search for: feitian

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2010 Mar 15
0
Donation of 5 FEITIAN PKI smart cards to OpenSSH project
Dear friends, We are aware that OpenSSH recently supports smart cards. FEITIAN and Gooze http://www.gooze.eu kindly offers 5 FEITIAN PKI smart cards to OpenSSH developers interested with smart card support. If you are interested, please apply here: http://www.gooze.eu/feitian-pki-free-software-developer-card The FEITIAN PKI card is completely compliant with GNU/Linux. Kind...
2012 Jan 20
1
Donation of 10 ePass2003 to the OpenSSH project
...http://download.gooze.eu/pki/iso/ The ePass2003 would be the ideal companion of OpenSSH to protect the server key. If you are interested by the ePass2003 and you are an OpenSSH contributor (not only user, you should be a past contributor), you may request a free ePass2003 here: http://www.gooze.eu/feitian-epass-2003-free-software-developer-kit Hoping the best to help the OpenSSH community. Kind regards, -- Jean-Michel Pour? - Gooze - http://www.gooze.eu -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/x-pkcs7-signatu...
2010 Apr 06
3
Using OpenSSH with smart cards HOWTO
On Tue, 2010-04-06 at 15:52 +0300, Lars Nooden wrote: > You might wish to focus on sftp instead of scp. Okay, I will have a look. I had some problems: 1) I would like to store smart card information -o PKCS11Provider=/usr/lib/opensc-pkcs11.so in /etc/ssh/ssh-config. Is it possible? 2) ssh-add -s does not seem to work. Read:
2010 Mar 17
20
[Bug 1736] New: OpenSSH doesn't seem to work with my MuscleCard PKCS#11 library
https://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1736 Summary: OpenSSH doesn't seem to work with my MuscleCard PKCS#11 library Product: Portable OpenSSH Version: 5.4p1 Platform: ix86 OS/Version: Linux Status: NEW Severity: normal Priority: P2 Component: Smartcard AssignedTo:
2019 Nov 01
10
U2F support in OpenSSH HEAD
...ot; stands for "security key"). If you're not familiar with U2F, this is an open standard for making inexpensive hardware security tokens. These are easily the cheapest way for users to get a hardware-backed keypair and there is a good range of vendors who sell them including Yubico, Feitian, Thetis and Kensington. Hardware-backed keys offer the benefit of being considerably more difficult to steal - an attacker typically has to steal the physical token (or at least persistent access to it) in order to steal the key. Since there are a number of ways to talk to U2F devices, including U...