Interview with organizers of the BSD certification exam


 
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Old 03-25-2008
Interview with organizers of the BSD certification exam

Tue, 25 Mar 2008 18:00:00 GMT
The BSD Certification Group, (BSDCG) held its first in-person BSDA certification exam session for systems administrators during SCALE last month in Los Angeles. Subsequent tests were then held held during FOSDEM in Brussels, Belgium, and Linux-Tage Chemnitzer in Chemnitz, Germany. During the events, we were able to catch up with several people involved in the testing. Here's what they had to say about the exam development process, the events themselves, and reasons for becoming certified.


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MONKEYSPHERE(7) 						 System Frameworks						   MONKEYSPHERE(7)

NAME
monkeysphere - ssh and TLS authentication framework using OpenPGP Web of Trust DESCRIPTION
Monkeysphere is a framework to leverage the OpenPGP web of trust for OpenSSH and TLS key-based authentication. OpenPGP keys are tracked via GnuPG, and added to the authorized_keys and known_hosts files used by OpenSSH for connection authentication. Monkeysphere can also be used by a validation agent to validate TLS connections (e.g. https). IDENTITY CERTIFIERS
Each host that uses the Monkeysphere to authenticate its remote users needs some way to determine that those users are who they claim to be. SSH permits key-based authentication, but we want instead to bind authenticators to human-comprehensible user identities. This switch from raw keys to User IDs makes it possible for administrators to see intuitively who has access to an account, and it also enables end users to transition keys (and revoke compromised ones) automatically across all Monkeysphere-enabled hosts. The User IDs and certifica- tions that the Monkeysphere relies on are found in the OpenPGP Web of Trust. However, in order to establish this binding, each host must know whose cerifications to trust. Someone who a host trusts to certify User Identities is called an Identity Certifier. A host must have at least one Identity Certifier in order to bind User IDs to keys. Commonly, every ID Certifier would be trusted by the host to fully identify any User ID, but more nuanced approaches are possible as well. For exam- ple, a given host could specify a dozen ID certifiers, but assign them all "marginal" trust. Then any given User ID would need to be cer- tified in the OpenPGP Web of Trust by at least three of those certifiers. It is also possible to limit the scope of trust for a given ID Certifier to a particular domain. That is, a host can be configured to fully (or marginally) trust a particular ID Certifier only when they certify identities within, say, example.org (based on the e-mail address in the User ID). KEY ACCEPTABILITY
The monkeysphere commands work from a set of user IDs to determine acceptable keys for ssh and TLS authentication. OpenPGP keys are con- sidered acceptable if the following criteria are met: capability The key must have the `authentication' (`a') usage flag set. validity The key itself must be valid, i.e. it must be well-formed, not expired, and not revoked. certification The relevant user ID must be signed by a trusted identity certifier. HOST IDENTIFICATION
The OpenPGP keys for hosts have associated `service names` (OpenPGP user IDs) that are based on URI specifications for the service. Some examples: ssh: ssh://host.example.com[:port] https: https://host.example.com[:port] AUTHOR
Written by: Jameson Rollins <jrollins@finestructure.net>, Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net> SEE ALSO
monkeysphere(1), monkeysphere-host(8), monkeysphere-authentication(8), openpgp2ssh(1), pem2openpgp(1), gpg(1), http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4880, ssh(1), http://tools.ietf.org/wg/secsh/draft-ietf-secsh-scp-sftp-ssh-uri/ monkeysphere March 2010 MONKEYSPHERE(7)