Administrators and other people can use passwords or public-key pairs with a passphrase-protected private key to access remote machines with Tectia clients from a Telnet or Secure Shell session. They can also use public-key pairs with a null passphrase if they want to run the Tectia client programs in JCL.
Mainframe batch users are accounts that represent applications or subsystems, not
people. They are set up with public-key pairs with a null passphrase to enable
non-interactive access through JCL to remote servers. One key pair is generated for each
batch user. If the batch user has a shared home directory, the key is placed in the shared
$HOME/.ssh2
directory, otherwise it is copied to the user's home
directories on all the LPARs.
When ssh-keygen-g3 is run with the -P
option, which
requests a null passphrase, it can be run in JCL. It must be run under the batch user's user
ID in order for the file permissions to be set properly. For more information on the
ssh-keygen-g3 options, see ssh-keygen-g3(1).
The batch user accesses the remote machine using an account created and administered on the remote machine. The remote user name may either be the same as the batch user's RACF user ID, or the same but in lower case, or a different user name. Several batch users may use the same remote account. One batch user may use separate accounts on one remote machine for different accesses.
Each batch user's public key must be distributed to all the remote accounts it will be accessing. The way the public key is set up differs between Tectia and OpenSSH. The ssh-keydist-g3 script must be told which type of server the remote machine has. The server must be running when ssh-keydist-g3 is run.
ssh-keydist-g3 uses password authentication for this initial access to the remote server. The password for the remote account can be entered in a data set or in a file. See Password Stored in a File and Password Stored in a Data Set for instructions. The file name is entered as one of the options in the ssh-keydist-g3 command.
The other options needed on the ssh-keydist-g3 command line are the remote account user name, the remote host DNS name or IP address, and the type of the remote Secure Shell server (Tectia Server on Unix, Tectia Server on Windows, Tectia Server for IBM z/OS on mainframe, or OpenSSH on Unix).
The following examples illustrate using ssh-keydist-g3 for distributing user keys.
This command creates a 1024-bit RSA key with an empty passphrase and uploads it to a
Unix server running OpenSSH, including the necessary conversions. Public-key upload uses
password-from-file for authentication. A log of the operation is stored under
/tmp
. The example assumes that the server host key has already
been fetched and verified.
$ ssh-keydist-g3 --key-type rsa --key-bits 1024 --empty-passphrase \ --remote-user userid --password-file /home/userid/passwd_file \ --user-key-log /tmp/my_log_file --openssh-unix open_server.example.com
This example KEYDIST
from SAMPLIB
presents
a JCL script that does the same steps as the USS command in Example 1 above (options are
given in short format):
//KEYDIST EXEC PGM=BPXBATSL,REGION=0M,TIME=NOLIMIT //STDPARM DD * PGM /opt/tectia/bin/ssh-keydist-g3 -t rsa -b 1024 -P -u userid -p //'USERID.PASSWD' -U /tmp/my_log_file -O host1.example.com //STDENV DD DSN=&SYSUID..SSZ.SRVR648.PARMLIB(SSHENV),DISP=SHR //STDOUT DD SYSOUT=* //STDERR DD SYSOUT=* //STDIN DD DUMMY //
This example distributes an existing public key to several remote hosts
automatically. Individual user names can be defined for each server. Server type (Tectia
Unix, Tectia Windows, Tectia z/OS, or OpenSSH) needs to be defined with the flags:
-S
, -W
, -Z
, or -O
.
The example assumes that the relevant server host keys have already been fetched and
verified.
In this example you can find four server "blocks":
-O -u user1 open_server.example.com
-S -u user2 tectia_unix.example.com
-W -u user2 tectia_win.example.com
-Z -u user3 tectia_zos.example.com
A password file is defined for each separate user ID.
user2
is assumed to have the same password on Unix and
Windows. A log of the operation is stored under /tmp
.
The command is as follows:
$ ssh-keydist-g3 -f /home/userid/.ssh2/id_rsa_2048_a.pub \ -U /tmp/userkeys.log \ -p /home/userid/passwd_file1 \ -O -u user1 open_server.example.com \ -p /home/userid/passwd_file2 \ -S -u user2 tectia_unix.example.com \ -W -u user2 tectia_win.example.com \ -p /home/userid/passwd_file3 \ -Z -u user3 tectia_zos.example.com