) s
-5 635 M
-( MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.) s
-5 602 M
-(Acknowledgment) s
-5 580 M
-( Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the) s
-5 569 M
-( Internet Society.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 29]) s
-_R
-S
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-PStoPSmatrix setmatrix
-595.000000 421.271378 translate
-90 rotate
-0.706651 dup scale
-userdict/PStoPSmatrix matrix currentmatrix put
-userdict/PStoPSclip{0 0 moveto
- 595.000000 0 rlineto 0 842.000000 rlineto -595.000000 0 rlineto
- closepath}put initclip
-PStoPSxform concat
-showpage
-PStoPSsaved restore
-%%Trailer
-%%Pages: 29
-%%DocumentNeededResources: font Courier-Bold Courier
-%%EOF
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9073ea52b2..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1624 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Network Working Group T. Ylonen
-Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp
-Expires: March 31, 2004 D. Moffat, Editor, Ed.
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- Oct 2003
-
-
- SSH Transport Layer Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-transport-17.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
- groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on March 31, 2004.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network
- services over an insecure network.
-
- This document describes the SSH transport layer protocol which
- typically runs on top of TCP/IP. The protocol can be used as a basis
- for a number of secure network services. It provides strong
- encryption, server authentication, and integrity protection. It may
- also provide compression.
-
- Key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption
- algorithm, message authentication algorithm, and hash algorithm are
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- all negotiated.
-
- This document also describes the Diffie-Hellman key exchange method
- and the minimal set of algorithms that are needed to implement the
- SSH transport layer protocol.
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3. Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 4. Connection Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 4.1 Use over TCP/IP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 4.2 Protocol Version Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 4.3 Compatibility With Old SSH Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 4.3.1 Old Client, New Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 4.3.2 New Client, Old Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 5. Binary Packet Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 5.1 Maximum Packet Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 5.2 Compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 5.3 Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 5.4 Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 5.5 Key Exchange Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 5.6 Public Key Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 6. Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 6.1 Algorithm Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- 6.2 Output from Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 6.3 Taking Keys Into Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- 7. Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 7.1 diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 8. Key Re-Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 9. Service Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 10. Additional Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 10.1 Disconnection Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 10.2 Ignored Data Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- 10.3 Debug Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 10.4 Reserved Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 11. Summary of Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 12. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- 13. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- 14. Intellectual Property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- 15. Additional Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- Normative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- Informative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- A. Contibutors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 28
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-1. Contributors
-
- The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,
- Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen (all of SSH Communications
- Security Corp), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen (University of
- Jyvaskyla)
-
- The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this
- internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,
- details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html
-
-2. Introduction
-
- The SSH transport layer is a secure low level transport protocol. It
- provides strong encryption, cryptographic host authentication, and
- integrity protection.
-
- Authentication in this protocol level is host-based; this protocol
- does not perform user authentication. A higher level protocol for
- user authentication can be designed on top of this protocol.
-
- The protocol has been designed to be simple, flexible, to allow
- parameter negotiation, and to minimize the number of round-trips.
- Key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption
- algorithm, message authentication algorithm, and hash algorithm are
- all negotiated. It is expected that in most environments, only 2
- round-trips will be needed for full key exchange, server
- authentication, service request, and acceptance notification of
- service request. The worst case is 3 round-trips.
-
-3. Conventions Used in This Document
-
- The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
- and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as
- described in [RFC2119].
-
- The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture
- document [SSH-ARCH].
-
- The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming
- conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.
-
-4. Connection Setup
-
- SSH works over any 8-bit clean, binary-transparent transport. The
- underlying transport SHOULD protect against transmission errors as
- such errors cause the SSH connection to terminate.
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 3]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- The client initiates the connection.
-
-4.1 Use over TCP/IP
-
- When used over TCP/IP, the server normally listens for connections on
- port 22. This port number has been registered with the IANA, and has
- been officially assigned for SSH.
-
-4.2 Protocol Version Exchange
-
- When the connection has been established, both sides MUST send an
- identification string of the form "SSH-protoversion-softwareversion
- comments", followed by carriage return and newline characters (ASCII
- 13 and 10, respectively). Both sides MUST be able to process
- identification strings without carriage return character. No null
- character is sent. The maximum length of the string is 255
- characters, including the carriage return and newline.
-
- The part of the identification string preceding carriage return and
- newline is used in the Diffie-Hellman key exchange (see Section
- Section 7).
-
- The server MAY send other lines of data before sending the version
- string. Each line SHOULD be terminated by a carriage return and
- newline. Such lines MUST NOT begin with "SSH-", and SHOULD be
- encoded in ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC2279] (language is not specified).
- Clients MUST be able to process such lines; they MAY be silently
- ignored, or MAY be displayed to the client user; if they are
- displayed, control character filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] SHOULD
- be used. The primary use of this feature is to allow TCP-wrappers to
- display an error message before disconnecting.
-
- Version strings MUST consist of printable US-ASCII characters, not
- including whitespaces or a minus sign (-). The version string is
- primarily used to trigger compatibility extensions and to indicate
- the capabilities of an implementation. The comment string should
- contain additional information that might be useful in solving user
- problems.
-
- The protocol version described in this document is 2.0.
-
- Key exchange will begin immediately after sending this identifier.
- All packets following the identification string SHALL use the binary
- packet protocol, to be described below.
-
-4.3 Compatibility With Old SSH Versions
-
- During the transition period, it is important to be able to work in a
-
-
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- way that is compatible with the installed SSH clients and servers
- that use an older version of the protocol. Information in this
- section is only relevant for implementations supporting compatibility
- with SSH versions 1.x. There is no standards track or informational
- draft available that defines the SSH 1.x protocol. The only known
- documentation of the 1.x protocol is contained in README files that
- are shipped along with the source code.
-
-4.3.1 Old Client, New Server
-
- Server implementations MAY support a configurable "compatibility"
- flag that enables compatibility with old versions. When this flag is
- on, the server SHOULD identify its protocol version as "1.99".
- Clients using protocol 2.0 MUST be able to identify this as identical
- to "2.0". In this mode the server SHOULD NOT send the carriage
- return character (ASCII 13) after the version identification string.
-
- In the compatibility mode the server SHOULD NOT send any further data
- after its initialization string until it has received an
- identification string from the client. The server can then determine
- whether the client is using an old protocol, and can revert to the
- old protocol if required. In the compatibility mode, the server MUST
- NOT send additional data before the version string.
-
- When compatibility with old clients is not needed, the server MAY
- send its initial key exchange data immediately after the
- identification string.
-
-4.3.2 New Client, Old Server
-
- Since the new client MAY immediately send additional data after its
- identification string (before receiving server's identification), the
- old protocol may already have been corrupted when the client learns
- that the server is old. When this happens, the client SHOULD close
- the connection to the server, and reconnect using the old protocol.
-
-5. Binary Packet Protocol
-
- Each packet is in the following format:
-
- uint32 packet_length
- byte padding_length
- byte[n1] payload; n1 = packet_length - padding_length - 1
- byte[n2] random padding; n2 = padding_length
- byte[m] mac (message authentication code); m = mac_length
-
- packet_length
-
-
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- The length of the packet (bytes), not including MAC or the
- packet_length field itself.
-
- padding_length
- Length of padding (bytes).
-
- payload
- The useful contents of the packet. If compression has been
- negotiated, this field is compressed. Initially, compression
- MUST be "none".
-
- random padding
- Arbitrary-length padding, such that the total length of
- (packet_length || padding_length || payload || padding) is a
- multiple of the cipher block size or 8, whichever is larger.
- There MUST be at least four bytes of padding. The padding
- SHOULD consist of random bytes. The maximum amount of padding
- is 255 bytes.
-
- mac
- Message authentication code. If message authentication has
- been negotiated, this field contains the MAC bytes. Initially,
- the MAC algorithm MUST be "none".
-
-
- Note that length of the concatenation of packet length, padding
- length, payload, and padding MUST be a multiple of the cipher block
- size or 8, whichever is larger. This constraint MUST be enforced
- even when using stream ciphers. Note that the packet length field is
- also encrypted, and processing it requires special care when sending
- or receiving packets.
-
- The minimum size of a packet is 16 (or the cipher block size,
- whichever is larger) bytes (plus MAC); implementations SHOULD decrypt
- the length after receiving the first 8 (or cipher block size,
- whichever is larger) bytes of a packet.
-
-5.1 Maximum Packet Length
-
- All implementations MUST be able to process packets with uncompressed
- payload length of 32768 bytes or less and total packet size of 35000
- bytes or less (including length, padding length, payload, padding,
- and MAC.). The maximum of 35000 bytes is an arbitrary chosen value
- larger than uncompressed size. Implementations SHOULD support longer
- packets, where they might be needed, e.g. if an implementation wants
- to send a very large number of certificates. Such packets MAY be
- sent if the version string indicates that the other party is able to
- process them. However, implementations SHOULD check that the packet
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- length is reasonable for the implementation to avoid
- denial-of-service and/or buffer overflow attacks.
-
-5.2 Compression
-
- If compression has been negotiated, the payload field (and only it)
- will be compressed using the negotiated algorithm. The length field
- and MAC will be computed from the compressed payload. Encryption will
- be done after compression.
-
- Compression MAY be stateful, depending on the method. Compression
- MUST be independent for each direction, and implementations MUST
- allow independently choosing the algorithm for each direction.
-
- The following compression methods are currently defined:
-
- none REQUIRED no compression
- zlib OPTIONAL ZLIB (LZ77) compression
-
- The "zlib" compression is described in [RFC1950] and in [RFC1951].
- The compression context is initialized after each key exchange, and
- is passed from one packet to the next with only a partial flush being
- performed at the end of each packet. A partial flush means that the
- current compressed block is ended and all data will be output. If the
- current block is not a stored block, one or more empty blocks are
- added after the current block to ensure that there are at least 8
- bits counting from the start of the end-of-block code of the current
- block to the end of the packet payload.
-
- Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-5.3 Encryption
-
- An encryption algorithm and a key will be negotiated during the key
- exchange. When encryption is in effect, the packet length, padding
- length, payload and padding fields of each packet MUST be encrypted
- with the given algorithm.
-
- The encrypted data in all packets sent in one direction SHOULD be
- considered a single data stream. For example, initialization vectors
- SHOULD be passed from the end of one packet to the beginning of the
- next packet. All ciphers SHOULD use keys with an effective key length
- of 128 bits or more.
-
- The ciphers in each direction MUST run independently of each other,
- and implementations MUST allow independently choosing the algorithm
- for each direction (if multiple algorithms are allowed by local
- policy).
