freebsd-nq/crypto/openssh/FREEBSD-upgrade

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FreeBSD maintainer's guide to OpenSSH-portable
==============================================
0) Make sure your mail spool has plenty of free space. It'll fill up
pretty fast once you're done with this checklist.
1) Grab the latest OpenSSH-portable tarball from the OpenBSD FTP
site (ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/OpenSSH/portable/)
2) Unpack the tarball in a suitable directory.
3) Remove trash:
$ rm -rf $(cat FREEBSD-Xlist)
Make sure that took care of everything, and if it didn't, make sure
to update FREEBSD-Xlist so you won't miss it the next time.
4) Import the sources:
$ cvs import src/crypto/openssh-portable OPENSSH OpenSSH_X_YpZ
5) Resolve conflicts. Remember to bump the version number and
addendum in version.h.
6) Generate configure and config.h.in:
$ autoconf
$ autoheader
Note: this requires a recent version of autoconf, not autoconf213.
7) Run configure with the appropriate arguments:
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc/ssh \
--with-pam --with-tcp-wrappers
Note that we don't want to configure OpenSSH for Kerberos using
configure since we have to be able to turn it on or off depending
on the value of MAKE_KERBEROS[45]. Our Makefiles take care of
this.
8) Commit the resulting config.h. Make sure you don't accidentally
commit any other files created by autoconf, autoheader or
configure; they'll just clutter up the repo and cause trouble at
the next upgrade.
9) Build and test.
A) Re-commit everything on freefall (you *did* use a test repo for
this, didn't you?)
An overview of FreeBSD changes to OpenSSH-portable
==================================================
0) VersionAddendum
The SSH protocol allows for a human-readable version string of up
to 40 characters to be appended to the protocol version string.
FreeBSD takes advantage of this to include a date indicating the
"patch level", so people can easily determine whether their system
is vulnerable when an OpenSSH advisory goes out. Some people,
however, dislike advertising their patch level in the protocol
handshake, so we've added a VersionAddendum configuration variable
to allow them to change or disable it.
1) Modified server-side defaults
We've modified some configuration defaults in sshd:
- For protocol version 2, we don't load RSA host keys by
default. If both RSA and DSA keys are present, we prefer DSA
to RSA.
- LoginGraceTime defaults to 120 seconds instead of 600.
- PermitRootLogin defaults to "no".
- X11Forwarding defaults to "yes" (it's a threat to the client,
not to the server.)
- Unless the config file says otherwise, we automatically enable
Kerberos support if an appropriate keytab is present.
- PAMAuthenticationViaKbdInt defaults to "yes".
2) Modified client-side defaults
We've modified some configuration defaults in ssh:
- For protocol version 2, if both RSA and DSA keys are present,
we prefer DSA to RSA.
- CheckHostIP defaults to "no".
3) Canonic host names
We've added code to ssh.c to canonicize the target host name after
reading options but before trying to connect. This eliminates the
usual problem with duplicate known_hosts entries.
4) OPIE
We've added support for using OPIE as a drop-in replacement for
S/Key.
5) PAM
We use our own PAM code, which wraps PAM in a KbdintDevice and
works with privsep, instead of OpenSSH's own PAM code.
6) setusercontext() environment
Our setusercontext(3) can set environment variables, which we must
take care to transfer to the child's environment.
This port was brought to you by (in no particular order) DARPA, NAI
Labs, ThinkSec, Nescaf<61>, the Aberlour Glenlivet Distillery Co.,
Suzanne Vega, and a Sanford's #69 Deluxe Marker.
-- des@FreeBSD.org
$FreeBSD$