2b56215488
OpenSSH 8.3 was released on 2020-05-27. It is available from the mirrors listed at https://www.openssh.com/. OpenSSH is a 100% complete SSH protocol 2.0 implementation and includes sftp client and server support. Once again, we would like to thank the OpenSSH community for their continued support of the project, especially those who contributed code or patches, reported bugs, tested snapshots or donated to the project. More information on donations may be found at: https://www.openssh.com/donations.html Future deprecation notice ========================= It is now possible[1] to perform chosen-prefix attacks against the SHA-1 algorithm for less than USD$50K. For this reason, we will be disabling the "ssh-rsa" public key signature algorithm by default in a near-future release. This algorithm is unfortunately still used widely despite the existence of better alternatives, being the only remaining public key signature algorithm specified by the original SSH RFCs. The better alternatives include: * The RFC8332 RSA SHA-2 signature algorithms rsa-sha2-256/512. These algorithms have the advantage of using the same key type as "ssh-rsa" but use the safe SHA-2 hash algorithms. These have been supported since OpenSSH 7.2 and are already used by default if the client and server support them. * The ssh-ed25519 signature algorithm. It has been supported in OpenSSH since release 6.5. * The RFC5656 ECDSA algorithms: ecdsa-sha2-nistp256/384/521. These have been supported by OpenSSH since release 5.7. To check whether a server is using the weak ssh-rsa public key algorithm, for host authentication, try to connect to it after removing the ssh-rsa algorithm from ssh(1)'s allowed list: ssh -oHostKeyAlgorithms=-ssh-rsa user@host If the host key verification fails and no other supported host key types are available, the server software on that host should be upgraded. A future release of OpenSSH will enable UpdateHostKeys by default to allow the client to automatically migrate to better algorithms. Users may consider enabling this option manually. Vendors of devices that implement the SSH protocol should ensure that they support the new signature algorithms for RSA keys. [1] "SHA-1 is a Shambles: First Chosen-Prefix Collision on SHA-1 and Application to the PGP Web of Trust" Leurent, G and Peyrin, T (2020) https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/014.pdf Security ======== * scp(1): when receiving files, scp(1) could be become desynchronised if a utimes(2) system call failed. This could allow file contents to be interpreted as file metadata and thereby permit an adversary to craft a file system that, when copied with scp(1) in a configuration that caused utimes(2) to fail (e.g. under a SELinux policy or syscall sandbox), transferred different file names and contents to the actual file system layout. Exploitation of this is not likely as utimes(2) does not fail under normal circumstances. Successful exploitation is not silent - the output of scp(1) would show transfer errors followed by the actual file(s) that were received. Finally, filenames returned from the peer are (since openssh-8.0) matched against the user's requested destination, thereby disallowing a successful exploit from writing files outside the user's selected target glob (or directory, in the case of a recursive transfer). This ensures that this attack can achieve no more than a hostile peer is already able to achieve within the scp protocol. Potentially-incompatible changes ================================ This release includes a number of changes that may affect existing configurations: * sftp(1): reject an argument of "-1" in the same way as ssh(1) and scp(1) do instead of accepting and silently ignoring it. Changes since OpenSSH 8.2 ========================= The focus of this release is bug fixing. New Features ------------ * sshd(8): make IgnoreRhosts a tri-state option: "yes" to ignore rhosts/shosts, "no" allow rhosts/shosts or (new) "shosts-only" to allow .shosts files but not .rhosts. * sshd(8): allow the IgnoreRhosts directive to appear anywhere in a sshd_config, not just before any Match blocks; bz3148 * ssh(1): add %TOKEN percent expansion for the LocalFoward and RemoteForward keywords when used for Unix domain socket forwarding. bz#3014 * all: allow loading public keys from the unencrypted envelope of a private key file if no corresponding public key file is present. * ssh(1), sshd(8): prefer to use