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  3. SSH Key?

SSH Key?

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  • girishG girish

    @nebulon Yeah, let's put in ssh server like the one we have in gogs and just have it read of an authorized_keys file editable via the File Manager. What do you think? We can also remove the password based authorization entirely. I think we just implemented it that way for initial prototyping.

    T Offline
    T Offline
    thetomester13
    App Dev
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    @girish said in SSH Key?:

    I think we just implemented it that way for initial prototyping.

    Makes sense!

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    • LanhildL Offline
      LanhildL Offline
      Lanhild
      App Dev
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      Reviving this topic as it's been forgotten for a while now. We already have multiple apps with SSH implementations.

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      • girishG Offline
        girishG Offline
        girish
        Staff
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        @Lanhild if you are in the market, then https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/githubpages-app has to be adapted to run a SSH server and accept keys (maybe /app/data/ssh_keys or something?).

        LanhildL 1 Reply Last reply
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        • girishG girish

          @Lanhild if you are in the market, then https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/githubpages-app has to be adapted to run a SSH server and accept keys (maybe /app/data/ssh_keys or something?).

          LanhildL Offline
          LanhildL Offline
          Lanhild
          App Dev
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          @girish might take a look someday

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          • I Offline
            I Offline
            Info-Tech.guru
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            Hey there Cloudron folks - with a special tip of the hat to those of you are on the Staff and Developer teams!

            I am having a world of trouble getting the SSH key authentication to work on a brand-new Github Pages installation. I'm familiar enough with the usage of RSA key pairs and the SSH protocol - so I feel that it shouldn't be as difficult as it has been. I wasn't sure if it was better for me to open up a new thread, or just add on to this somewhat dated post - but this is the exact same subject, so here it is:

            I have made several attempts at this - whereby I'm generating both the public and private ssh keys via two different methods. I have run the ssh-keygen command on the host docker/machine and added the public key to /app/data/ssh/authorized_keys - as well as using a third party app to generate the keys from my client machine. After both attempts at generating these keys, I have uploaded the public key to the location specified with the file-browser method, as well as cat > appending it to the file through the CLI/terminal.

            I have also looked at the owner and group of the authorized_keys file and experimented with assigning the user and group as root:root, versus git:git. Rebooting the docker app after making these changes has also not helped in any way. Alas, nothing that I have been trying has worked so far, and I am seeking some sort of resolution or solution to this issue. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

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            • nebulonN Offline
              nebulonN Offline
              nebulon
              Staff
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              Is the key picked up automatically for the remote by ssh on your machine?

              You can explicitly configure that in ~/.ssh/config (linux at least, no clue about other OSs). For example:

              ....
              Host ssh.gitlab.gnome.org
                  IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa_mykey
                  IdentitiesOnly yes
              ....
              
              1 Reply Last reply
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              • I Offline
                I Offline
                Info-Tech.guru
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                Well, so this is where things get Docker-container style weird: my ~ (home) directory has a "Read-only file system" and I am unable to edit any of the files - even when logged in as root - in that directory (or any other standard-issue, conventional Linux folder). On that note; I have tried to edit my /etc/ssh/ssh_config file as well (which I thought would be the obvious solution to this problem) but that yields the same non-writable issue.

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                • I Offline
                  I Offline
                  Info-Tech.guru
                  wrote on last edited by Info-Tech.guru
                  #11

                  Ahh, I think that I may have possibly misinterpreted your comment!

                  Is the key picked up automatically for the remote by ssh on your machine?

                  The client/local side of things is (I believe) able to engage in an attempted handshake with the host/server - but the authentication is rejected when the private key is loaded from my home computer ssh session. I get an error that states "Authentication rejected"

                  I've been trying to find a logfile on my server/host, but been unable to locate a history of login attempts. Still unsure about how to proceed...

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                  • nebulonN Offline
                    nebulonN Offline
                    nebulon
                    Staff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    Yes I was referring to your client (laptop) side of things. SSH does not always pick up the correct keyfile automatically for a domain, basically what you would provide with -i in ssh.

