NAME
skey
—
one-time password user
database
DESCRIPTION
The /etc/skey directory contains user records for the S/Key one-time password authentication system.
Records take the form of files within /etc/skey where each file is named for the user whose record it contains. For example, /etc/skey/root would hold root's S/Key record.
The mode for /etc/skey should be 01730 and it should be owned by root and group auth. Individual records within /etc/skey should be owned by the user they describe and be mode 0600. To access S/Key records, a process must run as group auth.
Each record consists of five lines:
- The name of the user the record describes. This should be the same as the name of the file.
- The hash type used for this entry; one of md4, md5, sha1, or rmd160. The default is md5.
- The sequence number. This is a decimal number between one and one thousand. Each time the user authenticates via S/Key this number is decremented by one.
- A seed used along with the sequence number and the six S/Key words to compute the value.
- The value expected from the crunching of the user's seed, sequence number and the six S/Key words. When the result matches this value, authentication is considered to have been successful.
FILES
- /etc/skey
EXAMPLES
Here is a sample /etc/skey file for root:
root md5 99 obsd36521 1f4359a3764b675d