Background: 15 years of experience in software and apparently spoiled because it was already set up correctly.

Been practicing doing my own servers, published a test site and 24 hours later, root was compromised.

Rolled back to the backup before I made it public and now I have a security checklist.

  • Tablaste@linux.communityOP
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    7 months ago

    I published it to the internet and the next day, I couldn’t ssh into the server anymore with my user account and something was off.

    Tried root + password, also failed.

    Immediately facepalmed because the password was the generic 8 characters and there was no fail2ban to stop guessing.

            • steventhedev@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Many cloud providers (the cheap ones in particular) will put patches on top of the base distro, so sometimes root always gets a password. Even for Ubuntu.

              There are ways around this, like proper cloud-init support, but not exactly beginner friendly.

            • satans_methpipe@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Yeah I was confused about the comment chain. I was thinking terminal login vs ssh. You’re right in my experience…root ssh requires user intervention for RHEL and friends and arch and debian.

              Side note: did you mean to say “shot themselves in the root”? I love it either way.

    • lud@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      Don’t use passwords for ssh. Use keys and disable password authentication.

      • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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        7 months ago

        More importantly, don’t open up SSH to public access. Use a VPN connection to the server. This is really easy to do with Netbird, Tailscale, etc. You should only ever be able to connect to SSH privately, never over the public net.

        • troed@fedia.io
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          7 months ago

          It’s perfectly safe to run SSH on port 22 towards the open Internet with public key authentication only.