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1password-ssh-utils

Utilities for storing and loading SSH keys with 1Password. Use a unique key for every host you connect to, without worrying about keeping them straight across your local machines.

Installation

Dependencies

These executables (op and jq) must be available on PATH.

You should run op signin at least once before using these scripts in order to cache your basic account information. See "1Password Accounts" for more information.

Adding the scripts

Clone the repo anywhere on your computer and add the bin folder to your PATH. For example, with bash:

git clone https://github.com/eritbh/1password-ssh-utils.git ~/.1password-ssh-utils
echo 'export PATH="$HOME/.1password-ssh-utils/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc

Setting up your SSH config

The fetch utility stores your keys in a dedicated directory, ideally one that will not be written to disk. It also creates an SSH config file that maps the host and username specified for each key to the fetched key file. In order to use theses keys for authentication, you must include the generated config file in your own local config via an Include directive. For example:

Include /dev/shm/op-ssh-utils/ssh_config

Note that the path to this file may be different on systems where /dev/shm is not available; see the "Environment" section for more information.

Automatically fetch keys before using SSH

In many shells, you can define an alias for the ssh command which ensures your keys are fetched before connecting to a server, like so:

alias ssh="op-ssh-fetch -n && ssh"

Usage

Note that non-interactive execution is not supported for any of these scripts, since op signin is required for all scripts and itself requires interactive password input.

Create a new SSH item in the vault

$ op-ssh-create -H <hostname>

Create a new vault item associated with the given host and the current username, generating a new SSH key specifically for that user on that host, and optionally register the new key for local use.

  • Use -u user to log into the host as user rather than your current username. TODO: -H hostname should NOT be given in user@host format right now because I don't know quite enough sed magic to parse things like that.
  • Use -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa to use an existing keypair, ~/.ssh/id_rsa and ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub, instead of generating a new keypair.

Pull all SSH items in the vault for use locally

$ op-ssh-fetch

Search for SSH key items in your vault and register them for local use.

  • Use -n to do nothing if keys already exist. This is useful for shell aliases to only display the password prompt once per login.

Remove all local SSH credentials

$ op-ssh-remove

Completely deletes the storage directory, undoing op-ssh-fetch.

Environment

The location where keys and the temporary SSH config file are stored is given by the OP_SSH_STORAGEDIR environment variable, defaulting to $TMPDIR/op-ssh-utils. The TMPDIR environment variable defaults to /dev/shm or /tmp, whichever is available. /dev/shm is preferred since it is guaranteed to hold keys in memory, whereas /tmp may write to disk on some systems. Particularly if /dev/shm is not available, you may wish to mount your own tmpfs filesystem somewhere else and point TMPDIR to that location instead.

Within this location, the SSH config file is stored in ssh_config, and key pairs are stored in the keys subdirectory according to the UUID of their associated 1Password item.

1Password Accounts

Normally, running op signin at least once before using these scripts caches some of your 1Password account details in your home directory. This cached account is what this script will attempt to log in as by default. The full invocation may look something like this:

eval $(op signin my.1password.com [email protected] YOUR-SECRET-KEY)

If you would like to use a different account for this script than the cached one, you can pass additional arguments to op-ssh-fetch and op-ssh-create which will be passed through directly to op signin. For example:

op-ssh-fetch my.1password.com [email protected] YOUR-SECRET-KEY

See op signin --help for details about what arguments are expected.