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                    • I Offline
                      I Offline
                      Info-Tech.guru
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      I see, however in that case:

                      SSH does not always pick up the correct keyfile automatically for a domain

                      I am certain, that have the correct private key-file for the ssh session on my client-side - and I only have one key stored in my /app/data/ssh/authorized_keys file, which is stored in a single line entry as depicted below:

                      ssh-rsa $+|20Ng-|<3Y...etc.

                      I also have an identical file named id_rsa.pub in the very same directory. When using the corresponding id_rsa private key from my home computer in order to login, it rejects the keypair.

                      I am curious if there are any further steps that I might be able to take on the server-side of things!? Thank you for your responsiveness, availability, and willingness to help me with this @nebulon - I both hope and trust that we can get it sorted out!

                      robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • I Info-Tech.guru

                        I see, however in that case:

                        SSH does not always pick up the correct keyfile automatically for a domain

                        I am certain, that have the correct private key-file for the ssh session on my client-side - and I only have one key stored in my /app/data/ssh/authorized_keys file, which is stored in a single line entry as depicted below:

                        ssh-rsa $+|20Ng-|<3Y...etc.

                        I also have an identical file named id_rsa.pub in the very same directory. When using the corresponding id_rsa private key from my home computer in order to login, it rejects the keypair.

                        I am curious if there are any further steps that I might be able to take on the server-side of things!? Thank you for your responsiveness, availability, and willingness to help me with this @nebulon - I both hope and trust that we can get it sorted out!

                        robiR Offline
                        robiR Offline
                        robi
                        wrote on last edited by robi
                        #14

                        @Info-Tech.guru have you repeated the setup with the demo server by installing the same app there and configuring it?

                        Have you used the same key pair elsewhere?

                        Conscious tech

                        I 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • BrutalBirdieB Offline
                          BrutalBirdieB Offline
                          BrutalBirdie
                          Partner
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          I just did a fresh setup and could not reproduce your issue.

                          Web Terminal of the ghp (github page app)

                          curl -s https://github.com/brutalbirdie.keys > /app/data/ssh/authorized_keys
                          

                          Localhost:

                          cd tmp
                          mkdir ghpt
                          cd ghpt
                          touch index.html
                          echo '<h1>FooBar</h1>' > index.html
                          git init
                          git remote add page ssh://git@ghp.cloudron.dev:29418/app/data/repo.git
                          git add .
                          git commit -m "WIP"
                          git push
                          curl -s https://ghp.cloudron.dev
                          <h1>FooBar</h1>
                          

                          😕
                          Maybe somewhere you missed a step or something 🤔
                          https://docs.cloudron.io/apps/githubpages/

                          Like my work? Consider donating a drink. Cheers!

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                          • robiR robi

                            @Info-Tech.guru have you repeated the setup with the demo server by installing the same app there and configuring it?

                            Have you used the same key pair elsewhere?

                            I Offline
                            I Offline
                            Info-Tech.guru
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            @robi said in SSH Key?:

                            Have you used the same key pair elsewhere?

                            In every one of the multitude of attempts to get this straight, I have generated a set of completely unique and new key-pairs, even rotating between different formats and implementations of the cryptography used by ssh sessions (RSA, PEM, OpenSSH, ECDSA, etc.). Nothing seems to be sticking.

                            @BrutalBirdie said in SSH Key?:

                            I just did a fresh setup and could not reproduce your issue.

                            I thank you for taking your time to try that out and see if you could replicate the problem. I have done a reinstall as well - just to see if I had borked something in the first installation - but I'm still encountering the same issues. I wish that I could spy over your shoulder or something while you perform a working setup, to see where I am going wrong. I have consulted with the docs that you've linked to, and I am still unsure of what the exact cause of the problem is.

                            Anyway, thank you all for the time you have dedicated to this matter. I wish that I could simply mark this problem as SOLVED, but the actual takeaway here - is that I had to implement the HTTP transfer methodology, even though it is less secure and is discouraged as a solution. If I DO MANGE to figure it out, then I will update this thread accordingly so that others are not left wondering about this as well.

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