chacha20 from libcrypto where possible instead of the (slower) portable C implementation included in OpenSSH. * ssh-keygen(1): add ability to dump the contents of a binary key revocation list via "ssh-keygen -lQf /path" bz#3132 Bugfixes -------- * ssh(1): fix IdentitiesOnly=yes to also apply to keys loaded from a PKCS11Provider; bz#3141 * ssh-keygen(1): avoid NULL dereference when trying to convert an invalid RFC4716 private key. * scp(1): when performing remote-to-remote copies using "scp -3", start the second ssh(1) channel with BatchMode=yes enabled to avoid confusing and non-deterministic ordering of prompts. * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1): when signing a challenge using a FIDO token, perform hashing of the message to be signed in the middleware layer rather than in OpenSSH code. This permits the use of security key middlewares that perform the hashing implicitly, such as Windows Hello. * ssh(1): fix incorrect error message for "too many known hosts files." bz#3149 * ssh(1): make failures when establishing "Tunnel" forwarding terminate the connection when ExitOnForwardFailure is enabled; bz#3116 * ssh-keygen(1): fix printing of fingerprints on private keys and add a regression test for same. * sshd(8): document order of checking AuthorizedKeysFile (first) and AuthorizedKeysCommand (subsequently, if the file doesn't match); bz#3134 * sshd(8): document that /etc/hosts.equiv and /etc/shosts.equiv are not considered for HostbasedAuthentication when the target user is root; bz#3148 * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1): fix NULL dereference in private certificate key parsing (oss-fuzz #20074). * ssh(1), sshd(8): more consistency between sets of %TOKENS are accepted in various configuration options. * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1): improve error messages for some common PKCS#11 C_Login failure cases; bz#3130 * ssh(1), sshd(8): make error messages for problems during SSH banner exchange consistent with other SSH transport-layer error messages and ensure they include the relevant IP addresses bz#3129 * various: fix a number of spelling errors in comments and debug/error messages * ssh-keygen(1), ssh-add(1): when downloading FIDO2 resident keys from a token, don't prompt for a PIN until the token has told us that it needs one. Avoids double-prompting on devices that implement on-device authentication. * sshd(8), ssh-keygen(1): no-touch-required FIDO certificate option should be an extension, not a critical option. * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1), ssh-add(1): offer a better error message when trying to use a FIDO key function and SecurityKeyProvider is empty. * ssh-add(1), ssh-agent(8): ensure that a key lifetime fits within the values allowed by the wire format (u32). Prevents integer wraparound of the timeout values. bz#3119 * ssh(1): detect and prevent trivial configuration loops when using ProxyJump. bz#3057. Portability ----------- * Detect systems where signals flagged with SA_RESTART will interrupt select(2). POSIX permits implementations to choose whether select(2) will return when interrupted with a SA_RESTART-flagged signal, but OpenSSH requires interrupting behaviour. * Several compilation fixes for HP/UX and AIX. * On platforms that do not support setting process-wide routing domains (all excepting OpenBSD at present), fail to accept a configuration attempts to set one at process start time rather than fatally erroring at run time. bz#3126 * Improve detection of egrep (used in regression tests) on platforms that offer a poor default one (e.g. Solaris). * A number of shell portability fixes for the regression tests. * Fix theoretical infinite loop in the glob(3) replacement implementation. * Fix seccomp sandbox compilation problems for some Linux configurations bz#3085 * Improved detection of libfido2 and some compilation fixes for some configurations when --with-security-key-builtin is selected. OpenSSH 8.2 was released on 2020-02-14. It is available from the mirrors listed at https://www.openssh.com/. OpenSSH is a 100% complete SSH protocol 2.0 implementation and includes sftp client and server support. Once again, we would like to thank the OpenSSH community for their continued support of the project, especially those who contributed code or patches, reported bugs, tested snapshots or donated to the project. More information on donations may be found at: https://www.openssh.com/donations.html