doc/pages/01.administrate/04.learn/04.commandline/01.ssh/ssh.de.md

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Was ist SSH?

SSH steht für Secure Shell, und bezeichnet ein Protokoll, dass es einem erlaubt über ein entferntes System auf die Kommandozeile (Command Line Interface, CLI) zuzugreifen. SSH ist standardmäßig auf jedem Terminal auf GNU/Linux oder macOS verfügbar. Für Windows ist Drittsoftware nötig, z.B. MobaXterm (Klicke nach dem Start auf Session und dann SSH).

Während der YunoHost Installation

Finde deine IP

Solltest du auf einem VPS installieren, dann hat der VPS Provider die IP-Adresse, die du bei ihm erfragen solltest.

Wenn du Zuhause installierst (z.B. auf einem Raspberry Pi oder OLinuXino), dann musst du herausfinden, welche IP-Adresse dein Router dem System zugewiesen hat. Hierfür existieren mehrere Wege:

  • Öffne ein Terminal und tippe sudo arp-scan --local ein, um eine Liste der aktiven IP-Adressen deines lokalen Netzwerks anzuzeigen;
  • wenn dir der arp-scan eine zu unübersichtliche Zahl an Adressen anzeigt, versuche mit nmap -p 22 192.168.**x**.0/24 nur die anzuzeigen, deren SSH-Port 22 offen ist. (passe das x deinem Netzwerk an);
  • Prüfe die angezeigten Geräte in der Benutzeroberfläche deines Routers, ob du das Gerät findest;
  • Schließe einen Bildschirm und Tastatur an deinen Server, logge dich ein und tippe hostname --all-ip-address.

Connect

Assuming your IP address is 111.222.333.444, open a terminal and enter :

ssh root@111.222.333.444

A password will be asked. If this is a VPS, your VPS provided should have communicated you the password. If you used a pre-installed image (for x86 computer or ARM board), the password should be yunohost.

Since YunoHost 3.4, after running the postinstallation, you won't be able to login as `root` anymore. Instead, **you should login using the `admin` user !** In the event that the LDAP server is broken and the `admin` user is unusable, you may still however still be able to login using `root` from the local network.

Change the password!

After logging in for the first time, you should change the root password. The server might automatically ask you to do so. If not, use the command passwd. It is important to choose a reasonably strong password. Note that the root password will be overriden by the admin password when you perform the postinstallation.

Let's configure !

We're now ready to begin the post-installation.

After installing YunoHost

If you installed your server at home and are attempting to connect from outside your local network, make sure port 22 is correctly forwarded to your server. (Reminder : since YunoHost 3.4 you should connect using the admin user !)

If you only know the IP address of your server :

ssh admin@111.222.333.444

Then, you need to enter your administrator password created at post-installation step.

If you configured your DNS (or tweaked your /etc/hosts), you can simply use your domain name :

ssh admin@your.domain.tld

If you changed the SSH port, you need to add -p <portnumber> to the command, e.g. :

ssh -p 2244 admin@your.domain.tld
If you are connected as `admin` and would like to become `root` for more comfort (e.g. to avoid typing `sudo` in front of every command), you can become `root` using the command `sudo su`.

Which users?

By default, only the admin user can log in to YunoHost SSH server.

YunoHost's users created via the administration interface are managed by the LDAP directory. By default, they can't connect via SSH for security reasons. If you want some users to have SSH access enabled, use the command:

yunohost user ssh allow <username>

It is also possible to remove SSH access using the following:

yunohost user ssh disallow <username>

Finally, it is possible to add, delete and list SSH keys, to improve SSH access security, using the commands:

yunohost user ssh add-key <username> <key>
yunohost user ssh remove-key <username> <key>
yunohost user ssh list-keys <username>

Security and SSH

N.B. : fail2ban will ban your IP for 10 mimutes if you perform 5 failed login attempts. If you need to unban the IP, have a look at the page about Fail2Ban

A more extensive discussion about security & SSH can be found on the dedicated page.