LinuxSecurity.com
Share your story
The central voice for Linux and Open Source security news
Home News Topics Advisories HOWTOs Features Newsletters About Register

Welcome!
Sign up!
EnGarde Community
Login
Polls
What is the most important Linux security technology?
 
Advisories
Community
Linux Events
Linux User Groups
Link to Us
Security Center
Book Reviews
Security Dictionary
Security Tips
SELinux
White Papers
Featured Blogs
All About Linux
DanWalsh LiveJournal
Securitydistro
Latest Newsletters
Linux Advisory Watch: March 6th, 2010
Linux Advisory Watch: February 26th, 2010
Subscribe
LinuxSecurity Newsletters
E-mail:
Choose Lists:
About our Newsletters
RSS Feeds
Get the LinuxSecurity news you want faster with RSS
Powered By

  
Key-Based SSH Logins With PuTTY Print E-mail
User Rating:      How can I rate this item?
Source: HOWTO Forge - Posted by Eric Lubow   
Documentation This guide describes how to generate and use a private/public key pair to log in to a remote system with SSH using PuTTY. PuTTY is an SSH client that is available for Windows and Linux (although it is more common on Windows systems). Using key-based SSH logins, you can disable the normal username/password login procedure which means that only people with a valid private/public key pair can log in. That way, there is no way for brute-force attacks to be successful, so your system is more secure.

In this tutorial I use a Windows desktop to connect to a Linux SSH server (Debian Sarge, IP address: 192.168.0.100). First we need to install PuTTY, PuTTYgen, and Pageant on our Windows system. All we need to do is download the exectuable files (.exe) and save them somewhere, e.g. on the desktop. We don't need to install them as they are standalone applications. To start them, we only need to double-click them.

Read this full article at HOWTO Forge

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Powered by AkoComment!

 
< Prev   Next >
    
Partner:

 

Latest Features
Introduction: Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities
FTP Attack Case Study Part II: the Lessons
Network Security Audit (Part II)
Measuring Security IT Success
Buffer Overflow Basics
Network Intrusion Prevention Systems: When They're Valuable, and When They're Not
Hacks From Pax: Network Server Monitoring With Nmap
Yesterday's Edition
Noted cryptographer on SSL, encryption and cloud computing
Security industry faces attacks it cannot stop
Seven Firefox Plug-ins That Improve Online Privacy
MD5 hash vulnerability is expert's top Web security flaw
Virtualization Security Is Taking Longer Than Expected
Apache bug prompts update advice
Partner Sponsor

Community | HOWTOs | Blogs | Features | Book Reviews | Networking
 Security Projects |  Latest News |  Newsletters |  SELinux |  Privacy |  Home
 Hardening |   About Us |   Advertise |   Legal Notice |   RSS |   Guardian Digital
(c)Copyright 2010 Guardian Digital, Inc. All rights reserved.