When you first create a new Ubuntu 14.04 server, there are a few configuration steps that you should take early on as part of the basic setup. This will increase the security and usability of your server and will give you a solid foundation for subsequent actions.
To log into your server, you will need to know your server’s public IP address and the password for the “root” user’s account. If you have not already logged into your server, you may want to follow the first tutorial in this series, How to Connect to Your Droplet with SSH, which covers this process in detail.
If you are not already connected to your server, go ahead and log in as the root
user using the following command (substitute the highlighted word with your server’s public IP address):
Complete the login process by accepting the warning about host authenticity, if it appears, then providing your root authentication (password or private key). If it is your first time logging into the server, with a password, you will also be prompted to change the root password.
The root user is the administrative user in a Linux environment that has very broad privileges. Because of the heightened privileges of the root account, you are actually discouraged from using it on a regular basis. This is because part of the power inherent with the root account is the ability to make very destructive changes, even by accident.
The next step is to set up an alternative user account with a reduced scope of influence for day-to-day work. We’ll teach you how to gain increased privileges during the times when you need them.
Once you are logged in as root
, we’re prepared to add the new user account that we will use to log in from now on.
This example creates a new user called “demo”, but you should replace it with a user name that you like:
You will be asked a few questions, starting with the account password.
Enter a strong password and, optionally, fill in any of the additional information if you would like. This is not required and you can just hit “ENTER” in any field you wish to skip.
Now, we have a new user account with regular account privileges. However, we may sometimes need to do administrative tasks.
To avoid having to log out of our normal user and log back in as the root account, we can set up what is known as “super user” or root privileges for our normal account. This will allow our normal user to run commands with administrative privileges by putting the word sudo
before each command.
To add these privileges to our new user, we need to add the new user to the “sudo” group. By default, on Ubuntu 14.04, users who belong to the “sudo” group are allowed to use the sudo
command.
As root
, run this command to add your new user to the sudo group (substitute the highlighted word with your new user):
Now your user can run commands with super user privileges! For more information about how this works, check out this sudoers tutorial.
The next step in securing your server is to set up public key authentication for your new user. Setting this up will increase the security of your server by requiring a private SSH key to log in.
If you do not already have an SSH key pair, which consists of a public and private key, you need to generate one. If you already have a key that you want to use, skip to the Copy the Public Key step.
To generate a new key pair, enter the following command at the terminal of your local machine (ie. your computer):
Assuming your local user is called “localuser”, you will see output that looks like the following:
ssh-keygen outputGenerating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/Users/localuser/.ssh/id_rsa):
Hit return to accept this file name and path (or enter a new name).
Next, you will be prompted for a passphrase to secure the key with. You may either enter a passphrase or leave the passphrase blank.
Note: If you leave the passphrase blank, you will be able to use the private key for authentication without entering a passphrase. If you enter a passphrase, you will need both the private key and the passphrase to log in. Securing your keys with passphrases is more secure, but both methods have their uses and are more secure than basic password authentication.
This generates a private key, id_rsa
, and a public key, id_rsa.pub
, in the .ssh
directory of the localuser’s home directory. Remember that the private key should not be shared with anyone who should not have access to your servers!
After generating an SSH key pair, you will want to copy your public key to your new server. We will cover two easy ways to do this.
Note: The ssh-copy-id
method will not work on DigitalOcean if an SSH key was selected during Droplet creation. This is because DigitalOcean disables password authentication if an SSH key is present, and the ssh-copy-id
relies on password authentication to copy the key.
If you are using DigitalOcean and selected an SSH key during Droplet creation, use option 2 instead.
If your local machine has the ssh-copy-id
script installed, you can use it to install your public key to any user that you have login credentials for.
Run the ssh-copy-id
script by specifying the user and IP address of the server that you want to install the key on, like this:
After providing your password at the prompt, your public key will be added to the remote user’s .ssh/authorized_keys
file. The corresponding private key can now be used to log into the server.
Assuming you generated an SSH key pair using the previous step, use the following command at the terminal of your local machine to print your public key (id_rsa.pub
):
This should print your public SSH key, which should look something like the following:
id_rsa.pub contentsssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDBGTO0tsVejssuaYR5R3Y/i73SppJAhme1dH7W2c47d4gOqB4izP0+fRLfvbz/tnXFz4iOP/H6eCV05hqUhF+KYRxt9Y8tVMrpDZR2l75o6+xSbUOMu6xN+uVF0T9XzKcxmzTmnV7Na5up3QM3DoSRYX/EP3utr2+zAqpJIfKPLdA74w7g56oYWI9blpnpzxkEd3edVJOivUkpZ4JoenWManvIaSdMTJXMy3MtlQhva+j9CgguyVbUkdzK9KKEuah+pFZvaugtebsU+bllPTB0nlXGIJk98Ie9ZtxuY3nCKneB+KjKiXrAvXUPCI9mWkYS/1rggpFmu3HbXBnWSUdf localuser@machine.local
Select the public key, and copy it to your clipboard.
