OpenSSH 7.8 was released on 2018-08-24. It is available from the
mirrors listed at
https://www.openssh.com/.
OpenSSH is a 100% complete SSH protocol 2.0 implementation and
includes sftp client and server support.
Once again, we would like to thank the OpenSSH community for their
continued support of the project, especially those who contributed
code or patches, reported bugs, tested snapshots or donated to the
project. More information on donations may be found at:
http://www.openssh.com/donations.htmlPotentially-incompatible changes
================================
This release includes a number of changes that may affect existing
configurations:
* ssh-keygen(1): write OpenSSH format private keys by default
instead of using OpenSSL's PEM format. The OpenSSH format,
supported in OpenSSH releases since 2014 and described in the
PROTOCOL.key file in the source distribution, offers substantially
better protection against offline password guessing and supports
key comments in private keys. If necessary, it is possible to write
old PEM-style keys by adding "-m PEM" to ssh-keygen's arguments
when generating or updating a key.
* sshd(8): remove internal support for S/Key multiple factor
authentication. S/Key may still be used via PAM or BSD auth.
* ssh(1): remove vestigal support for running ssh(1) as setuid. This
used to be required for hostbased authentication and the (long
gone) rhosts-style authentication, but has not been necessary for
a long time. Attempting to execute ssh as a setuid binary, or with
uid != effective uid will now yield a fatal error at runtime.
* sshd(8): the semantics of PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes and the similar
HostbasedAcceptedKeyTypes options have changed. These now specify
signature algorithms that are accepted for their respective
authentication mechanism, where previously they specified accepted
key types. This distinction matters when using the RSA/SHA2
signature algorithms "rsa-sha2-256", "rsa-sha2-512" and their
certificate counterparts. Configurations that override these
options but omit these algorithm names may cause unexpected
authentication failures (no action is required for configurations
that accept the default for these options).
* sshd(8): the precedence of session environment variables has
changed. ~/.ssh/environment and environment="..." options in
authorized_keys files can no longer override SSH_* variables set
implicitly by sshd.
* ssh(1)/sshd(8): the default IPQoS used by ssh/sshd has changed.
They will now use DSCP AF21 for interactive traffic and CS1 for
bulk. For a detailed rationale, please see the commit message:
https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/usr.bin/ssh/readconf.c#rev1.284