-
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- The following ciphers are currently defined:
-
- 3des-cbc REQUIRED three-key 3DES in CBC mode
- blowfish-cbc OPTIONALi Blowfish in CBC mode
- twofish256-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish in CBC mode,
- with 256-bit key
- twofish-cbc OPTIONAL alias for "twofish256-cbc" (this
- is being retained for
- historical reasons)
- twofish192-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish with 192-bit key
- twofish128-cbc OPTIONAL Twofish with 128-bit key
- aes256-cbc OPTIONAL AES (Rijndael) in CBC mode,
- with 256-bit key
- aes192-cbc OPTIONAL AES with 192-bit key
- aes128-cbc RECOMMENDED AES with 128-bit key
- serpent256-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent in CBC mode, with
- 256-bit key
- serpent192-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent with 192-bit key
- serpent128-cbc OPTIONAL Serpent with 128-bit key
- arcfour OPTIONAL the ARCFOUR stream cipher
- idea-cbc OPTIONAL IDEA in CBC mode
- cast128-cbc OPTIONAL CAST-128 in CBC mode
- none OPTIONAL no encryption; NOT RECOMMENDED
-
- The "3des-cbc" cipher is three-key triple-DES
- (encrypt-decrypt-encrypt), where the first 8 bytes of the key are
- used for the first encryption, the next 8 bytes for the decryption,
- and the following 8 bytes for the final encryption. This requires 24
- bytes of key data (of which 168 bits are actually used). To
- implement CBC mode, outer chaining MUST be used (i.e., there is only
- one initialization vector). This is a block cipher with 8 byte
- blocks. This algorithm is defined in [FIPS-46-3]
-
- The "blowfish-cbc" cipher is Blowfish in CBC mode, with 128 bit keys
- [SCHNEIER]. This is a block cipher with 8 byte blocks.
-
- The "twofish-cbc" or "twofish256-cbc" cipher is Twofish in CBC mode,
- with 256 bit keys as described [TWOFISH]. This is a block cipher with
- 16 byte blocks.
-
- The "twofish192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.
-
- The "twofish128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.
-
- The "aes256-cbc" cipher is AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
- [FIPS-197], formerly Rijndael, in CBC mode. This version uses 256-bit
- key.
-
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- The "aes192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.
-
- The "aes128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.
-
- The "serpent256-cbc" cipher in CBC mode, with 256-bit key as
- described in the Serpent AES submission.
-
- The "serpent192-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 192-bit key.
-
- The "serpent128-cbc" cipher. Same as above but with 128-bit key.
-
- The "arcfour" is the Arcfour stream cipher with 128 bit keys. The
- Arcfour cipher is believed to be compatible with the RC4 cipher
- [SCHNEIER]. RC4 is a registered trademark of RSA Data Security Inc.
- Arcfour (and RC4) has problems with weak keys, and should be used
- with caution.
-
- The "idea-cbc" cipher is the IDEA cipher in CBC mode [SCHNEIER].
-
- The "cast128-cbc" cipher is the CAST-128 cipher in CBC mode
- [RFC2144].
-
- The "none" algorithm specifies that no encryption is to be done.
- Note that this method provides no confidentiality protection, and it
- is not recommended. Some functionality (e.g. password
- authentication) may be disabled for security reasons if this cipher
- is chosen.
-
- Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-5.4 Data Integrity
-
- Data integrity is protected by including with each packet a message
- authentication code (MAC) that is computed from a shared secret,
- packet sequence number, and the contents of the packet.
-
- The message authentication algorithm and key are negotiated during
- key exchange. Initially, no MAC will be in effect, and its length
- MUST be zero. After key exchange, the selected MAC will be computed
- before encryption from the concatenation of packet data:
-
- mac = MAC(key, sequence_number || unencrypted_packet)
-
- where unencrypted_packet is the entire packet without MAC (the length
- fields, payload and padding), and sequence_number is an implicit
- packet sequence number represented as uint32. The sequence number is
- initialized to zero for the first packet, and is incremented after
- every packet (regardless of whether encryption or MAC is in use). It
-
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- is never reset, even if keys/algorithms are renegotiated later. It
- wraps around to zero after every 2^32 packets. The packet sequence
- number itself is not included in the packet sent over the wire.
-
- The MAC algorithms for each direction MUST run independently, and
- implementations MUST allow choosing the algorithm independently for
- both directions.
-
- The MAC bytes resulting from the MAC algorithm MUST be transmitted
- without encryption as the last part of the packet. The number of MAC
- bytes depends on the algorithm chosen.
-
- The following MAC algorithms are currently defined:
-
- hmac-sha1 REQUIRED HMAC-SHA1 (digest length = key
- length = 20)
- hmac-sha1-96 RECOMMENDED first 96 bits of HMAC-SHA1 (digest
- length = 12, key length = 20)
- hmac-md5 OPTIONAL HMAC-MD5 (digest length = key
- length = 16)
- hmac-md5-96 OPTIONAL first 96 bits of HMAC-MD5 (digest
- length = 12, key length = 16)
- none OPTIONAL no MAC; NOT RECOMMENDED
-
- Figure 1
-
- The "hmac-*" algorithms are described in [RFC2104] The "*-n" MACs use
- only the first n bits of the resulting value.
-
- The hash algorithms are described in [SCHNEIER].
-
- Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-5.5 Key Exchange Methods
-
- The key exchange method specifies how one-time session keys are
- generated for encryption and for authentication, and how the server
- authentication is done.
-
- Only one REQUIRED key exchange method has been defined:
-
- diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 REQUIRED
-
- This method is described later in this document.
-
- Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-
-
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-5.6 Public Key Algorithms
-
- This protocol has been designed to be able to operate with almost any
- public key format, encoding, and algorithm (signature and/or
- encryption).
-
- There are several aspects that define a public key type:
- o Key format: how is the key encoded and how are certificates
- represented. The key blobs in this protocol MAY contain
- certificates in addition to keys.
- o Signature and/or encryption algorithms. Some key types may not
- support both signing and encryption. Key usage may also be
- restricted by policy statements in e.g. certificates. In this
- case, different key types SHOULD be defined for the different
- policy alternatives.
- o Encoding of signatures and/or encrypted data. This includes but is
- not limited to padding, byte order, and data formats.
-
- The following public key and/or certificate formats are currently defined:
-
- ssh-dss REQUIRED sign Raw DSS Key
- ssh-rsa RECOMMENDED sign Raw RSA Key
- x509v3-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign X.509 certificates (RSA key)
- x509v3-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign X.509 certificates (DSS key)
- spki-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign SPKI certificates (RSA key)
- spki-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign SPKI certificates (DSS key)
- pgp-sign-rsa OPTIONAL sign OpenPGP certificates (RSA key)
- pgp-sign-dss OPTIONAL sign OpenPGP certificates (DSS key)
-
- Additional key types may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH].
-
- The key type MUST always be explicitly known (from algorithm
- negotiation or some other source). It is not normally included in
- the key blob.
-
- Certificates and public keys are encoded as follows:
-
- string certificate or public key format identifier
- byte[n] key/certificate data
-
- The certificate part may have be a zero length string, but a public
- key is required. This is the public key that will be used for
- authentication; the certificate sequence contained in the certificate
- blob can be used to provide authorization.
-
- Public key / certifcate formats that do not explicitly specify a
- signature format identifier MUST use the public key / certificate
- format identifier as the signature identifier.
-
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- Signatures are encoded as follows:
- string signature format identifier (as specified by the
- public key / cert format)
- byte[n] signature blob in format specific encoding.
-
-
- The "ssh-dss" key format has the following specific encoding:
-
- string "ssh-dss"
- mpint p
- mpint q
- mpint g
- mpint y
-
- Here the p, q, g, and y parameters form the signature key blob.
-
- Signing and verifying using this key format is done according to the
- Digital Signature Standard [FIPS-186] using the SHA-1 hash. A
- description can also be found in [SCHNEIER].
-
- The resulting signature is encoded as follows:
-
- string "ssh-dss"
- string dss_signature_blob
-
- dss_signature_blob is encoded as a string containing r followed by s
- (which are 160 bits long integers, without lengths or padding,
- unsigned and in network byte order).
-
- The "ssh-rsa" key format has the following specific encoding:
-
- string "ssh-rsa"
- mpint e
- mpint n
-
- Here the e and n parameters form the signature key blob.
-
- Signing and verifying using this key format is done according to
- [SCHNEIER] and [PKCS1] using the SHA-1 hash.
-
- The resulting signature is encoded as follows:
-
- string "ssh-rsa"
- string rsa_signature_blob
-
- rsa_signature_blob is encoded as a string containing s (which is an
- integer, without lengths or padding, unsigned and in network byte
- order).
-
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- The "spki-sign-rsa" method indicates that the certificate blob
- contains a sequence of SPKI certificates. The format of SPKI
- certificates is described in [RFC2693]. This method indicates that
- the key (or one of the keys in the certificate) is an RSA-key.
-
- The "spki-sign-dss". As above, but indicates that the key (or one of
- the keys in the certificate) is a DSS-key.
-
- The "pgp-sign-rsa" method indicates the certificates, the public key,
- and the signature are in OpenPGP compatible binary format
- ([RFC2440]). This method indicates that the key is an RSA-key.
-
- The "pgp-sign-dss". As above, but indicates that the key is a
- DSS-key.
-
-6. Key Exchange
-
- Key exchange begins by each side sending lists of supported
- algorithms. Each side has a preferred algorithm in each category, and
- it is assumed that most implementations at any given time will use
- the same preferred algorithm. Each side MAY guess which algorithm
- the other side is using, and MAY send an initial key exchange packet
- according to the algorithm if appropriate for the preferred method.
-
- Guess is considered wrong, if:
- o the kex algorithm and/or the host key algorithm is guessed wrong
- (server and client have different preferred algorithm), or
- o if any of the other algorithms cannot be agreed upon (the
- procedure is defined below in Section Section 6.1).
-
- Otherwise, the guess is considered to be right and the optimistically
- sent packet MUST be handled as the first key exchange packet.
-
- However, if the guess was wrong, and a packet was optimistically sent
- by one or both parties, such packets MUST be ignored (even if the
- error in the guess would not affect the contents of the initial
- packet(s)), and the appropriate side MUST send the correct initial
- packet.
-
- Server authentication in the key exchange MAY be implicit. After a
- key exchange with implicit server authentication, the client MUST
- wait for response to its service request message before sending any
- further data.
-
-6.1 Algorithm Negotiation
-
- Key exchange begins by each side sending the following packet:
-
-
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- byte SSH_MSG_KEXINIT
- byte[16] cookie (random bytes)
- string kex_algorithms
- string server_host_key_algorithms
- string encryption_algorithms_client_to_server
- string encryption_algorithms_server_to_client
- string mac_algorithms_client_to_server
- string mac_algorithms_server_to_client
- string compression_algorithms_client_to_server
- string compression_algorithms_server_to_client
- string languages_client_to_server
- string languages_server_to_client
- boolean first_kex_packet_follows
- uint32 0 (reserved for future extension)
-
- Each of the algorithm strings MUST be a comma-separated list of
- algorithm names (see ''Algorithm Naming'' in [SSH-ARCH]). Each
- supported (allowed) algorithm MUST be listed in order of preference.