To enable the use of SSH key to authenticate as the new remote user, you must add the public key to a special file in the user’s home directory.
On the server, as the root
user, enter the following command to switch to the new user (substitute your own user name):
Now you will be in your new user’s home directory.
Create a new directory called .ssh
and restrict its permissions with the following commands:
Now open a file in .ssh called authorized_keys
with a text editor. We will use nano to edit the file:
Now insert your public key (which should be in your clipboard) by pasting it into the editor.
Hit CTRL-X
to exit the file, then Y
to save the changes that you made, then ENTER
to confirm the file name.
Now restrict the permissions of the authorized_keys file with this command:
Type this command once to return to the root
user:
Now you may SSH login as your new user, using the private key as authentication.
To read more about how key authentication works, read this tutorial: How To Configure SSH Key-Based Authentication on a Linux Server.
Now that we have our new account, we can secure our server a little bit by modifying its SSH daemon configuration (the program that allows us to log in remotely) to disallow remote SSH access to the root account.
Begin by opening the configuration file with your text editor as root:
Next, we need to find the line that looks like this:
PermitRootLogin yes
Here, we have the option to disable root login through SSH. This is generally a more secure setting since we can now access our server through our normal user account and escalate privileges when necessary.
Modify this line to “no” like this to disable root login:
PermitRootLogin no
Disabling remote root login is highly recommended on every server!
When you are finished making your changes, save and close the file using the method we went over earlier (CTRL-X
, then Y
, then ENTER
).
Now that we have made our change, we need to restart the SSH service so that it will use our new configuration.
Type this to restart SSH:
Now, before we log out of the server, we should test our new configuration. We do not want to disconnect until we can confirm that new connections can be established successfully.
Open a new terminal window on your local machine. In the new window, we need to begin a new connection to our server. This time, instead of using the root account, we want to use the new account that we created.
For the server that we showed you how to configure above, you would connect using this command. Substitute your own user name and server IP address where appropriate:
Note: If you are using PuTTY to connect to your servers, be sure to update the session’s port number to match your server’s current configuration.
You will be prompted for the new user’s password that you configured. After that, you will be logged in as your new user.
Remember, if you need to run a command with root privileges, type “sudo” before it like this:
If all is well, you can exit your sessions by typing:
At this point, you have a solid foundation for your server. You can install any of the software you need on your server now.
If you are not sure what you want to do with your server, check out the next tutorial in this series for Additional Recommended Steps for New Ubuntu 14.04 Servers. It covers things like basic firewall settings, NTP, and swap files. It also provides links to tutorials that show you how to set up common web applications. You may also want to check out this guide to learn how to enable fail2ban
to reduce the effectiveness of brute force attacks.
If you just want to explore, take a look at the rest of our community to find more tutorials. Some popular ideas are configuring a LAMP stack or a LEMP stack, which will allow you to host websites.
Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.
When creating a new Ubuntu 14.04 server, there are some basic steps that you should take to ensure that your server is secure and configured properly. This tutorial series covers connecting to your server and general security best practices, and provides links to articles that will help you start running your own web server or application.
This tutorial series helps sysadmins set up a new web server using the LEMP stack, focusing on Nginx setup with virtual blocks. This will let you serve multiple websites from one Droplet.
You’ll start by setting up your Ubuntu 14.04 server and end with multiple virtual blocks set up for your websites. An Nginx configuration guide is included at the end for reference.
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You can type !ref in this text area to quickly search our full set of tutorials, documentation & marketplace offerings and insert the link!
When I try to restart the SSH server after some modifications I get this error:
WARNING: Usage of “server” is deprecated, it has been renamed to “rspserver”! Starting service Echo… Echo Server - Version 1.0
General Parameters: Pool Handle = EchoPool Reregistration Interval = 30.000s Local Addresses = { all } Runtime Limit = off Policy Settings Policy Type = RoundRobin Load Degradation = 0.000% Load DPF = 0.000% Weight = 0 Weight DPF = 0.000% 20-Apr-2014 01:51:53.0852: P3130.7f57bfb19780@stuff rserpoolsocket.c:354 doRegistration() 20-Apr-2014 01:51:53.0857: Error: (Re-)Registration failed: no registrar available Registration: Identifier = $62292d97
Plus, my shell prompt become’s locked and I have to reconnect.