Future deprecation notice ========================= It is now possible[1] to perform chosen-prefix attacks against the SHA-1 hash algorithm for less than USD$50K. For this reason, we will be disabling the "ssh-rsa" public key signature algorithm that depends on SHA-1 by default in a near-future release. This algorithm is unfortunately still used widely despite the existence of better alternatives, being the only remaining public key signature algorithm specified by the original SSH RFCs. The better alternatives include: * The RFC8332 RSA SHA-2 signature algorithms rsa-sha2-256/512. These algorithms have the advantage of using the same key type as "ssh-rsa" but use the safe SHA-2 hash algorithms. These have been supported since OpenSSH 7.2 and are already used by default if the client and server support them. * The ssh-ed25519 signature algorithm. It has been supported in OpenSSH since release 6.5. * The RFC5656 ECDSA algorithms: ecdsa-sha2-nistp256/384/521. These have been supported by OpenSSH since release 5.7. To check whether a server is using the weak ssh-rsa public key algorithm for host authentication, try to connect to it after removing the ssh-rsa algorithm from ssh(1)'s allowed list: ssh -oHostKeyAlgorithms=-ssh-rsa user@host If the host key verification fails and no other supported host key types are available, the server software on that host should be upgraded. A future release of OpenSSH will enable UpdateHostKeys by default to allow the client to automatically migrate to better algorithms. Users may consider enabling this option manually. [1] "SHA-1 is a Shambles: First Chosen-Prefix Collision on SHA-1 and Application to the PGP Web of Trust" Leurent, G and Peyrin, T (2020) https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/014.pdf Security ======== * ssh(1), sshd(8), ssh-keygen(1): this release removes the "ssh-rsa" (RSA/SHA1) algorithm from those accepted for certificate signatures (i.e. the client and server CASignatureAlgorithms option) and will use the rsa-sha2-512 signature algorithm by default when the ssh-keygen(1) CA signs new certificates. Certificates are at special risk to the aforementioned SHA1 collision vulnerability as an attacker has effectively unlimited time in which to craft a collision that yields them a valid certificate, far more than the relatively brief LoginGraceTime window that they have to forge a host key signature. The OpenSSH certificate format includes a CA-specified (typically random) nonce value near the start of the certificate that should make exploitation of chosen-prefix collisions in this context challenging, as the attacker does not have full control over the prefix that actually gets signed. Nonetheless, SHA1 is now a demonstrably broken algorithm and futher improvements in attacks are highly likely. OpenSSH releases prior to 7.2 do not support the newer RSA/SHA2 algorithms and will refuse to accept certificates signed by an OpenSSH 8.2+ CA using RSA keys unless the unsafe algorithm is explicitly selected during signing ("ssh-keygen -t ssh-rsa"). Older clients/servers may use another CA key type such as ssh-ed25519 (supported since OpenSSH 6.5) or one of the ecdsa-sha2-nistp256/384/521 types (supported since OpenSSH 5.7) instead if they cannot be upgraded. Potentially-incompatible changes ================================ This release includes a number of changes that may affect existing configurations: * ssh(1), sshd(8): the above removal of "ssh-rsa" from the accepted CASignatureAlgorithms list. * ssh(1), sshd(8): this release removes diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 from the default key exchange proposal for both the client and server. * ssh-keygen(1): the command-line options related to the generation and screening of safe prime numbers used by the diffie-hellman-group-exchange-* key exchange algorithms have changed. Most options have been folded under the -O flag. * sshd(8): the sshd listener process title visible to ps(1) has changed to include information about the number of connections that are currently attempting authentication and the limits configured by MaxStartups. * ssh-sk-helper(8): this is a new binary. It is used by the FIDO/U2F support to provide address-space isolation for token middleware libraries (including the internal one). It needs to be installed in the expected path, typically under /usr/libexec or similar. Changes since OpenSSH 8.1 ========================= This