-
- The first algorithm in each list MUST be the preferred (guessed)
- algorithm. Each string MUST contain at least one algorithm name.
-
-
- cookie
- The cookie MUST be a random value generated by the sender. Its
- purpose is to make it impossible for either side to fully
- determine the keys and the session identifier.
-
- kex_algorithms
- Key exchange algorithms were defined above. The first
- algorithm MUST be the preferred (and guessed) algorithm. If
- both sides make the same guess, that algorithm MUST be used.
- Otherwise, the following algorithm MUST be used to choose a key
- exchange method: iterate over client's kex algorithms, one at a
- time. Choose the first algorithm that satisfies the following
- conditions:
- + the server also supports the algorithm,
- + if the algorithm requires an encryption-capable host key,
- there is an encryption-capable algorithm on the server's
- server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the
- client, and
- + if the algorithm requires a signature-capable host key,
- there is a signature-capable algorithm on the server's
- server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the
- client.
- + If no algorithm satisfying all these conditions can be
- found, the connection fails, and both sides MUST disconnect.
-
-
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- server_host_key_algorithms
- List of the algorithms supported for the server host key. The
- server lists the algorithms for which it has host keys; the
- client lists the algorithms that it is willing to accept.
- (There MAY be multiple host keys for a host, possibly with
- different algorithms.)
-
- Some host keys may not support both signatures and encryption
- (this can be determined from the algorithm), and thus not all
- host keys are valid for all key exchange methods.
-
- Algorithm selection depends on whether the chosen key exchange
- algorithm requires a signature or encryption capable host key.
- It MUST be possible to determine this from the public key
- algorithm name. The first algorithm on the client's list that
- satisfies the requirements and is also supported by the server
- MUST be chosen. If there is no such algorithm, both sides MUST
- disconnect.
-
- encryption_algorithms
- Lists the acceptable symmetric encryption algorithms in order
- of preference. The chosen encryption algorithm to each
- direction MUST be the first algorithm on the client's list
- that is also on the server's list. If there is no such
- algorithm, both sides MUST disconnect.
-
- Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be
- acceptable. The defined algorithm names are listed in Section
- Section 5.3.
-
- mac_algorithms
- Lists the acceptable MAC algorithms in order of preference.
- The chosen MAC algorithm MUST be the first algorithm on the
- client's list that is also on the server's list. If there is
- no such algorithm, both sides MUST disconnect.
-
- Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be
- acceptable. The MAC algorithm names are listed in Section
- Figure 1.
-
- compression_algorithms
- Lists the acceptable compression algorithms in order of
- preference. The chosen compression algorithm MUST be the first
- algorithm on the client's list that is also on the server's
- list. If there is no such algorithm, both sides MUST
- disconnect.
-
-
-
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- Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be
- acceptable. The compression algorithm names are listed in
- Section Section 5.2.
-
- languages
- This is a comma-separated list of language tags in order of
- preference [RFC3066]. Both parties MAY ignore this list. If
- there are no language preferences, this list SHOULD be empty.
- Language tags SHOULD NOT be present unless they are known to be
- needed by the sending party.
-
- first_kex_packet_follows
- Indicates whether a guessed key exchange packet follows. If a
- guessed packet will be sent, this MUST be TRUE. If no guessed
- packet will be sent, this MUST be FALSE.
-
- After receiving the SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet from the other side,
- each party will know whether their guess was right. If the
- other party's guess was wrong, and this field was TRUE, the
- next packet MUST be silently ignored, and both sides MUST then
- act as determined by the negotiated key exchange method. If
- the guess was right, key exchange MUST continue using the
- guessed packet.
-
- After the KEXINIT packet exchange, the key exchange algorithm is run.
- It may involve several packet exchanges, as specified by the key
- exchange method.
-
-6.2 Output from Key Exchange
-
- The key exchange produces two values: a shared secret K, and an
- exchange hash H. Encryption and authentication keys are derived from
- these. The exchange hash H from the first key exchange is
- additionally used as the session identifier, which is a unique
- identifier for this connection. It is used by authentication methods
- as a part of the data that is signed as a proof of possession of a
- private key. Once computed, the session identifier is not changed,
- even if keys are later re-exchanged.
-
-
- Each key exchange method specifies a hash function that is used in
- the key exchange. The same hash algorithm MUST be used in key
- derivation. Here, we'll call it HASH.
-
-
- Encryption keys MUST be computed as HASH of a known value and K as
- follows:
-
-
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- o Initial IV client to server: HASH(K || H || "A" || session_id)
- (Here K is encoded as mpint and "A" as byte and session_id as raw
- data."A" means the single character A, ASCII 65).
- o Initial IV server to client: HASH(K || H || "B" || session_id)
- o Encryption key client to server: HASH(K || H || "C" || session_id)
- o Encryption key server to client: HASH(K || H || "D" || session_id)
- o Integrity key client to server: HASH(K || H || "E" || session_id)
- o Integrity key server to client: HASH(K || H || "F" || session_id)
-
- Key data MUST be taken from the beginning of the hash output. 128
- bits (16 bytes) MUST be used for algorithms with variable-length
- keys. The only variable key length algorithm defined in this document
- is arcfour). For other algorithms, as many bytes as are needed are
- taken from the beginning of the hash value. If the key length needed
- is longer than the output of the HASH, the key is extended by
- computing HASH of the concatenation of K and H and the entire key so
- far, and appending the resulting bytes (as many as HASH generates) to
- the key. This process is repeated until enough key material is
- available; the key is taken from the beginning of this value. In
- other words:
-
- K1 = HASH(K || H || X || session_id) (X is e.g. "A")
- K2 = HASH(K || H || K1)
- K3 = HASH(K || H || K1 || K2)
- ...
- key = K1 || K2 || K3 || ...
-
- This process will lose entropy if the amount of entropy in K is
- larger than the internal state size of HASH.
-
-6.3 Taking Keys Into Use
-
- Key exchange ends by each side sending an SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS message.
- This message is sent with the old keys and algorithms. All messages
- sent after this message MUST use the new keys and algorithms.
-
-
- When this message is received, the new keys and algorithms MUST be
- taken into use for receiving.
-
-
- This message is the only valid message after key exchange, in
- addition to SSH_MSG_DEBUG, SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT and SSH_MSG_IGNORE
- messages. The purpose of this message is to ensure that a party is
- able to respond with a disconnect message that the other party can
- understand if something goes wrong with the key exchange.
- Implementations MUST NOT accept any other messages after key exchange
- before receiving SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 17]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS
-
-
-7. Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange
-
- The Diffie-Hellman key exchange provides a shared secret that can not
- be determined by either party alone. The key exchange is combined
- with a signature with the host key to provide host authentication.
-
-
- In the following description (C is the client, S is the server; p is
- a large safe prime, g is a generator for a subgroup of GF(p), and q
- is the order of the subgroup; V_S is S's version string; V_C is C's
- version string; K_S is S's public host key; I_C is C's KEXINIT
- message and I_S S's KEXINIT message which have been exchanged before
- this part begins):
-
-
- 1. C generates a random number x (1 < x < q) and computes e = g^x
- mod p. C sends "e" to S.
-
- 2. S generates a random number y (0 < y < q) and computes f = g^y
- mod p. S receives "e". It computes K = e^y mod p, H = hash(V_C
- || V_S || I_C || I_S || K_S || e || f || K) (these elements are
- encoded according to their types; see below), and signature s on
- H with its private host key. S sends "K_S || f || s" to C. The
- signing operation may involve a second hashing operation.
-
- 3. C verifies that K_S really is the host key for S (e.g. using
- certificates or a local database). C is also allowed to accept
- the key without verification; however, doing so will render the
- protocol insecure against active attacks (but may be desirable
- for practical reasons in the short term in many environments). C
- then computes K = f^x mod p, H = hash(V_C || V_S || I_C || I_S ||
- K_S || e || f || K), and verifies the signature s on H.
-
- Either side MUST NOT send or accept e or f values that are not in the
- range [1, p-1]. If this condition is violated, the key exchange
- fails.
-
-
- This is implemented with the following messages. The hash algorithm
- for computing the exchange hash is defined by the method name, and is
- called HASH. The public key algorithm for signing is negotiated with
- the KEXINIT messages.
-
- First, the client sends the following:
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 18]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_KEXDH_INIT
- mpint e
-
-
- The server responds with the following:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_KEXDH_REPLY
- string server public host key and certificates (K_S)
- mpint f
- string signature of H
-
- The hash H is computed as the HASH hash of the concatenation of the
- following:
-
- string V_C, the client's version string (CR and NL excluded)
- string V_S, the server's version string (CR and NL excluded)
- string I_C, the payload of the client's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT
- string I_S, the payload of the server's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT
- string K_S, the host key
- mpint e, exchange value sent by the client
- mpint f, exchange value sent by the server
- mpint K, the shared secret
-
- This value is called the exchange hash, and it is used to
- authenticate the key exchange. The exchange hash SHOULD be kept
- secret.
-
-
- The signature algorithm MUST be applied over H, not the original
- data. Most signature algorithms include hashing and additional
- padding. For example, "ssh-dss" specifies SHA-1 hashing; in that
- case, the data is first hashed with HASH to compute H, and H is then
- hashed with SHA-1 as part of the signing operation.
-
-7.1 diffie-hellman-group1-sha1
-
- The "diffie-hellman-group1-sha1" method specifies Diffie-Hellman key
- exchange with SHA-1 as HASH, and Oakley group 14 [RFC3526] (2048-bit
- MODP Group). It is included below in hexadecimal and decimal.
-
- The prime p is equal to 2^1024 - 2^960 - 1 + 2^64 * floor( 2^894 Pi +
- 129093 ). Its hexadecimal value is:
-
- FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF C90FDAA2 2168C234 C4C6628B 80DC1CD1
- 29024E08 8A67CC74 020BBEA6 3B139B22 514A0879 8E3404DD
- EF9519B3 CD3A431B 302B0A6D F25F1437 4FE1356D 6D51C245
- E485B576 625E7EC6 F44C42E9 A637ED6B 0BFF5CB6 F406B7ED
- EE386BFB 5A899FA5 AE9F2411 7C4B1FE6 49286651 ECE65381
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 19]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF.
