i want to remotely ssh to my home server, and I was wondering if I could just forward port 22 with disabling password login and use pubkey authentication will be safe enough?

  • @brandontaylor1B
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    37 months ago

    As long as password auth is disabled you’re fine. No one is cracking your RSA key. You can add Fail2Ban to reduce the log noise, but security wise it’s fine.

      • @SR_Lut3t1umB
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        17 months ago

        Dont connect it to the internet too. Chances are even less likely that some navy seals kinda guys will steal you data with brute force. Also always keep explosives next to your hdds so once they do come you can explode them.

    • @DarthNihilusB
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      17 months ago

      Realistically no one is cracking my super long randomized password either. Seems fine to leave it on as backup login.

      • @upofadownB
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        17 months ago

        RSA is fine. It isn’t like you will have to worry about the length of the keys for SSH.

        • @mr_whats_it_to_youB
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          17 months ago

          Well it‘s true that one can use RSA, which is still save with keys big enough, but if someone wants so save some extra computing power and time ed25519 is the way to go.

          • @dumbasPLB
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            17 months ago

            The difference is extremely tiny because asymmetric encryption is only used at the very beginning to securely establish a symmetric key that will be used for everything else afterwards. So you would have to be running this on a smart fridge to notice the speed difference.

          • @upofadownB
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            17 months ago

            Requires an actual hardware error. Almost all implementations, including all open source SSH implementations, check that the signature is valid thus preventing a cosmic ray induced bit flip from triggering this issue and any related issue.

            What effect do hardware errors have on Ed25519?

        • @BeastmindB
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          17 months ago

          It is but if you’re going to use something security related, use the current recommendation unless you stricly can’t for legacy reason or something.

          • @upofadownB
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            17 months ago

            I think that legacy reason in this case would be already having RSA keys. The point is that you don’t have to go through the bother of replacing them.

    • @Hatta00B
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      17 months ago

      Change your port.

      No one’s cracking a proper implementation of RSA, but not every implementation is proper. A little obscurity can’t hurt.

      • @pentesticalsB
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        17 months ago

        Just waiting for everyone to come in saying you shouldn’t do this lol. Yes, changing the port is a nice little bonus. It doesn’t any extra security, but it moves you out of the way from the automated bots that scan the internet trying recent 0days. You’ll probably see a reduction of 99% traffic hitting the service and the only logs will be real people.

        • @OujiiB
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          17 months ago

          only logs will be real people.

          There are bots that scan for open ports in minutes.

          • @Karyo_TenB
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            17 months ago

            But then it’s blatantly obvious and you can behavior block.

            • @dal8mocB
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              17 months ago

              Which is easily defeated by using one block of ip addresses to gather data and another block for actually trying to exploit found ports. Unless you block the whole AS. If the attacker only uses one system with one ip they probably wouldn’t have the resources to get past ssh anyway.

              • @Karyo_TenB
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                17 months ago

                Behavior blocking can be done across many IPs.

                If you have one IP that scans port 10000, the other port 10001, and thousands of other IPs scanning just 1 port it’s still blatantly obvious.

                And if they want to scan in a less obvious manner they need to do this spaced by days.

          • @pentesticalsB
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            17 months ago

            Yes but most bots are scanning for common ports. It’s far too slow to scan 65k ports on every host. Even things like shodan only scan a handful of common ports. But you can test this yourself, expose SSH on a port number in 20-40ks, I’ve seen several weeks without a single probe.

            If you’ve ever done mass scanning you know that’s minutes is not going to to be a full scan and if you are trying to do 65k ports in a few minutes, your results will not be accurate.

    • @mshriver2B
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      17 months ago

      If you really want security you should also add UFW and restrict it to only your IP address.