release contains some significant new features. FIDO/U2F Support ---------------- This release adds support for FIDO/U2F hardware authenticators to OpenSSH. U2F/FIDO are open standards for inexpensive two-factor authentication hardware that are widely used for website authentication. In OpenSSH FIDO devices are supported by new public key types "ecdsa-sk" and "ed25519-sk", along with corresponding certificate types. ssh-keygen(1) may be used to generate a FIDO token-backed key, after which they may be used much like any other key type supported by OpenSSH, so long as the hardware token is attached when the keys are used. FIDO tokens also generally require the user explicitly authorise operations by touching or tapping them. Generating a FIDO key requires the token be attached, and will usually require the user tap the token to confirm the operation: $ ssh-keygen -t ecdsa-sk -f ~/.ssh/id_ecdsa_sk Generating public/private ecdsa-sk key pair. You may need to touch your security key to authorize key generation. Enter file in which to save the key (/home/djm/.ssh/id_ecdsa_sk): Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again: Your identification has been saved in /home/djm/.ssh/id_ecdsa_sk Your public key has been saved in /home/djm/.ssh/id_ecdsa_sk.pub This will yield a public and private key-pair. The private key file should be useless to an attacker who does not have access to the physical token. After generation, this key may be used like any other supported key in OpenSSH and may be listed in authorized_keys, added to ssh-agent(1), etc. The only additional stipulation is that the FIDO token that the key belongs to must be attached when the key is used. FIDO tokens are most commonly connected via USB but may be attached via other means such as Bluetooth or NFC. In OpenSSH, communication with the token is managed via a middleware library, specified by the SecurityKeyProvider directive in ssh/sshd_config(5) or the $SSH_SK_PROVIDER environment variable for ssh-keygen(1) and ssh-add(1). The API for this middleware is documented in the sk-api.h and PROTOCOL.u2f files in the source distribution. OpenSSH includes a middleware ("SecurityKeyProvider=internal") with support for USB tokens. It is automatically enabled in OpenBSD and may be enabled in portable OpenSSH via the configure flag --with-security-key-builtin. If the internal middleware is enabled then it is automatically used by default. This internal middleware requires that libfido2 (https://github.com/Yubico/libfido2) and its dependencies be installed. We recommend that packagers of portable OpenSSH enable the built-in middleware, as it provides the lowest-friction experience for users. Note: FIDO/U2F tokens are required to implement the ECDSA-P256 "ecdsa-sk" key type, but hardware support for Ed25519 "ed25519-sk" is less common. Similarly, not all hardware tokens support some of the optional features such as resident keys. The protocol-level changes to support FIDO/U2F keys in SSH are documented in the PROTOCOL.u2f file in the OpenSSH source distribution. There are a number of supporting changes to this feature: * ssh-keygen(1): add a "no-touch-required" option when generating FIDO-hosted keys, that disables their default behaviour of requiring a physical touch/tap on the token during authentication. Note: not all tokens support disabling the touch requirement. * sshd(8): add a sshd_config PubkeyAuthOptions directive that collects miscellaneous public key authentication-related options for sshd(8). At present it supports only a single option "no-touch-required". This causes sshd to skip its default check for FIDO/U2F keys that the signature was authorised by a touch or press event on the token hardware. * ssh(1), sshd(8), ssh-keygen(1): add a "no-touch-required" option for authorized_keys and a similar extension for certificates. This option disables the default requirement that FIDO key signatures attest that the user touched their key to authorize them, mirroring the similar PubkeyAuthOptions sshd_config option. * ssh-keygen(1): add support for the writing the FIDO attestation information that is returned when new keys are generated via the "-O write-attestation=/path" option. FIDO attestation certificates may be used to verify that a FIDO key is hosted in trusted hardware. OpenSSH does not currently make use of this information, beyond optionally writing it to disk. FIDO2 resident keys ------------------- FIDO/U2F OpenSSH