-
- In decimal, this value is:
-
- 179769313486231590770839156793787453197860296048756011706444
- 423684197180216158519368947833795864925541502180565485980503
- 646440548199239100050792877003355816639229553136239076508735
- 759914822574862575007425302077447712589550957937778424442426
- 617334727629299387668709205606050270810842907692932019128194
- 467627007.
-
- The generator used with this prime is g = 2. The group order q is (p
- - 1) / 2.
-
-8. Key Re-Exchange
-
- Key re-exchange is started by sending an SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet when
- not already doing a key exchange (as described in Section Section
- 6.1). When this message is received, a party MUST respond with its
- own SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message except when the received SSH_MSG_KEXINIT
- already was a reply. Either party MAY initiate the re-exchange, but
- roles MUST NOT be changed (i.e., the server remains the server, and
- the client remains the client).
-
-
- Key re-exchange is performed using whatever encryption was in effect
- when the exchange was started. Encryption, compression, and MAC
- methods are not changed before a new SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS is sent after
- the key exchange (as in the initial key exchange). Re-exchange is
- processed identically to the initial key exchange, except for the
- session identifier that will remain unchanged. It is permissible to
- change some or all of the algorithms during the re-exchange. Host
- keys can also change. All keys and initialization vectors are
- recomputed after the exchange. Compression and encryption contexts
- are reset.
-
-
- It is recommended that the keys are changed after each gigabyte of
- transmitted data or after each hour of connection time, whichever
- comes sooner. However, since the re-exchange is a public key
- operation, it requires a fair amount of processing power and should
- not be performed too often.
-
-
- More application data may be sent after the SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS packet
- has been sent; key exchange does not affect the protocols that lie
- above the SSH transport layer.
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 20]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-9. Service Request
-
- After the key exchange, the client requests a service. The service is
- identified by a name. The format of names and procedures for defining
- new names are defined in [SSH-ARCH].
-
-
- Currently, the following names have been reserved:
-
- ssh-userauth
- ssh-connection
-
- Similar local naming policy is applied to the service names, as is
- applied to the algorithm names; a local service should use the
- "servicename@domain" syntax.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST
- string service name
-
- If the server rejects the service request, it SHOULD send an
- appropriate SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT message and MUST disconnect.
-
-
- When the service starts, it may have access to the session identifier
- generated during the key exchange.
-
-
- If the server supports the service (and permits the client to use
- it), it MUST respond with the following:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT
- string service name
-
- Message numbers used by services should be in the area reserved for
- them (see Section 6 in [SSH-ARCH]). The transport level will
- continue to process its own messages.
-
-
- Note that after a key exchange with implicit server authentication,
- the client MUST wait for response to its service request message
- before sending any further data.
-
-10. Additional Messages
-
- Either party may send any of the following messages at any time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 21]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-10.1 Disconnection Message
-
- byte SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT
- uint32 reason code
- string description [RFC2279]
- string language tag [RFC3066]
-
- This message causes immediate termination of the connection. All
- implementations MUST be able to process this message; they SHOULD be
- able to send this message.
-
- The sender MUST NOT send or receive any data after this message, and
- the recipient MUST NOT accept any data after receiving this message.
- The description field gives a more specific explanation in a
- human-readable form. The error code gives the reason in a more
- machine-readable format (suitable for localization), and can have the
- following values:
-
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_NOT_ALLOWED_TO_CONNECT 1
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_ERROR 2
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_KEY_EXCHANGE_FAILED 3
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_RESERVED 4
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_MAC_ERROR 5
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_COMPRESSION_ERROR 6
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_SERVICE_NOT_AVAILABLE 7
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED 8
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_KEY_NOT_VERIFIABLE 9
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_CONNECTION_LOST 10
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_BY_APPLICATION 11
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_TOO_MANY_CONNECTIONS 12
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER 13
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_NO_MORE_AUTH_METHODS_AVAILABLE 14
- #define SSH_DISCONNECT_ILLEGAL_USER_NAME 15
-
- If the description string is displayed, control character filtering
- discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by sending
- terminal control characters.
-
-10.2 Ignored Data Message
-
- byte SSH_MSG_IGNORE
- string data
-
- All implementations MUST understand (and ignore) this message at any
- time (after receiving the protocol version). No implementation is
- required to send them. This message can be used as an additional
- protection measure against advanced traffic analysis techniques.
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 22]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-10.3 Debug Message
-
- byte SSH_MSG_DEBUG
- boolean always_display
- string message [RFC2279]
- string language tag [RFC3066]
-
- All implementations MUST understand this message, but they are
- allowed to ignore it. This message is used to pass the other side
- information that may help debugging. If always_display is TRUE, the
- message SHOULD be displayed. Otherwise, it SHOULD NOT be displayed
- unless debugging information has been explicitly requested by the
- user.
-
-
- The message doesn't need to contain a newline. It is, however,
- allowed to consist of multiple lines separated by CRLF (Carriage
- Return - Line Feed) pairs.
-
-
- If the message string is displayed, terminal control character
- filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by
- sending terminal control characters.
-
-10.4 Reserved Messages
-
- An implementation MUST respond to all unrecognized messages with an
- SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED message in the order in which the messages were
- received. Such messages MUST be otherwise ignored. Later protocol
- versions may define other meanings for these message types.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED
- uint32 packet sequence number of rejected message
-
-
-11. Summary of Message Numbers
-
- The following message numbers have been defined in this protocol:
-
- #define SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT 1
- #define SSH_MSG_IGNORE 2
- #define SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED 3
- #define SSH_MSG_DEBUG 4
- #define SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST 5
- #define SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT 6
-
- #define SSH_MSG_KEXINIT 20
- #define SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS 21
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 23]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- /* Numbers 30-49 used for kex packets.
- Different kex methods may reuse message numbers in
- this range. */
-
- #define SSH_MSG_KEXDH_INIT 30
- #define SSH_MSG_KEXDH_REPLY 31
-
-
-12. IANA Considerations
-
- This document is part of a set, the IANA considerations for the SSH
- protocol as defined in [SSH-ARCH], [SSH-TRANS], [SSH-USERAUTH],
- [SSH-CONNECT] are detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].
-
-13. Security Considerations
-
- This protocol provides a secure encrypted channel over an insecure
- network. It performs server host authentication, key exchange,
- encryption, and integrity protection. It also derives a unique
- session id that may be used by higher-level protocols.
-
- Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in
- Section 8 of [SSH-ARCH]
-
-14. Intellectual Property
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in
- regard to some or all of the specification contained in this
- document. For more information consult the online list of claimed
- rights.
-
-15. Additional Information
-
- The current document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 24]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- this internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,
- details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html
-
-Normative
-
- [SSH-ARCH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D
- draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-TRANS]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-USERAUTH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-CONNECT]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-NUMBERS]
- Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned
- Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct
- 2003.
-
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
- Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
-
-Informative
-
- [FIPS-186]
- Federal Information Processing Standards Publication,
- "FIPS PUB 186, Digital Signature Standard", May 1994.
-
- [FIPS-197]
- NIST, "FIPS PUB 197 Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)",
- November 2001.
-
- [FIPS-46-3]
- U.S. Dept. of Commerce, "FIPS PUB 46-3, Data Encryption
- Standard (DES)", October 1999.
-
- [RFC2459] Housley, R., Ford, W., Polk, T. and D. Solo, "Internet
- X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and CRL
- Profile", RFC 2459, January 1999.
-
- [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 25]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.
-
- [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of
- Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.
-
- [RFC1950] Deutsch, L. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data Format
- Specification version 3.3", RFC 1950, May 1996.
-
- [RFC1951] Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification
- version 1.3", RFC 1951, May 1996.
-
- [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
- 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.
-
- [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC:
- Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,
- February 1997.
-
- [RFC2144] Adams, C., "The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm", RFC 2144,
- May 1997.
-
- [RFC2440] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H. and R. Thayer,
- "OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 2440, November 1998.
-
- [RFC2693] Ellison, C., Frantz, B., Lampson, B., Rivest, R., Thomas,
- B. and T. Ylonen, "SPKI Certificate Theory", RFC 2693,
- September 1999.
-
- [RFC3526] Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo, "More Modular Exponential (MODP)
- Diffie-Hellman groups for Internet Key Exchange (IKE)",
- RFC 3526, May 2003.
-
- [SCHNEIER]
- Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography Second Edition:
- protocols algorithms and source in code in C", 1996.
-
- [TWOFISH] Schneier, B., "The Twofish Encryptions Algorithm: A
- 128-Bit Block Cipher, 1st Edition", March 1999.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 26]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-Authors' Addresses
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Darren J. Moffat (editor)
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- 17 Network Circle
- Menlo Park 95025
- USA
-
-
-Appendix A. Contibutors
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 27]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
-Intellectual Property Statement
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
- this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
- might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
- has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the
- IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
- standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of
- claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
- licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
- obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
- proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
- be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
-
- The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
- copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
- rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
- this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
- Director.
-
- The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in
- regard to some or all of the specification contained in this
- document. For more information consult the online list of claimed
- rights.
-
-
-Full Copyright Statement
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
-
- This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
- others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
- or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
- and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
- kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
- included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
- document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
- the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
- Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
- developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
- copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
- followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
- English.
