ovh / the-bastion
- понедельник, 2 ноября 2020 г. в 00:24:58
Perl
Authentication, authorization, traceability and auditability for SSH accesses.
Bastions are a cluster of machines used as the unique entry point by operational teams (such as sysadmins, developers, database admins, ...) to securely connect to devices (servers, virtual machines, cloud instances, network equipment, ...), usually using ssh
.
Bastions provides mechanisms for authentication, authorization, traceability and auditability for the whole infrastructure.
Learn more by reading the blog post series that announced the release:
Please see the online documentation, or the corresponding text-based version found in the doc/
folder.
This is a good way to test The Bastion within seconds, but read the FAQ if you're serious about using this in production.
OK, let's run the docker image:
docker run -d -p 22 --name bastiontest ovhcom/the-bastion:sandbox-latest
Get your public SSH key at hand, then configure the first administrator account:
docker exec -it bastiontest /opt/bastion/bin/admin/setup-first-admin-account.sh poweruser auto
We're now up and running with the default configuration! Let's setup a handy bastion alias, and test the info
command:
PORT=$(docker port bastiontest | cut -d: -f2)
alias bastion="ssh poweruser@127.0.0.1 -tp $PORT -- "
bastion --osh info
It should greet you as being a bastion admin, which means you have access to all commands. Let's enter interactive mode:
bastion -i
This is useful to call several --osh
plugins in a row. Now we can ask for help to see all plugins:
$> help
If you have a remote machine you want to try to connect to through the bastion, fetch your egress key:
$> selfListEgressKeys
Copy this public key to the remote machine's authorized_keys
under the .ssh/
folder of the account you want to connect to, then:
$> selfAddPersonalAccess --host <remote_host> --user <remote_account_name> --port-any
$> ssh <remote_account_name>@<remote_host>
Note that you can connect directly without using interactive mode, with:
bastion <remote_account_name>@<remote_machine_host_or_ip>
That's it! Additional documentation is available under the doc/
folder and online.
Be sure to check the help of the bastion (bastion --help
) and the help of each osh plugin (bastion --osh command --help
).
Also don't forget to customize your bastion.conf
file, which can be found in /etc/bastion/bastion.conf
(for Linux).
Linux distros below are tested with each release, but as this is a security product, you are warmly advised to run it on the latest up-to-date stable version of your favorite OS:
*: Note that these versions have no MFA support. Any other so-called "modern" Linux version are not tested with each release, but should work with no or minor adjustments.
The code is also known to work correctly under:
Other BSD variants partially work but are unsupported and discouraged as they have a severe limitation over the maximum number of supplementary groups (causing problems for group membership and restricted commands checks), no filesystem-level ACL support and missing MFA:
When hell is breaking loose on all your infrastructures and/or your network, bastions still need to be the last component standing because you need them to access the rest of your infrastructure... to be able to actually fix the problem. Hence reliability is key.
perltidy
perlcritic
Even with the most conservative, precautionous and paranoid coding process, code has bugs, so it shouldn't be trusted blindly. Hence the bastion doesn't trust its own code. It leverages the operating system security primitives to get additional security, as seen below.
Uses the well-known and trusted UNIX Discretionary Access Control:
The bastion main script is declared as the bastion user's system shell:
bash
-like) shell access on the systemThe code is modular
ssh
access to other machinesAll the code needing extended system privileges is separated from the main code, in modules called helpers
sudo
sudoers
configuration is attached to a system group specific to the command, which is granted to accounts on a need-to-use basissudoers
configuration-T
) is used for all code running under sudo
, preventing any user-input to interfere with the logic, by halting execution immediatelysudo
doesn't trust its caller and re-checks every inputsyslog
, which should also be sent to a remote syslog server to ensure even bastion administrators can't tamper their tracks, and/orsqlite3
databases for easy searchingLicensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.