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Date:      Wed, 11 Feb 2015 22:14:00 -0500
From:      Eric van Gyzen <eric@vangyzen.net>
To:        stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: ssh known_hosts in 10.1
Message-ID:  <54DC1A78.9010500@vangyzen.net>
In-Reply-To: <54DBD1C2.4000108@vangyzen.net>
References:  <54DBD1C2.4000108@vangyzen.net>

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On 2/11/15 5:03 PM, Eric van Gyzen wrote:
> -stable:
>
> I just updated my workstation from 10.0 to 10.1.  Now, ssh is prompting
> me to accept host keys that I accepted long ago.  ssh is looking for the
> host key in known_hosts using the name given on the command line; it
> previously used the FQDN.  ssh-keygen -F confirms that known_hosts has
> the same key for the FQDN.
>
> If I recall correctly, using the FQDN in known_hosts was a FreeBSD
> customization.  Did this get dropped during the OpenSSH update?

As it turns out, OpenSSH 6.5 or 6.6 added a hostname canonicalization 
feature that--as I understand--should make FreeBSD's customization 
obsolete.  Based on the description in ssh_config, the following should 
behave as ssh did in 10.0:

     ssh -o 'CanonicalizeHostname yes' -o 'CanonicalizeFallbackLocal 
yes' short-name

However, it doesn't find the host key, because it's looking for the 
short-name, not the FQDN:

     The authenticity of host 'short-name (192.0.2.42)' can't be 
established.

Can anyone else confirm this behavior?

Eric



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