-
- The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
- revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat, Editor Expires March 31, 2004 [Page 28]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Transport Layer Protocol Oct 2003
-
-
- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
- TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
- BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
- HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-
-Acknowledgment
-
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.2.ps b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.2.ps
deleted file mode 100644
index be5799dbce..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.2.ps
+++ /dev/null
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-5 701 M
-(Network Working Group T. Ylonen) s
-5 690 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp) s
-5 679 M
-(Expires: March 2, 2003 D. Moffat, Ed.) s
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-( Sun Microsystems, Inc) s
-5 657 M
-( September 2002) s
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-( SSH Authentication Protocol) s
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-( draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt) s
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-(Status of this Memo) s
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-( This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with) s
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-( all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.) s
-5 536 M
-( Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering) s
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-( Task Force \(IETF\), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other) s
-5 514 M
-( groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.) s
-5 492 M
-( Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months) s
-5 481 M
-( and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any) s
-5 470 M
-( time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference) s
-5 459 M
-( material or to cite them other than as "work in progress.") s
-5 437 M
-( The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://) s
-5 426 M
-( www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.) s
-5 404 M
-( The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at) s
-5 393 M
-( http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.) s
-5 371 M
-( This Internet-Draft will expire on March 2, 2003.) s
-5 349 M
-(Copyright Notice) s
-5 327 M
-( Copyright \(C\) The Internet Society \(2002\). All Rights Reserved.) s
-5 305 M
-(Abstract) s
-5 283 M
-( SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network) s
-5 272 M
-( services over an insecure network. This document describes the SSH) s
-5 261 M
-( authentication protocol framework and public key, password, and) s
-5 250 M
-( host-based client authentication methods. Additional authentication) s
-5 239 M
-( methods are described in separate documents. The SSH authentication) s
-5 228 M
-( protocol runs on top of the SSH transport layer protocol and provides) s
-5 217 M
-( a single authenticated tunnel for the SSH connection protocol.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 1]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(Table of Contents) s
-5 668 M
-( 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
-5 657 M
-( 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3) s
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-( 3.1.1 Authentication Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4) s
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-( 3.1.2 Responses to Authentication Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . 5) s
-5 602 M
-( 3.1.3 The "none" Authentication Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6) s
-5 591 M
-( 3.1.4 Completion of User Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6) s
-5 580 M
-( 3.1.5 Banner Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 569 M
-( 3.2 Authentication Protocol Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . 7) s
-5 558 M
-( 3.3 Public Key Authentication Method: publickey . . . . . . . . 8) s
-5 547 M
-( 3.4 Password Authentication Method: password . . . . . . . . . . 10) s
-5 536 M
-( 3.5 Host-Based Authentication: hostbased . . . . . . . . . . . . 11) s
-5 525 M
-( 4. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12) s
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-( Normative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
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-( Informative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13) s
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-( Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14) s
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-( Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 15) s
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(1. Contributors) s
-5 668 M
-( The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,) s
-5 657 M
-( Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen \(all of SSH Communications) s
-5 646 M
-( Security Corp\), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen \(University of) s
-5 635 M
-( Jyvaskyla\)) s
-5 613 M
-( The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this) s
-5 602 M
-( internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,) s
-5 591 M
-( details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html) s
-5 569 M
-(2. Introduction) s
-5 547 M
-( The SSH authentication protocol is a general-purpose user) s
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-( authentication protocol. It is intended to be run over the SSH) s
-5 525 M
-( transport layer protocol [SSH-TRANS]. This protocol assumes that the) s
-5 514 M
-( underlying protocols provide integrity and confidentiality) s
-5 503 M
-( protection.) s
-5 481 M
-( This document should be read only after reading the SSH architecture) s
-5 470 M
-( document [SSH-ARCH]. This document freely uses terminology and) s
-5 459 M
-( notation from the architecture document without reference or further) s
-5 448 M
-( explanation.) s
-5 426 M
-( The service name for this protocol is "ssh-userauth".) s
-5 404 M
-( When this protocol starts, it receives the session identifier from) s
-5 393 M
-( the lower-level protocol \(this is the exchange hash H from the first) s
-5 382 M
-( key exchange\). The session identifier uniquely identifies this) s
-5 371 M
-( session and is suitable for signing in order to prove ownership of a) s
-5 360 M
-( private key. This protocol also needs to know whether the lower-level) s
-5 349 M
-( protocol provides confidentiality protection.) s
-5 327 M
-(3. Conventions Used in This Document) s
-5 305 M
-( The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",) s
-5 294 M
-( and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as) s
-5 283 M
-( described in [RFC2119]) s
-5 261 M
-( The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture) s
-5 250 M
-( document [SSH-ARCH]) s
-5 228 M
-( The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming) s
-5 217 M
-( conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.) s
-5 195 M
-(3.1 The Authentication Protocol Framework) s
-5 173 M
-( The server drives the authentication by telling the client which) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 3]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( authentication methods can be used to continue the exchange at any) s
-5 679 M
-( given time. The client has the freedom to try the methods listed by) s
-5 668 M
-( the server in any order. This gives the server complete control over) s
-5 657 M
-( the authentication process if desired, but also gives enough) s
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-5 635 M
-( most convenient for the user, when multiple methods are offered by) s
-5 624 M
-( the server.) s
-5 602 M
-( Authentication methods are identified by their name, as defined in) s
-5 591 M
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-5 580 M
-( supported. However, it MAY be sent by the client. The server MUST) s
-5 569 M
-( always reject this request, unless the client is to be allowed in) s
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-( without any authentication, in which case the server MUST accept this) s
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-( request. The main purpose of sending this request is to get the list) s
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-( of supported methods from the server.) s
-5 514 M
-( The server SHOULD have a timeout for authentication, and disconnect) s
-5 503 M
-( if the authentication has not been accepted within the timeout) s
-5 492 M
-( period. The RECOMMENDED timeout period is 10 minutes. Additionally,) s
-5 481 M
-( the implementation SHOULD limit the number of failed authentication) s
-5 470 M
-( attempts a client may perform in a single session \(the RECOMMENDED) s
-5 459 M
-( limit is 20 attempts\). If the threshold is exceeded, the server) s
-5 448 M
-( SHOULD disconnect.) s
-5 426 M
-(3.1.1 Authentication Requests) s
-5 404 M
-( All authentication requests MUST use the following message format.) s
-5 393 M
-( Only the first few fields are defined; the remaining fields depend on) s
-5 382 M
-( the authentication method.) s
-5 360 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 349 M
-( string user name \(in ISO-10646 UTF-8 encoding [RFC2279]\)) s
-5 338 M
-( string service name \(in US-ASCII\)) s
-5 327 M
-( string method name \(US-ASCII\)) s
-5 316 M
-( The rest of the packet is method-specific.) s
-5 294 M
-( The user name and service are repeated in every new authentication) s
-5 283 M
-( attempt, and MAY change. The server implementation MUST carefully) s
-5 272 M
-( check them in every message, and MUST flush any accumulated) s
-5 261 M
-( authentication states if they change. If it is unable to flush some) s
-5 250 M
-( authentication state, it MUST disconnect if the user or service name) s
-5 239 M
-( changes.) s
-5 217 M
-( The service name specifies the service to start after authentication.) s
-5 206 M
-( There may be several different authenticated services provided. If) s
-5 195 M
-( the requested service is not available, the server MAY disconnect) s
-5 184 M
-( immediately or at any later time. Sending a proper disconnect) s
-5 173 M
-( message is RECOMMENDED. In any case, if the service does not exist,) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 4]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( authentication MUST NOT be accepted.) s
-5 668 M
-( If the requested user does not exist, the server MAY disconnect, or) s
-5 657 M
-( MAY send a bogus list of acceptable authentication methods, but never) s
-5 646 M
-( accept any. This makes it possible for the server to avoid) s
-5 635 M
-( disclosing information on which accounts exist. In any case, if the) s
-5 624 M
-( user does not exist, the authentication request MUST NOT be accepted.) s
-5 602 M
-( While there is usually little point for clients to send requests that) s
-5 591 M
-( the server does not list as acceptable, sending such requests is not) s
-5 580 M
-( an error, and the server SHOULD simply reject requests that it does) s
-5 569 M
-( not recognize.) s
-5 547 M
-( An authentication request MAY result in a further exchange of) s
-5 536 M
-( messages. All such messages depend on the authentication method) s
-5 525 M
-( used, and the client MAY at any time continue with a new) s
-5 514 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST message, in which case the server MUST) s
-5 503 M
-( abandon the previous authentication attempt and continue with the new) s
-5 492 M
-( one.) s
-5 470 M
-(3.1.2 Responses to Authentication Requests) s
-5 448 M
-( If the server rejects the authentication request, it MUST respond) s
-5 437 M
-( with the following:) s
-5 415 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE) s
-5 404 M
-( string authentications that can continue) s
-5 393 M
-( boolean partial success) s
-5 371 M
-( "Authentications that can continue" is a comma-separated list of) s
-5 360 M
-( authentication method names that may productively continue the) s
-5 349 M
-( authentication dialog.) s
-5 327 M
-( It is RECOMMENDED that servers only include those methods in the list) s
-5 316 M
-( that are actually useful. However, it is not illegal to include) s
-5 305 M
-( methods that cannot be used to authenticate the user.) s
-5 283 M
-( Already successfully completed authentications SHOULD NOT be included) s
-5 272 M
-( in the list, unless they really should be performed again for some) s
-5 261 M
-( reason.) s
-5 239 M
-( "Partial success" MUST be TRUE if the authentication request to which) s
-5 228 M
-( this is a response was successful. It MUST be FALSE if the request) s
-5 217 M
-( was not successfully processed.) s
-5 195 M
-( When the server accepts authentication, it MUST respond with the) s
-5 184 M
-( following:) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 5]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS) s
-5 668 M
-( Note that this is not sent after each step in a multi-method) s
-5 657 M
-( authentication sequence, but only when the authentication is) s
-5 646 M
-( complete.) s
-5 624 M
-( The client MAY send several authentication requests without waiting) s
-5 613 M
-( for responses from previous requests. The server MUST process each) s
-5 602 M
-( request completely and acknowledge any failed requests with a) s
-5 591 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE message before processing the next request.) s
-5 569 M
-( A request that results in further exchange of messages will be) s
-5 558 M
-( aborted by a second request. It is not possible to send a second) s
-5 547 M
-( request without waiting for a response from the server, if the first) s
-5 536 M
-( request will result in further exchange of messages. No) s
-5 525 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE message will be sent for the aborted method.) s
-5 503 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS MUST be sent only once. When) s
-5 492 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS has been sent, any further authentication) s
-5 481 M
-( requests received after that SHOULD be silently ignored.) s
-5 459 M
-( Any non-authentication messages sent by the client after the request) s
-5 448 M
-( that resulted in SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS being sent MUST be passed) s
-5 437 M
-( to the service being run on top of this protocol. Such messages can) s
-5 426 M
-( be identified by their message numbers \(see Section Message Numbers) s
-5 415 M
-( \(Section 3.2\)\).) s
-5 393 M
-(3.1.3 The "none" Authentication Request) s
-5 371 M
-( A client may request a list of authentication methods that may) s
-5 360 M
-( continue by using the "none" authentication method.) s
-5 338 M
-( If no authentication at all is needed for the user, the server MUST) s
-5 327 M
-( return SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS. Otherwise, the server MUST return) s
-5 316 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE and MAY return with it a list of) s
-5 305 M
-( authentication methods that can continue.) s
-5 283 M