This is with a fresh copy of Ubuntu 14.04 installed minutes ago.
Fred
It seems that denyhosts is marked unmaintained for 14.04.
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I think you meant to say under Step Four:
“replacing “demo” with the user you created:”
@Dustin Fixed. Thanks for catching that!
@Rick Roberts: Right, denyhosts has been dead upstream for awhile, and Ubuntu and Debian have decided to stop providing it. Check out:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/433924/package-denyhosts-in-ubuntu-trusty-tahr-is-deleted-temporary-or-forever
You should use fail2ban. I’ll remove the link to denyhosts above. Thanks!
If anyone following step 5 gets stuck with a “Connection refused” error (like I did), there may be a typo in your config file. While still logged in as root in your other terminal window, you can run the following to test the ssh config file for issues:
sshd -T
If there is an issue with a config file, it will tell you which one and on what line.
If you logged out for some reason, you can use DO’s console access to log in and fix any issues.
Cheers
Thanks for posting this!! (sshd -T) I had a typo myself Allowuser should of been Allowusers and I couldn’t see it. This was driving me mad as everything looked correct the ssh service would start but I couldn’t get anything from netstat or ps. I kept looking at my configs just couldn’t see the typo lol! I read your post and went oh, ran the command and bam there it was! thwarted by a single character haha!
Thanks again great very happy :)
Thank you! Luckily I came across your post as soon as I encountered the issue.
I have followed this tutorial and it is all working, but now I have followed the sftp tutorial too and it keeps checking port 22. With this tutorial I changed that port “to something in between 1025 and 65536”, so my question is: how do I know get SFTP to work?
Piet:
If you’ve changed the port that SSH operates on, you can tell the
sftp
command or your file transfer client the new port you selected.If you are running from the command line, you can specify a non-default port like this. If the port you selected is 4444, the command would look like:
sftp -P 4444 username@server.com
If you are using an (S)FTP client to connect to the server, you can input the new port in the options. For instance, in Filezilla, there is a field on the right-hand side labeled “Port” as you can see here:
https://i.imgur.com/4FBl4vX.png
Let us know if that works for you or not.
I may be missing something, but if the point is to make it more secure by removing roots access, and giving another user the permissions… haven’t we just chased our own tail?
We’re exactly where we started, except that it’s now also a username they need to know.
@drphilbobaggins: Having to guess the username is surprisingly helpful when it comes to server security. Run a server for long enough, and you’ll see many brute force attempts to SSH into the root account. So if you don’t want to disable the root user, at least create a new user and set PermitRootLogin to no in your SSH configuration.
I am using putty to log into my server, I followed the tutorial, added user changed port and log in with putty under new settings I now receive the message: “server refused our key”
I am then prompted for pass, for the new user I enter it and gain access. I am not sure what I have missed in the tutorial that is stopping the SSH key from authenticating.
This authenticated when it was on default 22 and login as root.
Went through this guide perfectly without any problem. Thank you for the write up Justin.
It works, searched for putty tutorials, I had to add my public key for my new user /.ssh/authorized_keys and chmod 700 and 600
Please add in the tutorial username ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL for those that dont want to type password for sudo each time. It is not practical to type password each time thanks
@adsf: I wouldn’t recommend doing that. It’s insecure to leave sudo access unprotected, it’s actually more secure to type out your password every one in a while.
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@adsf: If typing the password is an annoyance for you, type “sudo su” to temporarily log in as root. This is a much better option than leaving sudo access unprotected.
When I use FileZilla and try delete index.php from /var/www/html/ I get - permission denied. How send sudo to ftp-client?
@timothybernerslee: You can’t use sudo or connect as root using FTP. Use SFTP instead – it’s much more secure (while the name is very similar to “FTP”, it’s not related to the FTP protocol at all): <a href=“https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-use-filezilla-to-transfer-and-manage-files-securely-on-your-vps”>https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-use-filezilla-to-transfer-and-manage-files-securely-on-your-vps</a>.
