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Teleport is software which provides an SSH Jump Host (or Bastion host) service in a secure, modern way, with support for role-based access control and single sign-on.

Teleport is meant to be the future replacement for the ecAccess SSH service. Both services are currently operational and can be widely used at this point, but note that only Teleport will be available for the new data centre in Bologna.

Please report any feedback or issues to our servicedesk@ecmwf.int.

Overview

The Teleport service provides:

  • Single SSH hop from client systems anywhere on the internet to servers inside ECMWF (ecGate, HPC, etc)
  • Re-authentication required only every 12 hours (once per day)
  • Integration with standard tools such as the OpenSSH ssh client, scp, and ssh-agent
  • Web-SSH interface for in-browser terminal access, with scp
  • X11 and Port forwarding

The single sign-on step is performed using an application called "tsh", every 12 hours.

After that you use standard ssh or scp to connect to systems inside ECMWF.

Alternatively you can have simple terminal access in a web browser

Downloading tsh 

The tsh application is required to perform user authentication once every 12 hours.

tsh is open source, very portable, and has minimal dependencies.

The binary is available for Linux 32-bit, 64-bit, and ARM, as well as Windows 64-bit and a signed package for MacOS.

MacOS users can also use homebrew for installation (brew install teleport).

User Authentication

Once every 12 hours, you will need to refresh your tokens with the tsh command, through your web browser.

SSH connections can remain active for longer than 12 hours, but new ones will require re-authentication.

First Time

Run tsh, giving the location of our gateway:

tsh login --proxy=shell.ecmwf.int:443

Your default web browser will open and you should login with your email address, ECMWF password, and then HID (ActivID) Token code.

If you're already logged in to the ECMWF website, or have recently logged in to this service, the password prompt might be skipped.

Subsequent Occasions

tsh login

Connecting to hosts through the gateway

Windows users should skip to our Guide for Windows SSH to ECMWF.

OpenSSH 7.3 or later has a simple command line option to connect via our gateway (shell.ecmwf.int) to the destination-host:

ssh -J username@shell.ecmwf.int username@destination-host

For example, if your username is ab0 and you wish to connect to ecgate:

ssh -J ab0@shell.ecmwf.int ab0@ecgate

The OpenSSH configuration setting for this is named ProxyJump:

Host ecgate
  User ab0
  ProxyJump ab0@shell.ecmwf.int

See the Legacy Configuration note below if your ssh client is older than 7.3.

If your connection fails after working for some time, it could be because your tokens have expired. You can check them:

$ tsh status
> Profile URL:  https://shell.ecmwf.int:443
  Logged in as: firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int
  Cluster:      shell.ecmwf.int
  Roles:        *
  Logins:       ab0
  Valid until:  2020-06-22 23:26:30 +0100 BST [EXPIRED]
  Extensions:   permit-X11-forwarding, permit-agent-forwarding, permit-port-forwarding, permit-pty

Destination Hosts available

The hosts directly available through the Teleport gateway are:

  • ECGATE (interactive node only)
  • CCA and CCB login nodes
  • HPC2020 TEMS

Terminal Access in a Web Browser

You can open a tabbed terminal in the web browser, with support for SCP upload and download.

Only available for ECGATE, CCA/CCB login nodes, and HPC2020 TEMS.

Browse to  http://webshell.ecmwf.int/destination-host/username (replacing destination-host and username with your selection).

For example, if your username is ab0 and you wish to connect to ecgate:

http://webshell.ecmwf.int/ecgate/ab0

The destination host should be just the short name, without "ecmwf.int".

If you open another tab inside the web terminal, use the QUICK LAUNCH box and enter "username@destination-host:22", for example ab0@ecgate:22.

The web terminal works very well to access tmux or screen running on the destination host.

Windows Clients

There are various ways to initiate SSH from Windows 10, so it depends on your system and your preferences.

We recommend using the Windows Subsystem for Linux if you can (on your own machine), followed by starting the SSH Agent and then connecting as for Linux/MacOS systems.

Alternatively, you can use:

  1. Install MobaXterm if it is not already on your system
  2. Download tsh (you may need to instruct antivirus software to ignore the file)
  3. Start MobaXterm
  4. Login using tsh (you will always need to specify the --proxy setting)
  5. Use the following in $HOME/.ssh/config (MobaXterm's home):
Host ecgate
  User ab0
  ProxyCommand ssh -q -i c:/users/ab0/.tsh/keys/shell.ecmwf.int/firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int -W %h:%p ab0@shell.ecmwf.int
  IdentityFile c:/users/ab0/.tsh/keys/shell.ecmwf.int/firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int
  1. Start the Windows SSH Agent Service
  2. Download tsh (you may need to instruct antivirus software to ignore the file)
  3. Login using tsh (you will always need to specify the --proxy setting)
  4. Use an SSH config as below:
# Windows currently has a bug, you need the full path to ssh or you will get:
# posix_spawn: No such file or directory

Host *.ecmwf.int
  User ab0
  ProxyCommand C:\Windows\System32\OpenSSH\ssh.exe -q -W %h:%p ab0@shell.ecmwf.int

# this assumes the SSH Agent is running, otherwise add:
# Host shell.ecmwf.int
#   IdentityFile ~/.tsh/keys/shell.ecmwf.int/firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int

The Windows 10 Terminal is a decent tabbed command line interface (albeit with no X11 support).

{
  "guid": "{717406b0-06cb-454c-a0c4-875267fa373d}", # run "[guid]::NewGuid()" in a PowerShell to generate this
  "name": "ecGate",
  "commandline": "ssh ab0@ecgate.ecmwf.int"
  "suppressApplicationTitle": true,
  "hidden": false,
  "fontSize": 10,
  "fontFace": "Fira Code",
  "cursorShape": "filledBox",
  "cursorColor": "#073642",
  "colorScheme": "Solarized Dark",
},

Other Notes

SSH Agent is required

If you have logged in but ssh fails to connect, it may be that your SSH agent is not running.

The Agent can be started and tokens refreshed this way:

eval $(ssh-agent -s)
tsh logout
tsh login

And this will make sure the Agent continues to run in your environment:

echo 'eval $(ssh-agent -s)' >> ~/.bash_profile

SCP, X11, Agent, and Port Forwarding

SCP, Agent forwarding, X11 forwarding, and Port forwarding (including SOCKS proxy), all work through the Teleport gateway.

For scp you can use the -o option:

scp -o ProxyJump=ab0@shell.ecmwf.int ab0@ecgate:/remote/file/path /local/file/path

X11 under macOS

$ brew cask install xquartz
# start xquartz app
$ export DISPLAY=:0
$ ssh -X ....

Legacy Configuration

For OpenSSH clients older than 7.3, the following configuration can be used:

# ~/.ssh/config file:
Host ecgate
  User ab0
  ProxyCommand /usr/bin/ssh -q -W %h:%p ab0@shell.ecmwf.int

Difficult client environments

You might not be able to download and run tsh, or access our web login service, or run the SSH Agent, from where you wish to use ssh.

Instead you can use (or copy) the identity files which tsh stores in $HOME:

# ~/.ssh/config file:
Host ecgate
  User ab0
  IdentityFile ~/.tsh/keys/shell.ecmwf.int/firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int
  ProxyCommand /usr/bin/ssh -q -i ~/.tsh/keys/shell.ecmwf.int/firstname.lastname@ecmwf.int -W %h:%p ab0@shell.ecmwf.int

This is a good way to access Teleport credentials via a shared file system from any host.




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