Hello Ted,

Your mail is very informative to me.
I wonder how to define cmd to run automatically in authorized_hosts?
I thought there's nothing but pub keys in authorized_hosts file.

And, do I need ssh-agent in this case? Do I need to leave passphrase
blank?

Thank you for your patience and kindness.

> On Wed, Jan 02, 2002 at 03:15:20PM +0800, Patrick Hsieh wrote:
> > I've read some doc. using ssh-keygen to generate key pairs, appending
> > the public keys to ~/.ssh/authorized_hosts on another host to prevent
> > ssh authentication prompt. Is it very risky? Chances are a cracker could
> > compromise one machine and ssh login others without  any authentication.
> 
> use ssh-keygen to generate a new key for *every* machine, and *every*
> application you want to use.  In the authorized_hosts section, you limit
> what a single key can do by specifying a cmd that is run automatically...
> in other words, use of the key executes only the command you want, and not
> simply a shell.
> 
> That does not limit an attacker from exploiting whatever the passwordless
> identity cmds you've setup, but they can't run rampant w/ root over an
> entire machine.
> 
> -- 
> Ted Deppner
> http://www.psyber.com/~ted/
> 
> 
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-- 
Patrick Hsieh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

GPG public key http://pahud.net/pubkeys/pahudatpahud.gpg


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