keys consist of two parts: a "key handle" part stored in the private key file on disk, and a per-device private key that is unique to each FIDO/U2F token and that cannot be exported from the token hardware. These are combined by the hardware at authentication time to derive the real key that is used to sign authentication challenges. For tokens that are required to move between computers, it can be cumbersome to have to move the private key file first. To avoid this requirement, tokens implementing the newer FIDO2 standard support "resident keys", where it is possible to effectively retrieve the key handle part of the key from the hardware. OpenSSH supports this feature, allowing resident keys to be generated using the ssh-keygen(1) "-O resident" flag. This will produce a public/private key pair as usual, but it will be possible to retrieve the private key part from the token later. This may be done using "ssh-keygen -K", which will download all available resident keys from the tokens attached to the host and write public/private key files for them. It is also possible to download and add resident keys directly to ssh-agent(1) without writing files to the file-system using "ssh-add -K". Resident keys are indexed on the token by the application string and user ID. By default, OpenSSH uses an application string of "ssh:" and an empty user ID. If multiple resident keys on a single token are desired then it may be necessary to override one or both of these defaults using the ssh-keygen(1) "-O application=" or "-O user=" options. Note: OpenSSH will only download and use resident keys whose application string begins with "ssh:" Storing both parts of a key on a FIDO token increases the likelihood of an attacker being able to use a stolen token device. For this reason, tokens should enforce PIN authentication before allowing download of keys, and users should set a PIN on their tokens before creating any resident keys. Other New Features ------------------ * sshd(8): add an Include sshd_config keyword that allows including additional configuration files via glob(3) patterns. bz2468 * ssh(1)/sshd(8): make the LE (low effort) DSCP code point available via the IPQoS directive; bz2986, * ssh(1): when AddKeysToAgent=yes is set and the key contains no comment, add the key to the agent with the key's path as the comment. bz2564 * ssh-keygen(1), ssh-agent(1): expose PKCS#11 key labels and X.509 subjects as key comments, rather than simply listing the PKCS#11 provider library path. PR138 * ssh-keygen(1): allow PEM export of DSA and ECDSA keys; bz3091 * ssh(1), sshd(8): make zlib compile-time optional, available via the Makefile.inc ZLIB flag on OpenBSD or via the --with-zlib configure option for OpenSSH portable. * sshd(8): when clients get denied by MaxStartups, send a notification prior to the SSH2 protocol banner according to RFC4253 section 4.2. * ssh(1), ssh-agent(1): when invoking the $SSH_ASKPASS prompt program, pass a hint to the program to describe the type of desired prompt. The possible values are "confirm" (indicating that a yes/no confirmation dialog with no text entry should be shown), "none" (to indicate an informational message only), or blank for the original ssh-askpass behaviour of requesting a password/phrase. * ssh(1): allow forwarding a different agent socket to the path specified by $SSH_AUTH_SOCK, by extending the existing ForwardAgent option to accepting an explicit path or the name of an environment variable in addition to yes/no. * ssh-keygen(1): add a new signature operations "find-principals" to look up the principal associated with a signature from an allowed- signers file. * sshd(8): expose the number of currently-authenticating connections along with the MaxStartups limit in the process title visible to "ps". Bugfixes -------- * sshd(8): make ClientAliveCountMax=0 have sensible semantics: it will now disable connection killing entirely rather than the current behaviour of instantly killing the connection after the first liveness test regardless of success. bz2627 * sshd(8): clarify order of AllowUsers / DenyUsers vs AllowGroups / DenyGroups in the sshd(8) manual page. bz1690 * sshd(8): better describe HashKnownHosts in the manual page. bz2560 * sshd(8): clarify that that permitopen=/PermitOpen do no name or address translation in the manual page. bz3099 * sshd(8): allow the UpdateHostKeys feature to function when multiple known_hosts files are in use. When updating