Make sure your user has write permissions to index.php so you can delete it: <pre>sudo chown youruser /var/www/html/index.php</pre>
After going through these steps I’m finding that ssh access is requiring a password to login (using the new user btw and not root as that is of course disabled) , in this case ssh keys were setup during droplet creation, is there another step to take to rectify this so no password is required for ssh with this new user?
Note: initially root@droplet-ip ssh is working out of the box with no password required on this same laptop/droplet combo.
Thanks!
I had the same problem and it has been solved.
Apparently, the “authorized_keys” file’s owner need to be the account username, NOT root. Login as root to change the file’s owner “chown user:user authorized_keys” will solve the problem.
You need to make sure that your public key is in the authorized_keys file for your user. Run: <pre> cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh user@your.ip.address “cat >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys” </pre>
I got the Public Key in section 4. How can I obtain my private key? That not mentioned here and its a most confusing things newbies like me.
@bijuoosmail Running the
ssh-keygen
command will produce two files. Your private key,id_rsa
, which should stay on your local computor, and a public key that is copied to the serverid_rsa.pub
@astarr yes its definitely in there, I’ve tried all kinds of combinations, like taking all other keys out of authorized_keys and leaving only the public key from the new pair I create, but still only the ssh login will work that is setup via DO droplet creation, no other key pair works, still requires password. Also permissions of the authorized_keys file are as they should be.
Anything else I could be missing?
In your <code>/etc/ssh/sshd_config</code> file did you add an <code>AllowUsers</code> line? If so make sure your user is listed.
Thanks @astarr I eventually figured a way to get it working, I had to do the following: <pre> eval
ssh-agent -s
ssh-add ~/.ssh/bitbucketkey </pre> and add this line… <pre> IdentityFile ~/.ssh/bitbucketkey </pre> to ~/.ssh/configNot sure if all of it is necessary, but following various error messages these steps resolved them and has got things working!
Hello! I’m really REALLY new Ubuntu user. I’m trying to do this procedure to make wordpress work on my pc (I got Ubuntu 14.04 LTS), yet when I do the first step (ssh root@server_ip_address) i got this message: ssh: connect to host 192.168.1.5 port 22: Connection refused Don’t have any clue what that’s it means… so… please… some help… Thank you very much!!! :-)
@manuel.fernando.camperos: Are you trying to install Wordpress locally to your PC? If so, then you don’t need to use SSH. SSH is a way to securely connect to a remote computer. Most articles on installing Wordpress will assume that you are installing it to a server remotely.
@astarr Thank you for your answer!! Yes that’s exactly what I’m trying to do. On the “How To Install Wordpress on Ubuntu 14.04” tutorial on step four they used “the same account that we set up during the initial server setup guide, which we called demo.” So I thought It was something important that I had to do… Isn’t? Once again thank you for your comments. :-)
Changing the port, looking at the comments, seems to cause a lot of trouble to users and provides absolutely no additional security.
May I suggest removing that section or at least strongly indicate that it’s for the overly paranoid?
The LAMP Stack link on this page should be updated to the tutorial for 14:
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-linux-apache-mysql-php-lamp-stack-on-ubuntu-14-04
Authentication:
LoginGraceTime 120 PermitRootLogin without-password StrictModes yes
Mine looks like the above, it doesn’t just say:
PermitRootLogin yes
So how should it be changed?
@gp+digitalocean
Of course it provides additional security, do I want to target servers that I first have to sniff out the ssh port on? Or would it be easier to get the idiots who keep it at the default?
Yes it causes problems, if you want something that “just works” get an apple product, it’s caused me hours and hours of frustration too, but each time I learn something new. Imagine how hard things would be if you were using windows for the first few times? But most of us go into the device manager or command prompt like pros and troubleshoot and fix things easily.
What ports, IPs and protocols we listen for
Port 2027
Use these options to restrict which interfaces/protocols sshd will bind to
I’m using the above port and it won’t let me connect, I can connect fine under port 22. There is a step missing here?? I’ve had this server up for 10min so I haven’t done anything with IPtables.
How do we tell it to not use port 22 anymore and use our chosen port instead (4444 in the article)?
@SaM5246:
Means that you can only login to the root account using ssh key pairs. That’s a pretty secure setting, but to disable root login completely set:
You need to both update the port in your server configuration and pass it to the ssh command:
ssh -p 4444 demo@server_ip_address
Also, remember to restart the ssh server after making configuration changes:service ssh restart
I had to do the following to prevent needing to enter a password when I logged in as the new user
From my local machine;
Replace NEW_USERNAME with the user you created at the top of this tutorial and IP-ADDRESS-HERE with your droplet’s IP address. Naturally, you’ll need to have created the public key on your local machine beforehand (you can do that by following this tutorial : https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-ssh-keys–2
On my VPS with another company running Ubuntu 14.04 it took me to VIM when I used the visudo command. If that happens to you just remember the commands below. For the most part I use “nano” to edit files which is what is assumed in this tutorial.
