Create an integration to manage access to SSH servers
SSH servers are secure, remote access points that allow users to connect to and manage systems over encrypted connections.
Through this integration, Apono enables managing secure Just-in-Time (JIT) access to SSH servers. Admins can create access flows for specific SSH servers and define approval processes and access durations for different users, groups, and shifts.
When a user's access request is approved, Apono creates a certificate that grants access to the server and assigns the requester to the appropriate access group(s). Apono may also use the user's default Linux group.
Item | Description |
---|---|
You can also use the steps below to integrate with Apono using Terraform.
In step 10, instead of clicking Confirm, follow the Are you integrating with Apono using Terraform? guidance.
Follow these steps to complete the integration:
On the Catalog tab, click SSH. The Connect Integration page appears.
Under Discovery, click Next. The Apono connector section expands.
From the dropdown menu, select a connector. Choosing a connector links Apono to all the services available on the account where the connector is located.
If the desired connector is not listed, click + Add new connector and follow the instructions for creating a connector (AWS, Azure, GCP, Kubernetes).
Click Next. The Integration Config page appears.
Define the Integration Config settings.
Click Next. The Secret Store section expands.
Click Next. The Get more with Apono section expands.
Define the Get more with Apono settings.
Click Confirm.
Now that you have completed this integration, you can create access flows that grant permission to your SSH instance.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
Setting | Description |
---|---|
Integration Name
Unique, alphanumeric, user-friendly name used to identify this integration when constructing an access flow
Servers
Minified JSON list of servers
User Groups
(Optional) Names of groups in the server representing the sudoer role
User's Login Shell
(Optional) Command-line interface program used to log in to an account via SSH
User Key Name
(Optional) Filename of the SSH key pair used for authentication
Credential Rotation
(Optional) Number of days after which the database credentials must be rotated
Learn more about the Credentials Rotation Policy.
User cleanup after access is revoked (in days)
(Optional) Defines the number of days after access has been revoked that the user should be deleted
Learn more about Periodic User Cleanup & Deletion.
Custom Access Details
(Optional) Instructions explaining how to access this integration's resources Upon accessing an integration, a message with these instructions will be displayed to end users in the User Portal. The message may include up to 400 characters. To view the message as it appears to end users, click Preview.
Integration Owner
(Optional) Fallback approver if no resource owner is found Follow these steps to define one or several integration owners:
From the Attribute dropdown menu, select User or Group under the relevant identity provider (IdP) platform.
From the Value dropdown menu, select one or multiple users or groups.
NOTE: When Resource Owner is defined, an Integration Owner must be defined.
Resource Owner
(Optional) Group or role responsible for managing access approvals or rejections for the resource Follow these steps to define one or several resource owners:
Enter a Key name. This value is the name of the tag created in your cloud environment.
From the Attribute dropdown menu, select an attribute under the IdP platform to which the key name is associated. Apono will use the value associated with the key (tag) to identify the resource owner. When you update the membership of the group or role in your IdP platform, this change is also reflected in Apono.
NOTE: When this setting is defined, an Integration Owner must also be defined.
Apono Connector
On-prem connection serving as a bridge between an SSH server and Apono:
Minimum Required Version: 1.4.0
Learn how to update an existing AWS, Azure, GCP, or Kubernetes connector.
Apono Secret
Value generated with the credentials of the SSH server user
Create your secret based on your SSH server private key in base64 format.
To find the private key in base64 format, run the following command.
Apono does not store credentials. The Apono connector uses the secret to communicate with services in your environment and separates the Apono web app from the environment for maximal security.
User with Key Pair Authentication
Dedicated SSH server user account that authenticates with SSH key pairs
In the sudoers file, add the following line to allow Apono to execute commands with sudo privileges without a password prompt.
JSON List of Servers
Structured list of SSH servers to which Apono will connect
The following information should be provided for each server:
name
: Unique identifier for the server
host
: IP address or hostname of the server
user
: (Optional) Username for the SSH connection. Default: apono
port
: (Optional) SSH port number. Default: 22
tags
: (Optional) Labels for grouping server resources for dynamic access management.
User Groups
(Optional) User groups representing access to the SSH servers
Default: Default
The default represents access to the server with the user's default Linux group.