host keys, ssh will now search subsequent known_hosts files, but will add updated host keys to the first specified file only. bz2738 * All: replace all calls to signal(2) with a wrapper around sigaction(2). This wrapper blocks all other signals during the handler preventing races between handlers, and sets SA_RESTART which should reduce the potential for short read/write operations. * sftp(1): fix a race condition in the SIGCHILD handler that could turn in to a kill(-1); bz3084 * sshd(8): fix a case where valid (but extremely large) SSH channel IDs were being incorrectly rejected. bz3098 * ssh(1): when checking host key fingerprints as answers to new hostkey prompts, ignore whitespace surrounding the fingerprint itself. * All: wait for file descriptors to be readable or writeable during non-blocking connect, not just readable. Prevents a timeout when the server doesn't immediately send a banner (e.g. multiplexers like sslh) * sshd_config(5): document the sntrup4591761x25519-sha512@tinyssh.org key exchange algorithm. PR#151 Portability ----------- * sshd(8): multiple adjustments to the Linux seccomp sandbox: - Non-fatally deny IPC syscalls in sandbox - Allow clock_gettime64() in sandbox (MIPS / glibc >= 2.31) - Allow clock_nanosleep_time64 in sandbox (ARM) bz3100 - Allow clock_nanosleep() in sandbox (recent glibc) bz3093 * Explicit check for memmem declaration and fix up declaration if the system headers lack it. bz3102 OpenSSH 8.1 was released on 2019-10-09. It is available from the mirrors listed at https://www.openssh.com/. OpenSSH is a 100% complete SSH protocol 2.0 implementation and includes sftp client and server support. Once again, we would like to thank the OpenSSH community for their continued support of the project, especially those who contributed code or patches, reported bugs, tested snapshots or donated to the project. More information on donations may be found at: http://www.openssh.com/donations.html Security ======== * ssh(1), sshd(8), ssh-add(1), ssh-keygen(1): an exploitable integer overflow bug was found in the private key parsing code for the XMSS key type. This key type is still experimental and support for it is not compiled by default. No user-facing autoconf option exists in portable OpenSSH to enable it. This bug was found by Adam Zabrocki and reported via SecuriTeam's SSD program. * ssh(1), sshd(8), ssh-agent(1): add protection for private keys at rest in RAM against speculation and memory side-channel attacks like Spectre, Meltdown and Rambleed. This release encrypts private keys when they are not in use with a symmetric key that is derived from a relatively large "prekey" consisting of random data (currently 16KB). Potentially-incompatible changes ================================ This release includes a number of changes that may affect existing configurations: * ssh-keygen(1): when acting as a CA and signing certificates with an RSA key, default to using the rsa-sha2-512 signature algorithm. Certificates signed by RSA keys will therefore be incompatible with OpenSSH versions prior to 7.2 unless the default is overridden (using "ssh-keygen -t ssh-rsa -s ..."). Changes since OpenSSH 8.0 ========================= This release is focused on bug-fixing. New Features ------------ * ssh(1): Allow %n to be expanded in ProxyCommand strings * ssh(1), sshd(8): Allow prepending a list of algorithms to the default set by starting the list with the '^' character, E.g. "HostKeyAlgorithms ^ssh-ed25519" * ssh-keygen(1): add an experimental lightweight signature and verification ability. Signatures may be made using regular ssh keys held on disk or stored in a ssh-agent and verified against an authorized_keys-like list of allowed keys. Signatures embed a namespace that prevents confusion and attacks between different usage domains (e.g. files vs email). * ssh-keygen(1): print key comment when extracting public key from a private key. bz#3052 * ssh-keygen(1): accept the verbose flag when searching for host keys in known hosts (i.e. "ssh-keygen -vF host") to print the matching host's random-art signature too. bz#3003 * All: support PKCS8 as an optional format for storage of private keys to disk. The OpenSSH native key format remains the default, but PKCS8 is a superior format to PEM if interoperability with non-OpenSSH software is required, as it may use a less insecure key derivation function than PEM's. Bugfixes -------- * ssh(1): if a PKCS#11 token returns no keys then