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Connecting to your virtual machine

This article describes several ways to connect to a running virtual machine. In order to create a Virtual Machine, check out Creating a virtual machine in Pouta.

Password access disabled

None of the accounts in the default images provided by Pouta CSC have password login enabled by default. Only SSH keypair access is possible by default. This is done to improve security.

Keypair-based SSH connection

First, you need to check the Virtual Machine status in the Compute > Instances view of the Pouta web interface.

VM Status check

Figure The Instances view of the cPouta web interface.

Find, under Instance name, the Virtual Machine that you want to connect to.

  • The Power State must be Running

  • It must have a Floating IP attached, write it down.

Info

To access an ePouta instance, you can ssh on the private IP (ssh cloud-user@private-ip).

  • Check the name of the key under Key Pair. You will need the corresponding SSH secret key installed in your computer.

    Generate SSH public key from a SSH private key

    If you have access to a SSH private key, it is possible to generate the corresponding public key by:

    ssh-keygen -y -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa

    This is useful to be sure which private key corresponds to which public one configured in Pouta.

  • Click in the machine name and check that there is a security group that allow SSH connections from your current IP. See the security group article for more information on how to create a SSH security group.

  • Now you need to know which user name is configured in the Virtual Machine to let your SSH keypair to log in. Different distributions/images have different user names. Third-party images can use any user name, please check the respective documentation. For the default images provided by Pouta CSC, have a look to the Images documentation article, the information there is kept up to date with any addition or change.

Info

It is a common practise for images, when you try to login as root, to get a message back telling you which username to use instead.

$ ssh root@86.xxx.xxx.xxx
Please login as the user "cloud-user" rather than the user "root".

With all the information ready you can now connect to the instance.

Linux, Mac and PowerShell

In Linux, Mac and most modern Windows, it is possible to use ssh:

ssh <user_name>@<floating-ip> -i <secretkey>

ssh_config

Instead of specifying the path, IP and user name each time you want to connect to the same Virtual Machine, you can write this formation in your ssh config file. Edit (or create if it is not there) the ~/.ssh/config file, and add this content:

Host <machine_name>
Hostname <floating ip>
User <user_name>
IdentityFile <private_key_with_path>
  • In Host you should write the machine name (to later use it to connect using ssh machine_name).

  • In Hostname write the floating of the Virtual Machine.

  • In User the user name must be specified.

  • In IdentityFile the full path to the private key must be written, for example IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa.

Check the manual page of ssh_config for more information.

Agent forwarding

You can enable agent forwarding when connecting through SSH to a virtual machine by using the -A flag.

ssh -A cloud-user@public-ip

By enabling agent forwarding, you enable the ssh agent running on the remote Virtual Machine to make use of the keys which are loaded in the ssh agent of your local workstation. You can use this feature to use the "Bastion host model", where only one single machine, the bastion host, in the cluster has Floating IP and outside access, and the rest of the machines are accessed through the bastion.

  1. Assign a floating IP to one of your instances
  2. ssh to the instance enabling agent forwarding
  3. ssh from this instance to the other instances in the network using their private IP

Using these steps, you need only a single public IP instead of one public IP for each of the instances.

Warning: using agent forwarding has some security implications

Putty

Open Putty, after following the instructions at windows-putty you should have a saved session with the private key stored on it.

  • Load the saved session.

  • Under Host Name (or IP address), write the user name an @ symbol and the floating IP of the instance like: cloud@89.14.89.14

  • Write a new name (like the machine name) under Saved Sessions and click save.

  • Click Open, a new window to the instance will be opened

Next time you need to use Putty to connect this instance, you will just need to Load the corresponding saved session and click Open.

Troubleshooting

port 22: Connection timed out

If you are not able to connect to your VM, the first thing to double check are the security groups, in the Firewalls and security groups article there is a guide on how to set them up correctly.

If the problem persists you may check the firewall setup of your local institution.

Permission denied

Incorrectly configured Security Groups, can lead to permissions denied errors due to the fact that the VM needs to fetch the public SSH keys on its first start. If the network is not configured properly, the public key may not be added and no access will be configured.

REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED

Sometimes Floating IPs are reused with different Virtual Machines at different times. By default SSH will have stricthostkeychecking=yes configured, and will show you the error message:

$ ssh cloud-user@86.50.xxx.xxx
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
@    WARNING: REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED!     @
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
IT IS POSSIBLE THAT SOMEONE IS DOING SOMETHING NASTY!
Someone could be eavesdropping on you right now (man-in-the-middle attack)!
It is also possible that a host key has just been changed.
The fingerprint for the ECDSA key sent by the remote host is
SHA256:JURkzITHXHGavwz6fAahou5g4ii1q9CVuzLyImH5+tI.
Please contact your system administrator.
Add correct host key in /home/yyyy/.ssh/known_hosts to get rid of this message.
Offending ECDSA key in /home/yyyy/.ssh/known_hosts:28
  remove with:
  ssh-keygen -f "/home/yyyy/.ssh/known_hosts" -R "86.50.xxx.xxx"
ECDSA host key for 86.50.xxx.xxx has changed and you have requested strict checking.
Host key verification failed.

You can safely do as it suggests and remove the entry. But only if you are sure that it is the first time you connect to said IP since it has been assigned to a new instance, or since the instance has been reinstalled.

root administrator access on a virtual machine

If you are using an image provided by Pouta, and logged in using the default user account, you will be able to run commands as root with sudo with no password. If other accounts are created, they will not have root administrator access by default.

sudo <some command>

You can also get an interactive root shell:

sudo -i

Connect to a machine using the Pouta virtual console

It is possible to access a machine using the Pouta Virtual console. This is only advisable when SSH access is impossible, for example when the network access of the Virtual Machine is broken.

In order to be able to use the console, you need to set up a password-based user account first:

  • Connected through SSH to your Virtual Machine instance
  • You can use useradd and or passwd to set up the account.
  • As indicated in our security guidelines, please do not enable remote login for this password-based account, but rather use it only in case you need to access the instance though the console.

Once there is a password based account, with no remote login allowed:

  • From the instance page at Compute > Instances, open a console session by clicking Console in the instance dropdown menu:

Open a console in the web GUI

  • To input text in the console, click the grey bar:

Input text to web console

  • Log in with the user account and password you have created.

Non ASCII characters problems

Umlaut characters, such as ä or ö, do not work in the virtual console for most keymaps.