Hit the Escape key; that goes into command mode. Then you can type
Now I know why, nano was not installed ;) If you wish to follow the tutorial above exactly and don’t have “nano” just do the following
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install nano
After i’ve changed user, i can’t open var/log/apache2 (Permission Denied) .“root” is owner. I’ve changed permissions to 755 but i think this solution is insecure. Can you suggest more reliable solution? Thank you.
I don’t have permission to write/save in existing files with the new user. Aren’t we giving all the permissions to that user with ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL? I’m confussed.
Nice tutorial. Everything worked as stated for me. Thanks.
With this setup I am no longer able to upload or edit files over sftp with Filezilla even though I can connect with my new user name and port and view files. Additionally, there are now some directories that I am not able to view the files for. This must be something to do with permissions yet I specified them as directed using:
demo ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
What else could it be?
anagram: Your new user has not been given write access to the system files, but it has been given
sudo
access. This means that while the account itself does not have access, the user can precede commands withsudo
to execute them with elevated privileges.As for connecting with Filezilla or a similar client, you are connecting using SFTP, which utilizes the SSH protocol to allow file transfer. However,
sudo
is not available when connecting through sftp. If you must modify system files or upload content to restricted locations, you will have to authenticate as the root user or upload them to a directory you have access to and then later move them over to the appropriate location by logging in through SSH.jellingwood: Then the best option would be to not restrict the root user until after all settings have been configured on the server and the site has been setup and files have been moved over from a previous host.
Is there any way to give your new profile these elevated privileges so SFTP on the new profile works the same as the root profile?
The idea behind making and utilizing a new account is that operating as the root user is dangerous. If you give your new account the same access as root, you will then have two accounts with unrestricted access, which means that you have significantly hindered your security.
If you need to upload files to a web directory, one option is to give ownership of the directory to your new user account using the
chown
command. The general syntax is:If you wish to give ownership over all of the files and subdirectories within a directory, you’ll have to add the
-R
flag to recursively assign the new ownership:Use these commands with care, and probably only at your web root. If you need to modify configuration files, you should log in using SSH.
jellingwood: Thanks. Giving access to the web root is really what I was thinking of.
Hi, everytime I log into console I make sure to get the latest updates:
Since I’m a newbie, I don’t know if the updates are automatically applied to the existing server or do I need to do something to install those updates? I’m currently on nginx(LEMP) with Zendopcache. Thanks in advance!
Okidoki:
The command that you listed updates your local package cache. Basically, it makes sure that your system has an up-to-date list of the most current packages. It does not actually download or install any new versions.
To update your server, you can use
sudo apt-get upgrade
. This will upgrade all of the packages on your system that do not depend on new packages. If you would like to upgrade all of the packages including those that might need some additional packages, you can typesudo apt-get dist-upgrade
.Regardless of which version of the above you choose, you should always run
sudo apt-get update
beforehand so that your system has the latest information about the available packages.Hope that helps.
Jellingwood: Thank you so much! I’ll use
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
from now on aftersudo apt-get update
Cool. Great tutorial mate!
Thank you so much for this. I love DO!
Step 5 AllowUsers demo where in the file do you put that is it directly below PermitRootLogin ???
Cheers
Mal
You can add it wherever you want, but I personally would prefer adding it to the very bottom of the file.
Thanks for this guide—it provides some useful and essential tips. During the process of setting up my first Droplet, I’ve discovered a couple of points that I believe are worth mentioning.
Default timezone
The default timezone is set to
America/New_York
, which may not suit everyone (if they’re not in New York, users’ local timezones or UTC may work better). I’d suggest adding a step that includes this command to update the timezone:Sudo permissions for the new user
There is no need to use
visudo
to explicitly specify sudo permissions for the new non-root user—by default, Ubuntu servers are configured to grant these to any user in thesudo
system group. So the same effect can be achieved by simply adding the ‘demo’ user to that group:Cheers, John
Im just getting
When i try to reconnect to my server through the new port. Made sure everything is the same as the rest of the steps so no idea whats gone wrong and google has failed me.
Anyone got any ideas?
