ssh-audit/ssh-audit.1

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2020-07-16 17:48:35 +02:00
.TH SSH-AUDIT 1 "July 16, 2020"
.SH NAME
\fBssh-audit\fP \- SSH server & client configuration auditor
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B ssh-audit
.RI [ options ] " <target_host>"
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
\fBssh-audit\fP analyzes the configuration of SSH servers & clients, then warns the user of weak, obsolete, and/or un-tested cryptographic primitives. It is very useful for hardening SSH tunnels, which by default tend to be optimized for compatibility, not security.
.PP
See <https://www.ssh\-audit.com/> for official hardening guides for common platforms.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.B -h, \-\-help
.br
Print short summary of options.
.TP
.B -1, \-\-ssh1
.br
Only perform an audit using SSH protocol version 1.
.TP
.B -2, \-\-ssh2
.br
Only perform an audit using SSH protocol version 2.
.TP
.B -4, \-\-ipv4
.br
Prioritize the usage of IPv4.
.TP
.B -6, \-\-ipv6
.br
Prioritize the usage of IPv6.
.TP
.B -b, \-\-batch
.br
Enables grepable output.
.TP
.B -c, \-\-client\-audit
.br
Starts a server on port 2222 to audit client software configuration. Use -p/--port=<port> to change port and -t/--timeout=<secs> to change listen timeout.
.TP
.B -j, \-\-json
.br
Output results in JSON format.
.TP
.B -l, \-\-level=<info|warn|fail>
.br
Specify the minimum output level. Default is info.
.TP
.B -L, \-\-list-policies
.br
List all official, built-in policies for common systems. Their file paths can then be provided using -P/--policy=<path/to/policy.txt>.
.TP
.B \-\-lookup=<alg1,alg2,...>
.br
Look up the security information of an algorithm(s) in the internal database. Does not connect to a server.
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.TP
.B -M, \-\-make-policy=<policy.txt>
.br
Creates a policy based on the target server. Useful when other servers should be compared to the target server's custom configuration (i.e.: a cluster environment). Note that the resulting policy can be edited manually.
.TP
.B -n, \-\-no-colors
.br
Disable color output.
.TP
.B -p, \-\-port=<port>
.br
The TCP port to connect to when auditing a server, or the port to listen on when auditing a client.
.TP
.B -P, \-\-policy=<policy.txt>
.br
Runs a policy audit against a target using the specified policy (see \fBPOLICY AUDIT\fP section for detailed description of this mode of operation). Combine with -c/--client-audit to audit a client configuration instead of a server. Use -L/--list-policies to list all official, built-in policies for common systems.
.TP
.B -t, \-\-timeout=<secs>
.br
The timeout, in seconds, for creating connections and reading data from the socket. Default is 5.
.TP
.B -T, \-\-targets=<hosts.txt>
.br
A file containing a list of target hosts. Each line must have one host, in the format of HOST[:PORT].
.TP
.B -v, \-\-verbose
.br
Enable verbose output.
.SH STANDARD AUDIT
.PP
By default, \fBssh-audit\fP performs a standard audit. That is, it enumerates all host key types, key exchanges, ciphers, MACs, and other information, then color-codes them in output to the user. Cryptographic primitives with potential issues are displayed in yellow; primitives with serious flaws are displayed in red.
.SH POLICY AUDIT
.PP
When the -P/--policy=<policy.txt> option is used, \fBssh-audit\fP performs a policy audit. The target's host key types, key exchanges, ciphers, MACs, and other information is compared to a set of expected values defined in the specified policy file. If everything matches, only a short message stating a passing result is reported. Otherwise, the field(s) that did not match are reported.
.PP
Policy auditing is helpful for ensuring a group of related servers are properly hardened to an exact specification.
.PP
The set of official built-in policies can be viewed with -L/--list-policies. Multiple servers can be audited with -T/--targets=<servers.txt>. Custom policies can be made from an ideal target server with -M/--make-policy=<custom_policy.txt>.
.SH EXAMPLES
.LP
Basic server auditing:
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit localhost
ssh-audit 127.0.0.1
ssh-audit 127.0.0.1:222
ssh-audit ::1
ssh-audit [::1]:222
.fi
.RE
.LP
To run a standard audit against many servers (place targets into servers.txt, one on each line in the format of HOST[:PORT]):
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -T servers.txt
.fi
.RE
.LP
To audit a client configuration (listens on port 2222 by default; connect using "ssh anything@localhost"):
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -c
.fi
.RE
.LP
To audit a client configuration, with a listener on port 4567:
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -c -p 4567
.fi
.RE
.LP
To list all official built-in policies (hint: use resulting file paths with -P/--policy):
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -L
.fi
.RE
.LP
To run a policy audit against a server:
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -P path/to/server_policy targetserver
.fi
.RE
.LP
To run a policy audit against a client:
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -c -P path/to/client_policy
.fi
.RE
.LP
To run a policy audit against many servers:
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -T servers.txt -P path/to/server_policy
.fi
.RE
.LP
To create a policy based on a target server (which can be manually edited; see official built-in policies for syntax examples):
.RS
.nf
ssh-audit -M new_policy.txt targetserver
.fi
.RE
.SH RETURN VALUES
When a successful connection is made and all algorithms are rated as "good", \fBssh-audit\fP returns 0. Other possible return values are:
.RS
.nf
1 = connection error
2 = at least one algorithm warning was found
3 = at least one algorithm failure was found
<any other non-zero value> = unknown error
.fi
.RE
.SH SSH HARDENING GUIDES
Hardening guides for common platforms can be found at: <https://www.ssh\-audit.com/>
.SH BUG REPORTS
Please file bug reports as a Github Issue at: <https://github.com/jtesta/ssh\-audit/issues>
.SH AUTHOR
.LP
\fBssh-audit\fP was originally written by Andris Raugulis <moo@arthepsy.eu>, and maintained from 2015 to 2017.
.br
.LP
Maintainership was assumed and development was resumed in 2017 by Joe Testa <jtesta@positronsecurity.com>.