ssh
James
oscartheduck at gmail.com
Wed Oct 31 08:52:07 PDT 2007
On 10/31/07, Michael Grant <mg-fbsd3 at grant.org> wrote:
>
> On 10/31/07, James <oscartheduck at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> > On 10/31/07, Michael Grant <mg-fbsd3 at grant.org> wrote:
> > > On 10/31/07, James <oscartheduck at gmail.com> wrote:
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > On 10/31/07, Michael Grant <mg-fbsd3 at grant.org > wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > If I'm sued as root and I ssh somewhere, ssh/scp reads it's files
> from
> > > > > /root/.ssh/. The docs say it reads from ~/.ssh which is what I
> want,
> > > > > but it's not doing that. When sued, the shell is properly
> expanding ~
> > > > > to my home dir.
> > > > >
> > > > > Anyone know of a way around this behavior?
> > > > >
> > > > > Michael Grant
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > su - root
> > >
> > > Nope. One other suggestion was 'su -l root'. This does not change
> > > the situation either.
> > >
> > > I went into the source for ssh and it does a getuid() and then gets
> > > the homedir of that uid. So no amount of fooling with su is gonig to
> > > fix this. I guess it's like this for security reasons, it sure seems
> > > like a bug to me. I'd have used the HOME enviroment variable.
> > >
> > > So far, the best fix I've found is to create some aliases in bash as
> > follows:
> > >
> > > alias scp="scp -o User=username -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa"
> > > alias ssh="ssh -l username -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa"
> > > alias rsync="rsync -op -e 'ssh -l username -i
> /home/username/.ssh/id_rsa'"
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > Yeah, I misread your problem. Are you saying that you want to su to
> root,
> > but still have some variables set as they were on the account you sued
> from?
> > So you have a user named Michael, say, and you su to root, but when you
> ssh
> > you want Michael's .ssh to be the effective one?
>
> Well sort of. When I su, $HOME is set to my homedir and $USER set to
> mgrant. This is fine. However, ssh (when sued) doesn't read
> $HOME/.ssh, it reads /root/.ssh. And it's not defaulting to logging
> into the remote machine as $USER, it tries to log in as root. It does
> this because it's hardwired in the code more or less as follows (I've
> extracted the relevant code from ssh.c):
>
> original_real_uid = getuid();
> pw = getpwuid(original_real_uid);
> sprintf(buf, "%s/%s", pw->pw_dir, "ssh-config");
> read_config_file(buf);
> options.user = strdup(pw->pw_name);
>
> Like I said, it seems like a bug to me. Personally I would have done
> a getenv("HOME") and getenv("USER") myself instead of depending on the
> userid. Probably they had good reason for doing it the way they did
> it.
>
> So I think the problem is unsolvable using options to su. Only
> solution I found so far was the aliases above.
>
> Michael Grant
>
You could just pop your code in there and compile it as you want it. Maybe
submit it back to openssh as a bugfix.
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