try to login and refetch them. Based on patch from Jakub Jelen; bz#2430 * ssh(1): produce a useful error message if the user's shell is set incorrectly during "match exec" processing. bz#2791 * sftp(1): allow the maximum uint32 value for the argument passed to -b which allows better error messages from later validation. bz#3050 * ssh(1): avoid pledge sandbox violations in some combinations of remote forwarding, connection multiplexing and ControlMaster. * ssh-keyscan(1): include SHA2-variant RSA key algorithms in KEX proposal; allows ssh-keyscan to harvest keys from servers that disable old SHA1 ssh-rsa. bz#3029 * sftp(1): print explicit "not modified" message if a file was requested for resumed download but was considered already complete. bz#2978 * sftp(1): fix a typo and make <esc><right> move right to the closest end of a word just like <esc><left> moves left to the closest beginning of a word. * sshd(8): cap the number of permitopen/permitlisten directives allowed to appear on a single authorized_keys line. * All: fix a number of memory leaks (one-off or on exit paths). * Regression tests: a number of fixes and improvements, including fixes to the interop tests, adding the ability to run most tests on builds that disable OpenSSL support, better support for running tests under Valgrind and a number of bug-fixes. * ssh(1), sshd(8): check for convtime() refusing to accept times that resolve to LONG_MAX Reported by Kirk Wolf bz2977 * ssh(1): slightly more instructive error message when the user specifies multiple -J options on the command-line. bz3015 * ssh-agent(1): process agent requests for RSA certificate private keys using correct signature algorithm when requested. bz3016 * sftp(1): check for user@host when parsing sftp target. This allows user@[1.2.3.4] to work without a path. bz#2999 * sshd(8): enlarge format buffer size for certificate serial number so the log message can record any 64-bit integer without truncation. bz#3012 * sshd(8): for PermitOpen violations add the remote host and port to be able to more easily ascertain the source of the request. Add the same logging for PermitListen violations which where not previously logged at all. * scp(1), sftp(1): use the correct POSIX format style for left justification for the transfer progress meter. bz#3002 * sshd(8) when examining a configuration using sshd -T, assume any attribute not provided by -C does not match, which allows it to work when sshd_config contains a Match directive with or without -C. bz#2858 * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1): downgrade PKCS#11 "provider returned no slots" warning from log level error to debug. This is common when attempting to enumerate keys on smartcard readers with no cards plugged in. bz#3058 * ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1): do not unconditionally log in to PKCS#11 tokens. Avoids spurious PIN prompts for keys not selected for authentication in ssh(1) and when listing public keys available in a token using ssh-keygen(1). bz#3006 Portability ----------- * ssh(1): fix SIGWINCH delivery of Solaris for multiplexed sessions bz#3030 * ssh(1), sshd(8): fix typo that prevented detection of Linux VRF * sshd(8): add no-op implementation of pam_putenv to avoid build breakage on platforms where the PAM implementation lacks this function (e.g. HP-UX). bz#3008 * sftp-server(8): fix Solaris privilege sandbox from preventing the legacy sftp rename operation from working (was refusing to allow hard links to files owned by other users). bz#3036 * All: add a proc_pidinfo()-based closefrom() for OS X to avoid the need to brute-force close all high-numbered file descriptors. bz#3049 * sshd(8): in the Linux seccomp-bpf sandbox, allow mprotect(2) with PROT_(READ|WRITE|NONE) only. This syscall is used by some hardened heap allocators. Github PR#142 * sshd(8): in the Linux seccomp-bpf sandbox, allow the s390-specific ioctl for ECC hardware support. * All: use "doc" man page format if the mandoc(1) tool is present on the system. Previously configure would not select the "doc" man page format if mandoc was present but nroff was not. * sshd(8): don't install duplicate STREAMS modules on Solaris; check if STREAMS modules are already installed on a pty before installing since when compiling with XPG>=4 they will likely be installed already. Prevents hangs and duplicate lines on the terminal. bz#2945 and bz#2998, |
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