Have you restarted ssh after setting the new port?
Perhaps this has been said before, but editing the sudoers file isn’t really the best idea. There is already a group set up for this purpose! Do not run visudo; run this instead:
usermod -aG sudo <username>
This will add sudo privileges to the user without editing a volatile file.
Thanks a lot for the guide.
A definite must for Ubuntu servers. :)
Regards
Nice tutorial!
One question though: What’s the practical difference between setting
PermitRootLogin no
andsudo passwd -l
which essentially locks the root account?I mean apart from switching to root with “su” or “sudo -s”.
The difference between the two is that locking the account with
sudo passwd -l
will prevent any password-based logins to the account, but will not do anything to prevent logging in with an SSH key.On the other hand, the
PermitRootLogin no
in thesshd_config
file will stop both password and key-base logins, but only through SSH. For instance, on DigitalOcean, you could still log into the root account if going through the web console, because that does not rely on SSH.If you truly want to lock the account from both directions, you can employ both of these techniques.
I forgot about the SSH key login, thanks for clarification!
I am new to the cloud world. I wanted to setup a LEMP server in Amazon EC2. Do you think these steps are required for that? I see that Amazon already restricts root usage and expects you to use the user named ‘ubuntu’. Hence this question.
You can just skip steps 3 & 4 and follow the rest. :)
I followed all the steps above. Disabled root login and Allowing only a non root user to login. But when I fire Putty to test and try logging using ‘root’, I am still allowed. Why?
I am using SSH keys to login.
@nspeaks: If you disabled the root account and are still able to login as root, it may indicate that your settings were not applied.
Did you restart the
sshd
service by typing this?Help please, I followed this tutorial and this one: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-wordpress-on-ubuntu-14-04. The result: sudo does not work anymore and ssh denies me access. My attempt was to just setup wordpress on digital ocean and ubuntu.
I am a ubuntu and wordpress beginner and I thought i was fine because the tutorial says beginner under “difficulty”. And now nothing works and I’m worried i broke something bigger by following this tutorial.
sudo chown -R demo:www-data *
And now first of all i cannot login, and second is that comes up:sudo: error in /etc/sudo.conf, line 0 while loading plugin `sudoers_policy' sudo: fatal error, unable to load plugins
and it also said something with “uid has to be 0”
I cannot reproduce the errors from yesterday because i cannot even login today, after i signed out the first time.
Please help!!! I’m super desperate.
@miriamneubauer: I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but unfortunately, it looks like you made a mistake that is pretty much unrepairable. You will almost certainly have to start over.
In the WordPress article, instead of changing the directory ownership of the
/var/www/html
directory, it looks like you may have changed the permissions of a huge portion of, or perhaps your entire server.This command:
Operates on the directory level, so it must be preceded by a directory change to the location that you would like to modify. This is done directly above that command with this line:
It looks like either you did not type this directory change command, or that there was an error that prevented you from changing to the specified directory. Because of this, subsequently, when you used the
chown
command, it targeted a much larger scope than the command was intended to.The best option at this point is to start over completely with a fresh server. Again, sorry that you ran into these problems, and I hope you have better luck on your next attempt.
@jellingwood thanks for the fast reply! when you say “start with a fresh server”, do you mean i have to restart the wordpress&ubuntu&digitalocean installation and get a new dropplet on DO? Or does it mean something along the lines of completely reconfiguring my computer?
I cannot retrace at this point if I was or was not in the right directory. For the future, I think this could be made more clearly in the tutorial :D as the tutorial says it’s for beginners. There should be some clear warning or stop-sign to double-tripe check that you are in the correct directory BEFORE entering such a potentially devastating command like
Looking forward to your reply, Miriam
I’m able to set create a new user but am having no luck changing port numbers. I’ve followed all steps but always end up having to access via DO’s console and reset the port number back to 22.
Also, for some reason, now even root access is denied when using putty. It prompts me with “Access Denied”, even though I’m able to login as root user in DO’s console.
Hi there,
Thanks for the tutorial! Just a quick heads-up here: it seems that a lot of the code snippets are improperly escaped. Lots of <pre> tags and such showing through. :)
Should be all fixed now. Thanks!
Looks good. Thanks! :)
The formatting is broken, code snippets have html tags in them
There was a small problem with our Markdown renderer. Should be good now. Thanks!
