• Hi, Pleskians! We are running a UX testing of our upcoming product intended for server management and monitoring.
    We would like to invite you to have a call with us and have some fun checking our prototype. The agenda is pretty simple - we bring new design and some scenarios that you need to walk through and succeed. We will be watching and taking insights for further development of the design.
    If you would like to participate, please use this link to book a meeting. We will sent the link to the clickable prototype at the meeting.
  • (Plesk for Windows):
    MySQL Connector/ODBC 3.51, 5.1, and 5.3 are no longer shipped with Plesk because they have reached end of life. MariaDB Connector/ODBC 64-bit 3.2.4 is now used instead.
  • The Horde webmail has been deprecated. Its complete removal is scheduled for April 2025. For details and recommended actions, see the Feature and Deprecation Plan.

Question AlmaLinux 9 - Hardening SSH Server breaks Plesk

marekp

New Pleskian
Server operating system version
AlmaLinux 9
Plesk version and microupdate number
18.0.66 Update #2
Hi to all,
I tried to harden the OpenSSH server. A first attempt was made with
Code:
sudo update-crypto-policies --set FUTURE
but this breaks Plesk with
Code:
Certificate signature verification failed; error info: error:03000098:digital envelope routines::invalid digest error:06880006:asn1 encoding routines::EVP lib (Error code: 2)
reverting to
Code:
sudo update-crypto-policies --set DEFAULT:SHA1
works.

Is this an Plesk Issue or an AlmaLinux 9 Issue?
 
You shouldn't be using the future set since that's meant for testing and what not to begin with (you can read more over at Strong crypto defaults in RHEL 8 and deprecation of weak crypto algorithms - Red Hat Customer Portal). Even more so since Plesk would only release things based off of current requirements.

Ideally the best way to harden SSH is to ensure the following:
  • Enable Certificate Based Authentication
  • Disable Password Authentication
  • Disable Empty Passwords
  • Disable Root Login
  • Change Default SSH Port
  • Only Allow Selected Users and/or Groups
  • Disable X11 Forwarding
Generally speaking as long as you've done those you should be pretty good in terms of hardening your SSH. Although I'd probably take it a step further by not opening the SSH port to the public to begin with regardless of it being on a new port or not and instead use a zero trust solution like tailscale or set up an instance of teleport to get access to the the server that way.
 
Hi, I had already adjusted sshd accordingly. However, an ssh audit shows that insecure encryption algorithms are still allowed:
“(kex) diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 (3072-bit) -- [fail] using broken SHA-1 hash algorithm”
“(kex) diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 -- [fail] using broken SHA-1 hash algorithm”

But I assume that Plesk still needs SHA1
 
Back
Top