Storage Foundation 7.4 Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Linux
- Section I. Introduction and configuration of Storage Foundation
- Section II. Upgrade of Storage Foundation
- Planning to upgrade Storage Foundation
- Upgrading Storage Foundation
- Performing an automated SF upgrade using response files
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
- Section III. Post configuration tasks
- Section IV. Configuration and Upgrade reference
- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
Setting up ssh and rsh connection using the pwdutil.pl utility
The password utility, pwdutil.pl, is bundled under the scripts directory. The users can run the utility in their script to set up the ssh and rsh connection automatically.
# ./pwdutil.pl -h Usage: Command syntax with simple format: pwdutil.pl check|configure|unconfigure ssh|rsh <hostname|IP addr> [<user>] [<password>] [<port>] Command syntax with advanced format: pwdutil.pl [--action|-a 'check|configure|unconfigure'] [--type|-t 'ssh|rsh'] [--user|-u '<user>'] [--password|-p '<password>'] [--port|-P '<port>'] [--hostfile|-f '<hostfile>'] [--keyfile|-k '<keyfile>'] [-debug|-d] <host_URI> pwdutil.pl -h | -?
Table: Options with pwdutil.pl utility
Option | Usage |
---|---|
--action|-a 'check|configure|unconfigure' | Specifies action type, default is 'check'. |
--type|-t 'ssh|rsh' | Specifies connection type, default is 'ssh'. |
--user|-u '<user>' | Specifies user id, default is the local user id. |
--password|-p '<password>' | Specifies user password, default is the user id. |
--port|-P '<port>' | Specifies port number for ssh connection, default is 22 |
--keyfile|-k '<keyfile>' | Specifies the private key file. |
--hostfile|-f '<hostfile>' | Specifies the file which list the hosts. |
-debug | Prints debug information. |
-h|-? | Prints help messages. |
<host_URI> | Can be in the following formats: <hostname> <user>:<password>@<hostname> <user>:<password>@<hostname>: <port> |
You can check, configure, and unconfigure ssh or rsh using the pwdutil.plutility. For example:
To check ssh connection for only one host:
pwdutil.pl check ssh hostname
To configure ssh for only one host:
pwdutil.pl configure ssh hostname user password
To unconfigure rsh for only one host:
pwdutil.pl unconfigure rsh hostname
To configure ssh for multiple hosts with same user ID and password:
pwdutil.pl -a configure -t ssh -u user -p password hostname1 hostname2 hostname3
To configure ssh or rsh for different hosts with different user ID and password:
pwdutil.pl -a configure -t ssh user1:password1@hostname1 user2:password2@hostname2
To check or configure ssh or rsh for multiple hosts with one configuration file:
pwdutil.pl -a configure -t ssh --hostfile /tmp/sshrsh_hostfile
To keep the host configuration file secret, you can use the 3rd party utility to encrypt and decrypt the host file with password.
For example:
### run openssl to encrypt the host file in base64 format # openssl aes-256-cbc -a -salt -in /hostfile -out /hostfile.enc enter aes-256-cbc encryption password: <password> Verifying - enter aes-256-cbc encryption password: <password> ### remove the original plain text file # rm /hostfile ### run openssl to decrypt the encrypted host file # pwdutil.pl -a configure -t ssh 'openssl aes-256-cbc -d -a -in /hostfile.enc' enter aes-256-cbc decryption password: <password>
To use the ssh authentication keys which are not under the default $
HOME/.ssh
directory, you can use --keyfile option to specify the ssh keys. For example:### create a directory to host the key pairs: # mkdir /keystore ### generate private and public key pair under the directory: # ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /keystore/id_rsa ### setup ssh connection with the new generated key pair under the directory: # pwdutil.pl -a configure -t ssh --keyfile /keystore/id_rsa user:password@hostname
You can see the contents of the configuration file by using the following command:
# cat /tmp/sshrsh_hostfile user1:password1@hostname1 user2:password2@hostname2 user3:password3@hostname3 user4:password4@hostname4 # all default: check ssh connection with local user hostname5 The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. 1 Command syntax error. 2 Ssh or rsh binaries do not exist. 3 Ssh or rsh service is down on the remote machine. 4 Ssh or rsh command execution is denied due to password is required. 5 Invalid password is provided. 255 Other unknown error.