SSH (Secure Shell) is a widely used remote secure shell protocol and is considered an industry standard for secure remote access to UNIX-like systems including Linux, BSDs, macOS and more recently even Windows received native support. SSH supports multiple types of authentication and the most widely used ones are either interactive keyboard input with a password or a public-key cryptography pair of keys.
KeePassXC SSH Agent integration is built to manage SSH keys in a secure manner by either storing them completely within your KeePassXC database or by having only the decryption key of a key file that is stored elsewhere. SSH Agent integration _does not_ provide an agent itself but works as a client for any agent implementation that is OpenSSH compatible.
=== OpenSSH agent on Linux
If you are using a modern desktop Linux distribution it is very likely the OpenSSH agent is already configured and running when you have logged in to a graphical desktop session.
This should be true for distributions like Debian, Ubuntu (including Kubuntu, Xubuntu and Lubuntu), Linux Mint, Fedora, ElementaryOS and Manjaro.
First, open a terminal and check the output of `ssh-add -l`:
$ ssh-add -l
The agent has no identities.
If you either got a list of fingerprints or the message above the agent is already running and no further setup is required.
If instead you got a message saying _"Could not open a connection to your authentication agent."_ that means the agent is either misconfigured or not running at all.
Since every distribution and desktop environment is configured differently there is no general guide how to properly set it up yourself.
The general rule of thumb, however, is that `ssh-agent` needs to be started as part of the startup programs for a session in a way its environment variables are exposed to all processes started by the desktop environment.
One of the easiest ways to achieve this is to enable _GNOME Keyring_ which should in turn start the agent as part of its services.
There are many guides on the internet how to hack your login shell to start an agent but it is very prone to errors and is not a supported configuration. If you prefer the login shell startup hack you need to set it up with a static socket path and use the _SSH_AUTH_SOCK override_ option in SSH Agent settings to match that.
WARNING: _GNU Privacy Guard (gpg)_ with its SSH agent implementation is *not* compatible with KeePassXC as it does not support _removing_ keys that have been added to it making it impossible to use any external tool to manage key lifetime.
WARNING: _GNOME Keyring_ prior to release 3.27.92 had its own custom implementation of an agent which does not support modern key types and was known to be buggy.
It does not support any constraints you may want to configure for an added key.
If you are running a modern distribution the custom agent has been removed and replaced with the stock OpenSSH agent which is feature complete.
Since Pageant is currently still the most widely used implementation and is easily installable on any version of Windows, it is the default on KeePassXC.
However, Microsoft includes a native OpenSSH client implementation with Windows 10 since autumn 2018 that can be used instead. If you would like to self-manage your OpenSSH version you can use the builds offered via their official https://github.com/powershell/Win32-OpenSSH[GitHub repository].
Download Pageant from the official PuTTY home page at https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
To use Pageant with KeePassXC, simply start it and it will minimize into the system tray and is ready to use. PuTTY and compatible tools will use Pageant automatically.
Make sure your Windows version has at least update 1809 installed. For more details consult the https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/openssh/openssh_overview[official documentation].
To use Windows OpenSSH the _OpenSSH Authentication Agent_ service has to be enabled first:
1. Open the Services application via the _Start Menu_, it is located in the _Windows Administrative Tools_ section
2. Select the _OpenSSH Authentication Agent_ and open its _Properties_
3. Set the _Startup type_ to _Automatic_ and start the service
Alternatively, you can use a _Windows PowerShell_ running as _Administrator_ to enable and start the service:
KeePassXC and other compatible tools can now use the Windows OpenSSH agent. To use it with KeePassXC, update the settings explained in <<Setting up SSH Agent integration>>.
By default the SSH Agent integration plugin is disabled.
To enable integration, follow the steps below to access the settings:
1. Select _Tools > Settings_ from the menu
2. Select _SSH Agent_ category on the left sidebar
.SSH Agent Application Settings Page
image::sshagent_application_settings.png[]
On the settings page you can enable the integration by checking _Enable SSH Agent integration_.
When the integration is enabled coming back to the settings page also shows if connection to the agent is working.
On Windows you have the option to select between _Pageant_ and _OpenSSH for Windows_ and on other platforms the settings page shows the current value of _SSH_AUTH_SOCK_ environment variable which is used to connect to the running agent and an option to manually override the automatically detected path.
If the value of _SSH_AUTH_SOCK_ is empty it means the agent is not properly configured and KeePassXC will be unable to connect to it unless you provide a static override path to the socket.
=== Generating a key to use with KeePassXC
KeePassXC only supports keys in the _OpenSSH_ format. On Windows, _PuTTYgen_ saves keys in its own format by default and you will need to convert them to OpenSSH format before being used. In this guide we are going to generate a standard RSA key in the default size.
Please read the manual on how to use _PuTTYgen_ for details on generate a key: https://the.earth.li/~sgtatham/putty/0.74/htmldoc/Chapter8.html#pubkey-puttygen. Once generated, you must save the key in the new OpenSSH format, see image below.