SSH, The Secure Shell
A comprehensive study of what is now a key part of many network systems, SSH, The Secure Shell is a valuable resource for system administrators and users. Its explanations are clear and thorough: I'm not sure about the "definitive" claim, but Barrett and Silverman do go into considerable detail, often to the limits of "if you want to play with this you really ought to look at the source code." Perhaps most importantly, The Secure Shell is organised so one can easily skip unwanted detail and find just those portions that are relevant. As a result, it can be used in different ways -- read through to learn about ssh and what it can be used for, or just consulted as necessary to answer particular questions or solve particular problems.
Chapter one puts ssh in context, looking at its history and related technologies, and chapter two introduces basic client operation. Anyone who uses ssh and scp as simple telnet and ftp replacements and isn't curious about how they work can stop reading here -- and doesn't really need their own copy of The Secure Shell. Chapter three is an "under the covers" look at ssh. After a three-page introduction to cryptography (not really suitable for the reader with absolutely no background), it explains the ssh1 protocol and then how ssh2 differs from that and the extra features it offers. There is also a brief overview of the cryptographic algorithms commonly used in ssh implementations, and an explanation what ssh secures and what it doesn't.
The rest of the book is more implementation-specific: the primary implementations covered are SSH, SSH2, and OpenSSH. Being a lazy user of packages, I skipped chapter four, on installation and compile-time configuration. Chapter five is a guide to server configuration, working systematically through the sshd configuration file options.
The next four chapters are aimed at power users, covering client use in much greater depth. Chapter six explains key management: what identities are, how to create them, how to manage them with ssh agents, and how they can be used (to automate logons, most obviously, but fancy things can be done with multiple identities). Chapter seven goes through client configuration in detail, working through the configuration file options, chapter eight covers account configuration on the server-side (including forced commands), and chapter nine looks at port and X11 forwarding.
For those overwhelmed by all of this, chapter ten describes a sample "recommended setup" for everything from compilation to client configuration. Chapter eleven covers some special topics -- unattended SSH, FTP forwarding, mail over SSH, Kerberos, using SSH through a gateway host -- and chapter twelve is a troubleshooting FAQ.
Chapter thirteen is an overview of other implementations, with a table of products, and four short chapters then cover specific Windows and Mac clients. Of the three Windows clients covered here, two are proprietary and the third is only distributed as a bzipped tar file: it would have been good to have a chapter on one of the free and more user-friendly Windows clients, perhaps PuTTY or TTSSH, both of which get a "recommended" tag in the table of products.
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man ssh
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
A snail for my O'Reilly zoo! Lets hope he can get along with all the other animals... or maybe he'll get eaten. Ah, who knows!
The speed of time is one second per second.
Ah, but does the book talk about my favorite SSH client, Top Gun ssh for PalmOS? It lets me configure a UNIX server from a palm-enabled cell phone while lying on the beach!
Admittedly using vi with Graffiti is a bit of a challenge...
"To be absolutely certain about something, one must know everything or nothing about it." -- Olin Miller
take your happy polite optimism somewhere else, thanks!
8)
"tr" - the definitive guide
The ifconfig bible
/etc/aliases in a nutshell
The System Administrator's guide to "ls"
find - the command that finds things
Plus, for Windows users:
Notepad for power-users
The DOS "cd" command - navigating directories from the command line
format - making unformatted discs usable for the storage of files.
Start->Shut Down - Switching off your computer for dummies.