-( This method MUST NOT be listed as supported by the server.) s
-5 261 M
-(3.1.4 Completion of User Authentication) s
-5 239 M
-( Authentication is complete when the server has responded with) s
-5 228 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS; all authentication related messages) s
-5 217 M
-( received after sending this message SHOULD be silently ignored.) s
-5 195 M
-( After sending SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS, the server starts the) s
-5 184 M
-( requested service.) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 6]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(3.1.5 Banner Message) s
-5 668 M
-( In some jurisdictions, sending a warning message before) s
-5 657 M
-( authentication may be relevant for getting legal protection. Many) s
-5 646 M
-( UNIX machines, for example, normally display text from `/etc/issue',) s
-5 635 M
-( or use "tcp wrappers" or similar software to display a banner before) s
-5 624 M
-( issuing a login prompt.) s
-5 602 M
-( The SSH server may send a SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER message at any time) s
-5 591 M
-( before authentication is successful. This message contains text to) s
-5 580 M
-( be displayed to the client user before authentication is attempted.) s
-5 569 M
-( The format is as follows:) s
-5 547 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER) s
-5 536 M
-( string message \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 525 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC3066]\)) s
-5 503 M
-( The client SHOULD by default display the message on the screen.) s
-5 492 M
-( However, since the message is likely to be sent for every login) s
-5 481 M
-( attempt, and since some client software will need to open a separate) s
-5 470 M
-( window for this warning, the client software may allow the user to) s
-5 459 M
-( explicitly disable the display of banners from the server. The) s
-5 448 M
-( message may consist of multiple lines.) s
-5 426 M
-( If the message string is displayed, control character filtering) s
-5 415 M
-( discussed in [SSH-ARCH] SHOULD be used to avoid attacks by sending) s
-5 404 M
-( terminal control characters.) s
-5 382 M
-(3.2 Authentication Protocol Message Numbers) s
-5 360 M
-( All message numbers used by this authentication protocol are in the) s
-5 349 M
-( range from 50 to 79, which is part of the range reserved for) s
-5 338 M
-( protocols running on top of the SSH transport layer protocol.) s
-5 316 M
-( Message numbers of 80 and higher are reserved for protocols running) s
-5 305 M
-( after this authentication protocol, so receiving one of them before) s
-5 294 M
-( authentication is complete is an error, to which the server MUST) s
-5 283 M
-( respond by disconnecting \(preferably with a proper disconnect message) s
-5 272 M
-( sent first to ease troubleshooting\).) s
-5 250 M
-( After successful authentication, such messages are passed to the) s
-5 239 M
-( higher-level service.) s
-5 217 M
-( These are the general authentication message codes:) s
-5 195 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST 50) s
-5 184 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE 51) s
-5 173 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS 52) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 7]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER 53) s
-5 668 M
-( In addition to the above, there is a range of message numbers) s
-5 657 M
-( \(60..79\) reserved for method-specific messages. These messages are) s
-5 646 M
-( only sent by the server \(client sends only SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 635 M
-( messages\). Different authentication methods reuse the same message) s
-5 624 M
-( numbers.) s
-5 602 M
-(3.3 Public Key Authentication Method: publickey) s
-5 580 M
-( The only REQUIRED authentication method is public key authentication.) s
-5 569 M
-( All implementations MUST support this method; however, not all users) s
-5 558 M
-( need to have public keys, and most local policies are not likely to) s
-5 547 M
-( require public key authentication for all users in the near future.) s
-5 525 M
-( With this method, the possession of a private key serves as) s
-5 514 M
-( authentication. This method works by sending a signature created) s
-5 503 M
-( with a private key of the user. The server MUST check that the key) s
-5 492 M
-( is a valid authenticator for the user, and MUST check that the) s
-5 481 M
-( signature is valid. If both hold, the authentication request MUST be) s
-5 470 M
-( accepted; otherwise it MUST be rejected. \(Note that the server MAY) s
-5 459 M
-( require additional authentications after successful authentication.\)) s
-5 437 M
-( Private keys are often stored in an encrypted form at the client) s
-5 426 M
-( host, and the user must supply a passphrase before the signature can) s
-5 415 M
-( be generated. Even if they are not, the signing operation involves) s
-5 404 M
-( some expensive computation. To avoid unnecessary processing and user) s
-5 393 M
-( interaction, the following message is provided for querying whether) s
-5 382 M
-( authentication using the key would be acceptable.) s
-5 360 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 349 M
-( string user name) s
-5 338 M
-( string service) s
-5 327 M
-( string "publickey") s
-5 316 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 305 M
-( string public key algorithm name) s
-5 294 M
-( string public key blob) s
-5 272 M
-( Public key algorithms are defined in the transport layer) s
-5 261 M
-( specification [SSH-TRANS]. The public key blob may contain) s
-5 250 M
-( certificates.) s
-5 228 M
-( Any public key algorithm may be offered for use in authentication.) s
-5 217 M
-( In particular, the list is not constrained by what was negotiated) s
-5 206 M
-( during key exchange. If the server does not support some algorithm,) s
-5 195 M
-( it MUST simply reject the request.) s
-5 173 M
-( The server MUST respond to this message with either) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 8]) s
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-%%BeginPageSetup
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE or with the following:) s
-5 668 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK) s
-5 657 M
-( string public key algorithm name from the request) s
-5 646 M
-( string public key blob from the request) s
-5 624 M
-( To perform actual authentication, the client MAY then send a) s
-5 613 M
-( signature generated using the private key. The client MAY send the) s
-5 602 M
-( signature directly without first verifying whether the key is) s
-5 591 M
-( acceptable. The signature is sent using the following packet:) s
-5 569 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 558 M
-( string user name) s
-5 547 M
-( string service) s
-5 536 M
-( string "publickey") s
-5 525 M
-( boolean TRUE) s
-5 514 M
-( string public key algorithm name) s
-5 503 M
-( string public key to be used for authentication) s
-5 492 M
-( string signature) s
-5 470 M
-( Signature is a signature by the corresponding private key over the) s
-5 459 M
-( following data, in the following order:) s
-5 437 M
-( string session identifier) s
-5 426 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 415 M
-( string user name) s
-5 404 M
-( string service) s
-5 393 M
-( string "publickey") s
-5 382 M
-( boolean TRUE) s
-5 371 M
-( string public key algorithm name) s
-5 360 M
-( string public key to be used for authentication) s
-5 338 M
-( When the server receives this message, it MUST check whether the) s
-5 327 M
-( supplied key is acceptable for authentication, and if so, it MUST) s
-5 316 M
-( check whether the signature is correct.) s
-5 294 M
-( If both checks succeed, this method is successful. Note that the) s
-5 283 M
-( server may require additional authentications. The server MUST) s
-5 272 M
-( respond with SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS \(if no more authentications are) s
-5 261 M
-( needed\), or SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE \(if the request failed, or more) s
-5 250 M
-( authentications are needed\).) s
-5 228 M
-( The following method-specific message numbers are used by the) s
-5 217 M
-( publickey authentication method.) s
-5 195 M
-( /* Key-based */) s
-5 184 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK 60) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 9]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-(3.4 Password Authentication Method: password) s
-5 668 M
-( Password authentication uses the following packets. Note that a) s
-5 657 M
-( server MAY request the user to change the password. All) s
-5 646 M
-( implementations SHOULD support password authentication.) s
-5 624 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 613 M
-( string user name) s
-5 602 M
-( string service) s
-5 591 M
-( string "password") s
-5 580 M
-( boolean FALSE) s
-5 569 M
-( string plaintext password \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 547 M
-( Note that the password is encoded in ISO-10646 UTF-8. It is up to) s
-5 536 M
-( the server how it interprets the password and validates it against) s
-5 525 M
-( the password database. However, if the client reads the password in) s
-5 514 M
-( some other encoding \(e.g., ISO 8859-1 \(ISO Latin1\)\), it MUST convert) s
-5 503 M
-( the password to ISO-10646 UTF-8 before transmitting, and the server) s
-5 492 M
-( MUST convert the password to the encoding used on that system for) s
-5 481 M
-( passwords.) s
-5 459 M
-( Note that even though the cleartext password is transmitted in the) s
-5 448 M
-( packet, the entire packet is encrypted by the transport layer. Both) s
-5 437 M
-( the server and the client should check whether the underlying) s
-5 426 M
-( transport layer provides confidentiality \(i.e., if encryption is) s
-5 415 M
-( being used\). If no confidentiality is provided \(none cipher\),) s
-5 404 M
-( password authentication SHOULD be disabled. If there is no) s
-5 393 M
-( confidentiality or no MAC, password change SHOULD be disabled.) s
-5 371 M
-( Normally, the server responds to this message with success or) s
-5 360 M
-( failure. However, if the password has expired the server SHOULD) s
-5 349 M
-( indicate this by responding with SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ.) s
-5 338 M
-( In anycase the server MUST NOT allow an expired password to be used) s
-5 327 M
-( for authentication.) s
-5 305 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ) s
-5 294 M
-( string prompt \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 283 M
-( string language tag \(as defined in [RFC3066]\)) s
-5 261 M
-( In this case, the client MAY continue with a different authentication) s
-5 250 M
-( method, or request a new password from the user and retry password) s
-5 239 M
-( authentication using the following message. The client MAY also send) s
-5 228 M
-( this message instead of the normal password authentication request) s
-5 217 M
-( without the server asking for it.) s
-5 195 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 184 M
-( string user name) s
-5 173 M
-( string service) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 10]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( string "password") s
-5 679 M
-( boolean TRUE) s
-5 668 M
-( string plaintext old password \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 657 M
-( string plaintext new password \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 635 M
-( The server must reply to request message with) s
-5 624 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS, SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE, or another) s
-5 613 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ. The meaning of these is as) s
-5 602 M
-( follows:) s
-5 580 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS The password has been changed, and) s
-5 569 M
-( authentication has been successfully completed.) s
-5 547 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE with partial success The password has) s
-5 536 M
-( been changed, but more authentications are needed.) s
-5 514 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE without partial success The password has) s
-5 503 M
-( not been changed. Either password changing was not supported, or) s
-5 492 M
-( the old password was bad. Note that if the server has already) s
-5 481 M
-( sent SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ, we know that it supports) s
-5 470 M
-( changing the password.) s
-5 448 M
-( SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_CHANGEREQ The password was not changed because) s
-5 437 M
-( the new password was not acceptable \(e.g. too easy to guess\).) s
-5 415 M
-( The following method-specific message numbers are used by the) s
-5 404 M
-( password authentication method.) s
-5 382 M
-( #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ 60) s
-5 349 M
-(3.5 Host-Based Authentication: hostbased) s
-5 327 M
-( Some sites wish to allow authentication based on the host where the) s
-5 316 M
-( user is coming from, and the user name on the remote host. While) s
-5 305 M
-( this form of authentication is not suitable for high-security sites,) s
-5 294 M
-( it can be very convenient in many environments. This form of) s
-5 283 M
-( authentication is OPTIONAL. When used, special care SHOULD be taken) s
-5 272 M
-( to prevent a regular user from obtaining the private host key.) s
-5 250 M
-( The client requests this form of authentication by sending the) s
-5 239 M
-( following message. It is similar to the UNIX "rhosts" and) s
-5 228 M
-( "hosts.equiv" styles of authentication, except that the identity of) s
-5 217 M
-( the client host is checked more rigorously.) s
-5 195 M
-( This method works by having the client send a signature created with) s
-5 184 M
-( the private key of the client host, which the server checks with that) s
-5 173 M
-( host's public key. Once the client host's identity is established,) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 11]) s
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-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( authorization \(but no further authentication\) is performed based on) s
-5 679 M
-( the user names on the server and the client, and the client host) s
-5 668 M
-( name.) s
-5 646 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 635 M
-( string user name) s
-5 624 M
-( string service) s
-5 613 M
-( string "hostbased") s
-5 602 M
-( string public key algorithm for host key) s
-5 591 M
-( string public host key and certificates for client host) s
-5 580 M
-( string client host name \(FQDN; US-ASCII\)) s
-5 569 M
-( string user name on the client host \(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 558 M
-( string signature) s
-5 536 M
-( Public key algorithm names for use in "public key algorithm for host) s
-5 525 M
-( key" are defined in the transport layer specification. The "public) s
-5 514 M
-( host key for client host" may include certificates.) s
-5 492 M
-( Signature is a signature with the private host key of the following) s
-5 481 M
-( data, in this order:) s
-5 459 M
-( string session identifier) s
-5 448 M
-( byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST) s
-5 437 M
-( string user name) s
-5 426 M
-( string service) s
-5 415 M
