SSHD2_SUBCONFIG(5) SSH2 SSHD2_SUBCONFIG(5)
NAME
sshd2_subconfig - advanced configuration of sshd2 on z/OS
DESCRIPTION
You can also specify configuration options in so-called
subconfiguration files, which have the same basic format
as the main configuration file. The process forked to han-
dle the user's connection reads these files. They are read
at run-time, so if they are modified, it is not necessary
to restart the server process.
If parsing of the subconfiguration files fails, the con-
nection is terminated (for the host-specific subconfigura-
tion) or access denied (for the user-specific subconfigu-
ration) by the server.
Most of the configuration options that work in the main
file work also in these, but some do not, where it either
does not make sense to set them (e.g. ListenAddress and
Port, which only affect the daemon process listening to
the port, and would not affect that behavior in any way in
a subconfiguration file) or it would be confusing (e.g.
AllowUsers in user-specific subconfiguration, and
AllowHosts in host-specific subconfiguration.).
The value for {Host,User}SpecificConfig keywords is a pat-
tern-filename pair, separated by a whitespace. With User-
SpecificConfig, the pattern is of format
"user[%group][@host]", where the pattern user is matched
with the user name and UID, group is matched with the
user's primary and any secondary groups, both group name
and GID, and host is matched as described under option
AllowHosts. With HostSpecificConfig, the pattern is
"host" (as in UserSpecificConfig).
Unlike sshd2_config, the subconfiguration files may have
configuration blocks, or stanzas, in them. The sub-
configuration heading is interpreted identically to what
is described above, i.e. with UserSpecificConfig the
pattern is of the format "user[%group][@host]", and with
HostSpecificConfig the format is "host".
The subconfiguration files are divided into two cate-
gories: user-specific and host-specific. User-specific
subconfiguration files are read when the client has stated
the username it is trying to log in with. At this point,
the server will obtain additional information about the
user: does the user exist, what is the user's UID, and
what groups does the user belong to. With this informa-
tion, the server can read the user-specific configuration
files specified by UserSpecificConfig in the main sshd2
configuration file.
The other category is host-specific configuration files,
which are configured with the HostSpecificConfig variable.
These files are read immediately after the daemon has
forked a new process to handle the connection. Thus most
configuration options can be set in these.
Note that it is possible to mix these configuration files.
This is not recommended, because any global settings in
these files would be set multiple times (which would not
do any harm per se, but might lead to behavior not
intended by the administrator).
Subconfigurations are really flexible, and because of
that, dangerous if the logic of the files is not carefully
planned. You can specify different authentication methods
for different users, different banner messages for people
from certain hosts, and set log messages of certain groups
to go to different files. There are a lot of possibilities
here.
OPTIONS
Configuration variables that work everywhere, i.e. in the
main file, the user-specific, and the host-specific con-
figuration files:
AllowShosts
AllowTcpForwarding
AllowedAuthentications
AuthHostBased.Cert.Required
AuthHostbased.Cert.ValidationMethods
AuthInteractiveFailureTimeout
AuthKbdInt.NumOptional
AuthKbdInt.Optional
AuthKbdInt.Plugin
AuthKbdInt.Required
AuthKbdInt.Retries
AuthPublicKey.Cert.Required
AuthPublicKey.Cert.ValidationMethods
AuthorizationEkInitStringMapper
AuthorizationEkInitStringMapperTimeout
AuthorizationEkProvider
AuthorizationFile
AuthPublicKey.MaxSize
AuthPublicKey.MinSize
Cert.RSA.Compat.HashScheme
CheckMail
DenyShosts
ForwardAgent
HostbasedAuthForceClientHostnameDNSMatch
IdleTimeout
IgnoreLoginRestrictions
IgnoreRhosts
IgnoreRootRhosts
KnownHostsEkProvider
PasswdPath
PasswordGuesses
PermitEmptyPasswords
PrintMOTD
QuietMode
RekeyIntervalSeconds
RequiredAuthentications
SecurIdGuesses
SettableEnvironmentVars
SftpSysLogFacility
ShellConvert
ShellAccountCodeset
ShellTransferCodeset
ShellTranslateTable
StrictModes
SysLogFacility
UserConfigDirectory
UserKnownHosts
VerboseMode
Variables that work in the host-specific configuration
file and the main file:
AllowGroups
AllowTcpForwardingForGroups
AllowTcpForwardingForUsers
AllowUsers
BannerMessageFile
ChrootGroups
ChrootUsers
Ciphers
DenyGroups
DenyTcpForwardingForGroups
DenyTcpForwardingForUsers
DenyUsers
DisableVersionFallback
ExternalAuthorizationProgram
ForwardACL
IdentityDispatchUsers
LoginGraceTime
MACs
PermitRootLogin
SSH1Compatibility
Sshd1ConfigFile
Sshd1Path
AUTHORS
SSH Communications Security Corp.
For more information, see http://www.ssh.com.
SEE ALSO
sshd2_config(5), sshd2(8), sshd-check-conf(5), sshregex(1)
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