- Prerequisites
You will need working installations of
Zlib and
OpenSSL (version 0.9.5a or later).
Redhat Linux RPMS of OpenSSL are available in the support/
subdirectory of the OpenSSH mirror sites.
OpenSSH can utilise
Pluggable Authentication
Modules (PAM) if your system supports it. PAM is standard on Redhat
and Debian Linux and on Solaris.
If you wish to build the GNOME passphrase requester, you will need the
GNOME libraries and headers.
Alternatively, Jim Knoble has written an
excellent X11 passphrase requester. This is maintained separately.
If you are planning to use OpenSSH on a Unix which lacks a Kernel random
number generator (/dev/urandom), you may want to install the
Entropy Gathering Daemon
(or similar). You will also need to specify the --with-egd-pool
option to ./configure. OpenSSH 2.0 includes some peliminary
built-in randomness collection, but it is not as well tested as EGD.
OpenSSH has only been tested with
GNU make. It may work with other
'make' programs, but you are on your own.
- Building / Installation
To install OpenSSH with default options:
./configure
make
make install
This will install the OpenSSH binaries in /usr/local/bin,
configuration files in /usr/local/etc, the server in
/usr/local/sbin, etc. To specify a
different installation prefix, use the --prefix option to
configure:
./configure --prefix=/opt
make
make install
Will install OpenSSH in /opt/{bin,etc,lib,sbin}. You can also
override specific paths, for example:
./configure --prefix=/opt --sysconfdir=/etc/ssh
make
make install
This will install the binaries in /opt/{bin,lib,sbin}, but will
place the configuration files in /etc/ssh.
If you are using PAM, you will need to manually install a PAM
control file as /etc/pam.d/sshd (or wherever your system
prefers to keep them). A generic PAM configuration is included as
contrib/sshd.pam.generic, you may need to edit it before using it
on your system. If you are using a recent version of Redhat Linux, the
config file in contrib/redhat/sshd.pam should be more useful.
There are a few other options to the configure script:
- --with-rsh=PATH
-
Specifies the path to your rsh program. Normally ./configure will
search the current $PATH for rsh. You may need to
specify this option if rsh is not in your path or has a different name.
- --without-pam
-
Disables PAM support. PAM is automatically detected and switched on if
found.
- --with-random=/some/file
-
Specifies an alternate source of random numbers (the default is
/dev/urandom). Unless you are absolutly sure of what you are doing,
it is best to leave this alone.
- --with-egd-pool=/some/file
-
Enables Entropy Gathering Daemon support and to specify a EGD pool
socket. You may want to use this if your Unix does not support the
/dev/urandom device (or similar). The file argument refers to the
EGD pool file, not the EGD program itself. Please refer to the EGD
documentation.
- --with-lastlog=FILE
-
Specifies the location of the lastlog file. ./configure searches
a few locations for lastlog, but may not find it if lastlog is installed
in a different place.
- --without-lastlog
-
Disables lastlog support entirely.
- --with-kerberos4=PATH
-
Enables Kerberos IV support. You will need to have the Kerberos
libraries and header files installed for this to work. Use the
optional PATH argument to specify the root of your Kerberos installation.
- --with-afs=PATH
-
Enables AFS support. You will need to have the Kerberos IV and the
AFS libraries and header files installed for this to work. Use the
optional PATH argument to specify the root of your AFS installation.
AFS requires Kerberos support to be enabled.
- --with-skey
-
Enables S/Key one time password support. You will need the S/Key
libraries and header files installed for this to work.
- --with-tcp-wrappers
-
Enables TCP Wrappers (/etc/hosts.allow|deny) support. You will need
libwrap.a and tcpd.h installed.
- --with-md5-passwords
-
Enables the use of MD5 passwords. Enable this if your operating system
uses MD5 passwords without using PAM.
- --with-utmpx
-
Enables utmpx support. utmpx support is automatic for some platforms.
- --without-shadow
-
Disables shadow password support.
- --with-ipaddr-display
-
Forces the use of a numeric IP address in the $DISPLAY
environment variable. Some broken systems need this.
- --with-default-path=PATH
-
allows you to specify a default $PATH for sessions started by
sshd. This replaces the standard path entirely. Use this if you have
troubles with the server not finding scp.
- --with-pid-dir=PATH
-
Specifies the directory in which the ssh.pid file is created.
- --with-xauth=PATH
-
Specifies the location of the xauth binary
- --with-ipv4-default
-
Instructs OpenSSH to use IPv4 by default for new connections. Normally
OpenSSH will try attempt to lookup both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses.
On Linux/glibc-2.1.2 this causes long delays in name resolution.
If this option is specified, you can still attempt to connect to IPv6
addresses using the command line option -6.
- --with-ssl-dir=DIR
-
Allows you to specify where your OpenSSL libraries are installed.
- --with-4in6
-
Check for IPv4 in IPv6 mapped addresses and convert them to
real (AF_INET) IPv4 addresses. Works around more IPv6 quirks on Linux.
If you need to pass special options to the compiler or linker, you
can specify these as enviornment variables before running
./configure.For example:
CFLAGS="-O -m486" LFLAGS="-s" LIBS="-lrubbish" LD="/usr/foo/ld" ./configure
- Configuration
The runtime configuration files are installed by in
${prefix}/etc or whatever you specified as your --sysconfdir
(/usr/local/etc by default).
The default configuration should be instantly usable, though you should
review it to ensure that it matches your security requirements.
To generate a host key, run "make host-key". Alternately you can do so
manually using the following commands:
/usr/bin/ssh-keygen -b 1024 -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key -N ''
/usr/bin/ssh-keygen -d -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key -N ''
Replacing /etc/ssh with the correct path to the configuration
directory. (${prefix}/etc or whatever you specified with
--sysconfdir during configuration)
If you have configured OpenSSH with EGD support, ensure that EGD is
running and has collected some Entropy.
For more information on configuration, please refer to the manual pages
for sshd, ssh and ssh-agent.