-( string "hostbased") s
-5 404 M
-( string public key algorithm for host key) s
-5 393 M
-( string public host key and certificates for client host) s
-5 382 M
-( string client host name \(FQDN; US-ASCII\)) s
-5 371 M
-( string user name on the client host\(ISO-10646 UTF-8\)) s
-5 349 M
-( The server MUST verify that the host key actually belongs to the) s
-5 338 M
-( client host named in the message, that the given user on that host is) s
-5 327 M
-( allowed to log in, and that the signature is a valid signature on the) s
-5 316 M
-( appropriate value by the given host key. The server MAY ignore the) s
-5 305 M
-( client user name, if it wants to authenticate only the client host.) s
-5 283 M
-( It is RECOMMENDED that whenever possible, the server perform) s
-5 272 M
-( additional checks to verify that the network address obtained from) s
-5 261 M
-( the \(untrusted\) network matches the given client host name. This) s
-5 250 M
-( makes exploiting compromised host keys more difficult. Note that) s
-5 239 M
-( this may require special handling for connections coming through a) s
-5 228 M
-( firewall.) s
-5 206 M
-(4. Security Considerations) s
-5 184 M
-( The purpose of this protocol is to perform client user) s
-5 173 M
-( authentication. It assumed that this runs over a secure transport) s
-5 129 M
-(Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 12]) s
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-/fname () def
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-5 723 M
-(Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002) s
-5 690 M
-( layer protocol, which has already authenticated the server machine,) s
-5 679 M
-( established an encrypted communications channel, and computed a) s
-5 668 M
-( unique session identifier for this session. The transport layer) s
-5 657 M
-( provides forward secrecy for password authentication and other) s
-5 646 M
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-5 624 M
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-5 613 M
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-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D) s
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-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D) s
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-( draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 481 M
-( [SSH-USERAUTH]) s
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-( Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D) s
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-( draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.) s
-5 437 M
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-5 371 M
-( Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct) s
-5 360 M
-( 2003.) s
-5 338 M
-( [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate) s
-5 327 M
-( Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.) s
-5 305 M
-(Informative) s
-5 283 M
-( [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of) s
-5 272 M
-( Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.) s
-5 250 M
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-PStoPSxform concat
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-5 690 M
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-5 668 M
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-( SSH Communications Security Corp) s
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-5 690 M
-(Intellectual Property Statement) s
-5 668 M
-( The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any) s
-5 657 M
-( intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to) s
-5 646 M
-( pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in) s
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-( The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in) s
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-5 426 M
-( document. For more information consult the online list of claimed) s
-5 415 M
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-5 382 M
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-5 327 M
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-5 316 M
-( or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published) s
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-( MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.) s
-5 602 M
-(Acknowledgment) s
-5 580 M
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-5 569 M
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-%%EOF
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt b/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9dae578a35..0000000000
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/standard/draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,896 +0,0 @@
-
-
-
-Network Working Group T. Ylonen
-Internet-Draft SSH Communications Security Corp
-Expires: March 2, 2003 D. Moffat, Ed.
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- September 2002
-
-
- SSH Authentication Protocol
- draft-ietf-secsh-userauth-18.txt
-
-Status of this Memo
-
- This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
- all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
-
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
- Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
- groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
-
- Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
- and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
- material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
-
- The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
- www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
-
- The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
- http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
-
- This Internet-Draft will expire on March 2, 2003.
-
-Copyright Notice
-
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
-
-Abstract
-
- SSH is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network
- services over an insecure network. This document describes the SSH
- authentication protocol framework and public key, password, and
- host-based client authentication methods. Additional authentication
- methods are described in separate documents. The SSH authentication
- protocol runs on top of the SSH transport layer protocol and provides
- a single authenticated tunnel for the SSH connection protocol.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 1]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
-Table of Contents
-
- 1. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3. Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3.1 The Authentication Protocol Framework . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 3.1.1 Authentication Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 3.1.2 Responses to Authentication Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- 3.1.3 The "none" Authentication Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.4 Completion of User Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 3.1.5 Banner Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 3.2 Authentication Protocol Message Numbers . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 3.3 Public Key Authentication Method: publickey . . . . . . . . 8
- 3.4 Password Authentication Method: password . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 3.5 Host-Based Authentication: hostbased . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 4. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- Normative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- Informative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 15
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 2]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
-1. Contributors
-
- The major original contributors of this document were: Tatu Ylonen,
- Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen (all of SSH Communications
- Security Corp), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen (University of
- Jyvaskyla)
-
- The document editor is: [email protected]. Comments on this
- internet draft should be sent to the IETF SECSH working group,
- details at: http://ietf.org/html.charters/secsh-charter.html
-
-2. Introduction
-
- The SSH authentication protocol is a general-purpose user
- authentication protocol. It is intended to be run over the SSH
- transport layer protocol [SSH-TRANS]. This protocol assumes that the
- underlying protocols provide integrity and confidentiality
- protection.
-
- This document should be read only after reading the SSH architecture
- document [SSH-ARCH]. This document freely uses terminology and
- notation from the architecture document without reference or further
- explanation.
-
- The service name for this protocol is "ssh-userauth".
-
- When this protocol starts, it receives the session identifier from
- the lower-level protocol (this is the exchange hash H from the first
- key exchange). The session identifier uniquely identifies this
- session and is suitable for signing in order to prove ownership of a
- private key. This protocol also needs to know whether the lower-level
- protocol provides confidentiality protection.
-
-3. Conventions Used in This Document
-
- The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
- and "MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as
- described in [RFC2119]
-
- The used data types and terminology are specified in the architecture
- document [SSH-ARCH]
-
- The architecture document also discusses the algorithm naming
- conventions that MUST be used with the SSH protocols.
-
-3.1 The Authentication Protocol Framework
-
- The server drives the authentication by telling the client which
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 3]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
- authentication methods can be used to continue the exchange at any
- given time. The client has the freedom to try the methods listed by
- the server in any order. This gives the server complete control over
- the authentication process if desired, but also gives enough
- flexibility for the client to use the methods it supports or that are
- most convenient for the user, when multiple methods are offered by
- the server.
-
- Authentication methods are identified by their name, as defined in
- [SSH-ARCH]. The "none" method is reserved, and MUST NOT be listed as
- supported. However, it MAY be sent by the client. The server MUST
- always reject this request, unless the client is to be allowed in
- without any authentication, in which case the server MUST accept this
- request. The main purpose of sending this request is to get the list
- of supported methods from the server.
-
- The server SHOULD have a timeout for authentication, and disconnect
- if the authentication has not been accepted within the timeout
- period. The RECOMMENDED timeout period is 10 minutes. Additionally,
- the implementation SHOULD limit the number of failed authentication
- attempts a client may perform in a single session (the RECOMMENDED
- limit is 20 attempts). If the threshold is exceeded, the server
- SHOULD disconnect.
-
-3.1.1 Authentication Requests
-
- All authentication requests MUST use the following message format.
- Only the first few fields are defined; the remaining fields depend on
- the authentication method.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name (in ISO-10646 UTF-8 encoding [RFC2279])
- string service name (in US-ASCII)
- string method name (US-ASCII)
- The rest of the packet is method-specific.
-
- The user name and service are repeated in every new authentication
- attempt, and MAY change. The server implementation MUST carefully
- check them in every message, and MUST flush any accumulated
- authentication states if they change. If it is unable to flush some
- authentication state, it MUST disconnect if the user or service name
- changes.
-
- The service name specifies the service to start after authentication.
- There may be several different authenticated services provided. If
- the requested service is not available, the server MAY disconnect
- immediately or at any later time. Sending a proper disconnect
- message is RECOMMENDED. In any case, if the service does not exist,
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 4]
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-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
- authentication MUST NOT be accepted.
-
- If the requested user does not exist, the server MAY disconnect, or
- MAY send a bogus list of acceptable authentication methods, but never
- accept any. This makes it possible for the server to avoid
- disclosing information on which accounts exist. In any case, if the
- user does not exist, the authentication request MUST NOT be accepted.
-
- While there is usually little point for clients to send requests that
- the server does not list as acceptable, sending such requests is not
- an error, and the server SHOULD simply reject requests that it does
- not recognize.
-
- An authentication request MAY result in a further exchange of
- messages. All such messages depend on the authentication method
- used, and the client MAY at any time continue with a new
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST message, in which case the server MUST
- abandon the previous authentication attempt and continue with the new
- one.
-
-3.1.2 Responses to Authentication Requests
-
- If the server rejects the authentication request, it MUST respond
- with the following:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE
- string authentications that can continue
- boolean partial success
-
- "Authentications that can continue" is a comma-separated list of
- authentication method names that may productively continue the
- authentication dialog.
-
- It is RECOMMENDED that servers only include those methods in the list
- that are actually useful. However, it is not illegal to include
- methods that cannot be used to authenticate the user.
-
- Already successfully completed authentications SHOULD NOT be included
- in the list, unless they really should be performed again for some
- reason.
-
- "Partial success" MUST be TRUE if the authentication request to which
- this is a response was successful. It MUST be FALSE if the request
- was not successfully processed.
-
- When the server accepts authentication, it MUST respond with the
- following:
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 5]
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-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS
-
- Note that this is not sent after each step in a multi-method
- authentication sequence, but only when the authentication is
- complete.
-
- The client MAY send several authentication requests without waiting
- for responses from previous requests. The server MUST process each
- request completely and acknowledge any failed requests with a
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE message before processing the next request.
-
- A request that results in further exchange of messages will be
- aborted by a second request. It is not possible to send a second
- request without waiting for a response from the server, if the first
- request will result in further exchange of messages. No
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE message will be sent for the aborted method.
