Posted on September 11, 2023 by nexonhost
How To Setup Passwordless SSH Login.
In this tutorial, we will show you how to setup an SSH key-based authentication as well how to connect to your Linux server without entering a password.
Setup SSH Passwordless Login
To set up a passwordless SSH login in Linux all you need to do is to generate a public authentication key and append it to the remote hosts ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file.
The following steps will describe the process for configuring passwordless SSH login:
Check for existing SSH key pair.
Before generating a new SSH key pair first check if you already have an SSH key on your client machine because you don’t want to overwrite your existing keys.
Run the following ls command to see if existing SSH keys are present:
ls -al ~/.ssh/id_*.pub
If there are existing keys, you can either use those and skip the next step or backup up the old keys and generate a new one.
If you see No such file or directory or no matches found it means that you do not have an SSH key and you can proceed with the next step and generate a new one.
Generate a new SSH key pair.
The following command will generate a new 4096 bits SSH key pair with your email address as a comment:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "your_email@domain.com"
Press Enter to accept the default file location and file name:
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/yourusername/.ssh/id_rsa):
Next, the ssh-keygen tool will ask you to type a secure passphrase. Whether you want to use passphrase it’s up to you, if you choose to use passphrase you will get an extra layer of security. In most cases, developers and system administrators use SSH without a passphrase because they are useful for fully automated processes. If you don’t want to use a passphrase just press Enter.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
To be sure that the SSH keys are generated you can list your new private and public keys with:
ls ~/.ssh/id_*
/home/yourusername/.ssh/id_rsa /home/yourusername/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
the public key
Now that you have generated an SSH key pair, in order to be able to login to your server without a password you need to the public key to the server you want to manage.
The easiest way to your public key to your server is to use a command called ssh–id. On your local machine terminal type:
ssh--id remote_username@server_ip_address
You will be prompted to enter the remote_username password:
remote_username@server_ip_address's password:
Once the user is authenticated, the public key will be appended to the remote user authorized_keys file and connection will be closed.
If by some reason the ssh–id utility is not available on your local computer you can use the following command to the public key:
cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh remote_username@server_ip_address "mkdir -p ~/.ssh && chmod 700 ~/.ssh && cat >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys && chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys"
Login to your server using SSH keys
After completing the steps above you should be able log in to the remote server without being prompted for a password.
To test it just try to login to your server via SSH:
ssh remote_username@server_ip_address
If everything went well, you will be logged in immediately.
Disabling SSH Password Authentication
To add an extra layer of security to your server you can disable the password authentication for SSH.
Before disabling the SSH password authentication make sure you can log in to your server without a password and the user you are logging in with has sudo privileges.
Log into your remote server with SSH keys, either as a user with sudo privileges or root:
ssh sudo_user@server_ip_address
Open the SSH configuration file /etc/ssh/sshd_config, search for the following directives and modify as it follows:
PasswordAuthentication no ChallengeResponseAuthentication no UsePAM no
Once you are done save the file and restart the SSH service.
On Ubuntu or Debian servers, run the following command:
sudo systemctl restart ssh
On CentOS or Fedora servers, run the following command:
sudo systemctl restart sshd
Conclusion
In this tutorial you have learned how to set up an SSH key-based authentication, allowing you to login to your remote server without providing a user password. You can add the same key to multiple remote serves.