Beware of creating $HOME/.ssh folder by hand, when SELinux is turned on

 

TL;DR

I was experimenting with chef to manage our Linux boxes. As a standard practice, our application user deployer is homed in /applications/deployer rather than the usual /home/deployer.

To enable password less login, I appended my public key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys

 ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa deployer@remote.server

The first time I run this command, I will be prompted for a password to install my key. After this, I can run the below command to login without a password:

ssh -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa deployer@remote.server

However, that did not work as expected.

For some reason, sshd was unable to read the authorized_keys file. I checked all the usual things.. all looked fine. Everything seem to work just fine when SELinux was running in permissive mode on the remote server, but not when it was in enforcing mode.

Discovered that if .ssh folder was created by hand (or even the folder containing .ssh folder), we need to do few additional things.

Step 1:

Open this file /etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/files/file_contexts.homedirs and append the following line to the bottom

 /applications/deployer/[^/]*/\.ssh(/.*)?     system_u:object_r:ssh_home_t:s0

Note: remember to adjust the path as per your needs.

Step 2: run the following command

restorecon -R -v /applications/deployer/.ssh

Again, remember to adjust the path as per your needs.

Now you are all set!

 ssh -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa deployer@remote.server

should log you in without asking for a password!


Shireesh Jayashetty photo Shireesh Jayashetty
Shireesh heads technology at eLitmus. He is generally curious about things, especially technology. His curiosity almost cost him his first job when he hacked into a customer's system to gain unauthorized internet access (mid '90s). He was lucky, his employer saw this as a potential rather than a threat.