Does it make sense to install Secure Shell as a non-root user on UNIX?

If you run the server, sshd or sshd2, as a user other than root then you can only login as that user. If you install the client, ssh or ssh2, non setuid root you will still be able to connect and login to remote servers, but you will not be able to use hostbased authentication. You can also start up sshd yourself as non-root, supplying the -p option so it binds to a non-privileged port (port number higher than 1024), and then connect from another system with ssh -p.

This will only allow connections to your own account, and sshd will, as a rule, not be restarted when your machine reboots. You will have to decide whether this is useful for you or not. More.

If you run the server, sshd, as a user other than root then you can only login as that user. If you install the client, ssh, non setuid root you will still be able to connect and login to remote servers, but you will not be able to use the . Rhosts form of user authentication.

You can also start up sshd yourself as non-root, supplying the -p option so it binds to a non-privileged port (1024), and then connect from another system with ssh -p. This will only allow connections to your own account, and sshd will, as a rule, not be restarted when your machine reboots. You will have to decide whether this is useful for you or not.

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