Hi ,
I have tried to automate some of the initial server setup via a script. Hopefully it will be helpful. https://github.com/jsinix/scripts/commit/51c7bf99fd25d00e0451e2780650d7ffb82fd899
Take care
after I set-upped my ssh port to 1994, and then unfortunately I suddenly got disconnected from the internet before I check the login, and then when I tried to login, it kept giving me “Operation timed out” how can I solve this now ?
Thanks,
@abdullah.alfaqeir: If you are using DigitalOcean, you can login using your password from the DigitalOcean console in the Control Panel. If your server is hosted elsewhere, you will have to find another way to log in.
I changed my default ssh port, and in testing it could not ssh to the the new port. Checked my log in /var/log/syslog showed a bunch of lines with [UFW BLOCK] , due to ufw not being setup with the new ssh port. see www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/additional-recommended-steps-for-new-ubuntu-14-04-servers
Going through this, I noted that the use of exit to return to
root
is deprecated in favor of logout.When I opened ssh config file there was no line as PermitRootLogin yes
There is line as 'UserPrevilageSeperate . Is it the same thing?
@samp: No, the
UsePrivilegeSeparation
setting is different.If you don’t a
PermitRootLogin
line, you can feel free to add it to the file. Be careful with the spelling and case.This comment has been deleted
I’ve been through the tutorial several times over, still no luck logging in without supplying my regular password. As suggested in the comments I added
AllowUsers demo
to the/etc/ssh/sshd_config
file on the server, substituting my own login name fordemo
.I also tried adding
AuthorizedKeysFile %h/.ssh/authorized_keys
to the config as well but this actually bars me from logging in asdemo
altogether giving me aPermission denied (publickey,password).
Not sure where else to go.
I finally got public key authentication working, but I don’t understand why my fix works. I ended up leaving
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
at its defaults, but instead of trying to give my key pair a custom name I letssh-keygen
use the default namesid_rsa
andid_rsa.pub
. Since I want public key authentication for root as well I’ll have to do some more digging to get additional custom key names working.EDIT: I didn’t realize the file name
id_rsa
was so critical. I found the-i
option forssh
which should let me select a different key pair but no luck. I still have to enter a password to log in as root.I realize I could just disable root login, but it bothers me that I can’t get this working.
Great success! Quite a combo of user error and knowledge-gap on my end here. Looks like I didn’t save the public key in
/root/.ssh/authorized_keys
correctly. Fixed it and I was able to use my key pair to log into root. (BTW I did disable root login after fixing this)The final head scratcher was that I could still log in using my standard credentials even with public key authentication correctly working. I didn’t realize that that must be disabled explicitly in
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
by changing the flag on the linePasswordAuthentication
fromyes
tono
.@pe8ter: Awesome! I’m glad that you got it figured out and sorry I wasn’t able to help over the weekend. Thanks for posting back with your solutions. I’m sure some other people will be thankful for that!
After I have created my new user
mynewuser
and try to ssh in with my new user, I run the following command:ssh -p 4444 mynewuser@my_server_ip_address
It then attempts to log in for a few minutes, but eventually times out…
ssh_exchange_identification: read: Operation timed out
Thoughts?
Do you have a firewall set up? What’s the output of the following command?
Upon setting root privileges for my user, I tried to add my public key to the new remote user. In nano, I got the following error:
Anybody know how I can fix?
I did exactly written on Step Four and I still can access to my user from the terminal with password from other computers.I don’t have the authentication key(id_rsa)saved in my other computer. Is this how it works?
@gio1044686: You’re exactly right. After you test that the SSH key does work, you can disable password authentication for your account by following the steps here.
This was originally not included in this guide because we were concerned about users locking themselves out of their servers, but we are considering changing this.
Thank you for the link.Working great now!
Thanks for the helpful tutorial… now, to get my Django admin working!
Nice tutorial, but I’d suggest replacing the Add Public Key to New Remote User section with: ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/your_key -o PubkeyAuthentication=no your_user@your_host Note that .pub is automatically appended to key file name (see: man ssh-copy-id) This creates the ~/.ssh with 700 access rights and copies a single key, voila!
My apache2 installation is incomplete, and after a lot of googling, purging and reinstalling I am in the same place. The console gives me:
============================================================================= Setting up apache2 (2.4.7-1ubuntu4.1) … Enabling module mpm_event. cp: cannot stat ‘/usr/share/apache2/default-site/index.html’: No such file or directory dpkg: error processing package apache2 (–configure): subprocess installed post-installation script returned error exit status 1 Processing triggers for ureadahead (0.100.0-16) … Processing triggers for ufw (0.34~rc-0ubuntu2) … Errors were encountered while processing: apache2 E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1)
I really want to clear this up and get a clean proper installation of apache2 up so I can continue with this tutorial, any help would be appreciated!