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS MUST be sent only once. When
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS has been sent, any further authentication
- requests received after that SHOULD be silently ignored.
-
- Any non-authentication messages sent by the client after the request
- that resulted in SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS being sent MUST be passed
- to the service being run on top of this protocol. Such messages can
- be identified by their message numbers (see Section Message Numbers
- (Section 3.2)).
-
-3.1.3 The "none" Authentication Request
-
- A client may request a list of authentication methods that may
- continue by using the "none" authentication method.
-
- If no authentication at all is needed for the user, the server MUST
- return SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS. Otherwise, the server MUST return
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE and MAY return with it a list of
- authentication methods that can continue.
-
- This method MUST NOT be listed as supported by the server.
-
-3.1.4 Completion of User Authentication
-
- Authentication is complete when the server has responded with
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS; all authentication related messages
- received after sending this message SHOULD be silently ignored.
-
- After sending SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS, the server starts the
- requested service.
-
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 6]
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-
-
-3.1.5 Banner Message
-
- In some jurisdictions, sending a warning message before
- authentication may be relevant for getting legal protection. Many
- UNIX machines, for example, normally display text from `/etc/issue',
- or use "tcp wrappers" or similar software to display a banner before
- issuing a login prompt.
-
- The SSH server may send a SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER message at any time
- before authentication is successful. This message contains text to
- be displayed to the client user before authentication is attempted.
- The format is as follows:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER
- string message (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC3066])
-
- The client SHOULD by default display the message on the screen.
- However, since the message is likely to be sent for every login
- attempt, and since some client software will need to open a separate
- window for this warning, the client software may allow the user to
- explicitly disable the display of banners from the server. The
- message may consist of multiple lines.
-
- If the message string is displayed, control character filtering
- discussed in [SSH-ARCH] SHOULD be used to avoid attacks by sending
- terminal control characters.
-
-3.2 Authentication Protocol Message Numbers
-
- All message numbers used by this authentication protocol are in the
- range from 50 to 79, which is part of the range reserved for
- protocols running on top of the SSH transport layer protocol.
-
- Message numbers of 80 and higher are reserved for protocols running
- after this authentication protocol, so receiving one of them before
- authentication is complete is an error, to which the server MUST
- respond by disconnecting (preferably with a proper disconnect message
- sent first to ease troubleshooting).
-
- After successful authentication, such messages are passed to the
- higher-level service.
-
- These are the general authentication message codes:
-
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST 50
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE 51
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS 52
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 7]
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-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER 53
-
- In addition to the above, there is a range of message numbers
- (60..79) reserved for method-specific messages. These messages are
- only sent by the server (client sends only SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- messages). Different authentication methods reuse the same message
- numbers.
-
-3.3 Public Key Authentication Method: publickey
-
- The only REQUIRED authentication method is public key authentication.
- All implementations MUST support this method; however, not all users
- need to have public keys, and most local policies are not likely to
- require public key authentication for all users in the near future.
-
- With this method, the possession of a private key serves as
- authentication. This method works by sending a signature created
- with a private key of the user. The server MUST check that the key
- is a valid authenticator for the user, and MUST check that the
- signature is valid. If both hold, the authentication request MUST be
- accepted; otherwise it MUST be rejected. (Note that the server MAY
- require additional authentications after successful authentication.)
-
- Private keys are often stored in an encrypted form at the client
- host, and the user must supply a passphrase before the signature can
- be generated. Even if they are not, the signing operation involves
- some expensive computation. To avoid unnecessary processing and user
- interaction, the following message is provided for querying whether
- authentication using the key would be acceptable.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "publickey"
- boolean FALSE
- string public key algorithm name
- string public key blob
-
- Public key algorithms are defined in the transport layer
- specification [SSH-TRANS]. The public key blob may contain
- certificates.
-
- Any public key algorithm may be offered for use in authentication.
- In particular, the list is not constrained by what was negotiated
- during key exchange. If the server does not support some algorithm,
- it MUST simply reject the request.
-
- The server MUST respond to this message with either
-
-
-
-Ylonen & Moffat Expires March 2, 2003 [Page 8]
-
-Internet-Draft SSH Authentication Protocol September 2002
-
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE or with the following:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK
- string public key algorithm name from the request
- string public key blob from the request
-
- To perform actual authentication, the client MAY then send a
- signature generated using the private key. The client MAY send the
- signature directly without first verifying whether the key is
- acceptable. The signature is sent using the following packet:
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "publickey"
- boolean TRUE
- string public key algorithm name
- string public key to be used for authentication
- string signature
-
- Signature is a signature by the corresponding private key over the
- following data, in the following order:
-
- string session identifier
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "publickey"
- boolean TRUE
- string public key algorithm name
- string public key to be used for authentication
-
- When the server receives this message, it MUST check whether the
- supplied key is acceptable for authentication, and if so, it MUST
- check whether the signature is correct.
-
- If both checks succeed, this method is successful. Note that the
- server may require additional authentications. The server MUST
- respond with SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS (if no more authentications are
- needed), or SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE (if the request failed, or more
- authentications are needed).
-
- The following method-specific message numbers are used by the
- publickey authentication method.
-
- /* Key-based */
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK 60
-
-
-
-
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-3.4 Password Authentication Method: password
-
- Password authentication uses the following packets. Note that a
- server MAY request the user to change the password. All
- implementations SHOULD support password authentication.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "password"
- boolean FALSE
- string plaintext password (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
-
- Note that the password is encoded in ISO-10646 UTF-8. It is up to
- the server how it interprets the password and validates it against
- the password database. However, if the client reads the password in
- some other encoding (e.g., ISO 8859-1 (ISO Latin1)), it MUST convert
- the password to ISO-10646 UTF-8 before transmitting, and the server
- MUST convert the password to the encoding used on that system for
- passwords.
-
- Note that even though the cleartext password is transmitted in the
- packet, the entire packet is encrypted by the transport layer. Both
- the server and the client should check whether the underlying
- transport layer provides confidentiality (i.e., if encryption is
- being used). If no confidentiality is provided (none cipher),
- password authentication SHOULD be disabled. If there is no
- confidentiality or no MAC, password change SHOULD be disabled.
-
- Normally, the server responds to this message with success or
- failure. However, if the password has expired the server SHOULD
- indicate this by responding with SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ.
- In anycase the server MUST NOT allow an expired password to be used
- for authentication.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ
- string prompt (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
- string language tag (as defined in [RFC3066])
-
- In this case, the client MAY continue with a different authentication
- method, or request a new password from the user and retry password
- authentication using the following message. The client MAY also send
- this message instead of the normal password authentication request
- without the server asking for it.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
-
-
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- string "password"
- boolean TRUE
- string plaintext old password (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
- string plaintext new password (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
-
- The server must reply to request message with
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS, SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE, or another
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ. The meaning of these is as
- follows:
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS The password has been changed, and
- authentication has been successfully completed.
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE with partial success The password has
- been changed, but more authentications are needed.
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE without partial success The password has
- not been changed. Either password changing was not supported, or
- the old password was bad. Note that if the server has already
- sent SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ, we know that it supports
- changing the password.
-
- SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_CHANGEREQ The password was not changed because
- the new password was not acceptable (e.g. too easy to guess).
-
- The following method-specific message numbers are used by the
- password authentication method.
-
- #define SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ 60
-
-
-3.5 Host-Based Authentication: hostbased
-
- Some sites wish to allow authentication based on the host where the
- user is coming from, and the user name on the remote host. While
- this form of authentication is not suitable for high-security sites,
- it can be very convenient in many environments. This form of
- authentication is OPTIONAL. When used, special care SHOULD be taken
- to prevent a regular user from obtaining the private host key.
-
- The client requests this form of authentication by sending the
- following message. It is similar to the UNIX "rhosts" and
- "hosts.equiv" styles of authentication, except that the identity of
- the client host is checked more rigorously.
-
- This method works by having the client send a signature created with
- the private key of the client host, which the server checks with that
- host's public key. Once the client host's identity is established,
-
-
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- authorization (but no further authentication) is performed based on
- the user names on the server and the client, and the client host
- name.
-
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "hostbased"
- string public key algorithm for host key
- string public host key and certificates for client host
- string client host name (FQDN; US-ASCII)
- string user name on the client host (ISO-10646 UTF-8)
- string signature
-
- Public key algorithm names for use in "public key algorithm for host
- key" are defined in the transport layer specification. The "public
- host key for client host" may include certificates.
-
- Signature is a signature with the private host key of the following
- data, in this order:
-
- string session identifier
- byte SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST
- string user name
- string service
- string "hostbased"
- string public key algorithm for host key
- string public host key and certificates for client host
- string client host name (FQDN; US-ASCII)
- string user name on the client host(ISO-10646 UTF-8)
-
- The server MUST verify that the host key actually belongs to the
- client host named in the message, that the given user on that host is
- allowed to log in, and that the signature is a valid signature on the
- appropriate value by the given host key. The server MAY ignore the
- client user name, if it wants to authenticate only the client host.
-
- It is RECOMMENDED that whenever possible, the server perform
- additional checks to verify that the network address obtained from
- the (untrusted) network matches the given client host name. This
- makes exploiting compromised host keys more difficult. Note that
- this may require special handling for connections coming through a
- firewall.
-
-4. Security Considerations
-
- The purpose of this protocol is to perform client user
- authentication. It assumed that this runs over a secure transport
-
-
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- layer protocol, which has already authenticated the server machine,
- established an encrypted communications channel, and computed a
- unique session identifier for this session. The transport layer
- provides forward secrecy for password authentication and other
- methods that rely on secret data.
-
- Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in
- Section 8 of [SSH-ARCH]
-
-Normative
-
- [SSH-ARCH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Protocol Architecture", I-D
- draft-ietf-architecture-15.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-TRANS]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Transport Layer Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-transport-17.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-USERAUTH]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Authentication Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-userauth-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-CONNECT]
- Ylonen, T., "SSH Connection Protocol", I-D
- draft-ietf-connect-18.txt, Oct 2003.
-
- [SSH-NUMBERS]
- Lehtinen, S. and D. Moffat, "SSH Protocol Assigned
- Numbers", I-D draft-ietf-secsh-assignednumbers-05.txt, Oct
- 2003.
-
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
- Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
-
-Informative
-
- [RFC3066] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of
- Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001.
-
- [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
- 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.
-
-
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-Authors' Addresses
-
- Tatu Ylonen
- SSH Communications Security Corp
- Fredrikinkatu 42
- HELSINKI FIN-00100
- Finland
-
-
-
- Darren J. Moffat (editor)
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- 17 Network Circle
- Menlo Park 95025
- USA
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-Intellectual Property Statement
-
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
- pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
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- This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
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