This comment has been deleted
Thanks for this tutorial, I have done this a few times now but still like to have an “instruction manual” at hand and this fits the ticket nicely.
Out of curiosity, by enabling SSH access for demo , do you also prevent the possibility of logging in with a password?
I have a very secure password (which I use for sudo commands etc) but now that I connect with SSH, I’d like to know that there is no way of brute-forcing the password.
You can never be too secure =0p
@qbdsolutionsltd: When you enable SSH keys for a new user, password authentication is still configured. After you’ve thoroughly tested your SSH keys to make sure they are working properly, it is a good idea to disable password authentication for the reasons you state. You can find the steps to do that in this guide.
I hope that helps!
This comment has been deleted
I’ved followed all the tutorial step by step. I’m using Windows ( so Putty as client and Putty_gen as key generator ). I’d copy the public key in authorized_key 's file, but when i try to connect via Putty, it requires password and not the SSL. i’d try to use the public key ( with another session of Putty ), and it answer me with the following error :
type 2 ( protocol error ) : “bad service request ssh-connection”
on the active connection i gived the command ssh -vvv myuser@myipaddress
and the extract of the debug is :
debug2: key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_rsa ((nil)), debug2: key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_dsa ((nil)), debug2: key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ecdsa ((nil)), debug2: key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ed25519 ((nil)), debug1: Authentications that can continue: publickey,password debug3: start over, passed a different list publickey,password debug3: preferred gssapi-keyex,gssapi-with-mic,publickey,keyboard-interactive,password debug3: authmethod_lookup publickey debug3: remaining preferred: keyboard-interactive,password debug3: authmethod_is_enabled publickey debug1: Next authentication method: publickey debug1: Trying private key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_rsa debug3: no such identity: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_rsa: No such file or directory debug1: Trying private key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_dsa debug3: no such identity: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_dsa: No such file or directory debug1: Trying private key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ecdsa debug3: no such identity: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ecdsa: No such file or directory debug1: Trying private key: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ed25519 debug3: no such identity: /home/myuser/.ssh/id_ed25519: No such file or directory debug2: we did not send a packet, disable method debug3: authmethod_lookup password debug3: remaining preferred: ,password debug3: authmethod_is_enabled password debug1: Next authentication method: password
Any help, pls?
@zerobyte: I’m not entirely familiar with PuTTY, but from the logs from the second PuTTY session, it looks like it is unable to find your private key. Just to be clear, you are supposed to add the public key to the authorized keys file on the server. You use the private key on your local computer to connect. Can you see if the
ssh
command works correctly if you explicitly point to your private key using the-i
option?It would look something like this:
Usually, the private key that you generate will be called
id_rsa
and the public key that you should copy to theauthorized_keys
file should be calledid_rsa.pub
. Hopefully that helps a bit.… maybe I’m nitpicking, but the link at the end for what’s next… it doesn’t cover fail2ban there as the description following the link implies it would. It is covered here though, https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-and-use-fail2ban-on-ubuntu-14-04
Great tutorial! I have few issues:
I have tried sshd -T as @tamara said but can’t follow and understand what to do. At the beginning I get: Could not load host key: /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key
How can I upload files from my mac to my server? I tried this
But the console always respond like this
Using SCP refuses the connections on port 22. This is what I’m doing now
And this is the message that I’m getting:
I was missing 2 important settings in this tutorial:
Optional: 3. add swap file // important when running small droplets for intensive tasks (e.g. mail servers)
not
use
Hi. I completed all steps successfully. But when I try to ssh to my new user like ssh -p [NEW_PORT] newuser@SERVER_IP_ADDRESS, it doesn’t ask a password, just logging in. Did I do something wrong, or is it the way it does?
‘where to go from here’ links to further steps and says that it will cover things like fail2ban - however the linked page does not cover fail2ban
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/additional-recommended-steps-for-new-ubuntu-14-04-servers
@jellingwood possible problem with the additional steps and the fail2ban article. as far as I can see, the fail2ban article assumes iptables - but the additional steps article uses ufw
For those who have trouble logging in with ssh key and falls back to password, the problem for me was the permissions, more specifically the group that
.ssh
folder and.ssh/autherized_keys
belonged to. For me this did the trick:chown $USER:$USER ~/.ssh -R
For more information this post on askubuntu really helped