module Rye # = Rye::Box # # The Rye::Box class represents a machine. All system # commands are made through this class. # # rbox = Rye::Box.new('filibuster') # rbox.hostname # => filibuster # rbox.uname # => FreeBSD # rbox.uptime # => 20:53 up 1 day, 1:52, 4 users # # You can also run local commands through SSH # # rbox = Rye::Box.new('localhost') # rbox.hostname # => localhost # rbox.uname(:a) # => Darwin vanya 9.6.0 ... # #-- # * When anything confusing happens, enable debug in initialize # by passing :debug => STDERR. This will output Rye debug info # as well as Net::SSH info. This is VERY helpful for figuring # out why some command is hanging or otherwise acting weird. # * If a remote command is hanging, it's probably because a # Net::SSH channel is waiting on_extended_data (a prompt). #++ class Box include Rye::Cmd def host; @rye_host; end def opts; @rye_opts; end def safe; @rye_safe; end def user; (@rye_opts || {})[:user]; end # Returns the current value of the stash +@rye_stash+ def stash; @rye_stash; end def quiet; @rye_quiet; end def nickname; @rye_nickname || host; end def host=(val); @rye_host = val; end def opts=(val); @rye_opts = val; end # Store a value to the stash +@rye_stash+ def stash=(val); @rye_stash = val; end def nickname=(val); @rye_nickname = val; end def enable_safe_mode; @rye_safe = true; end def disable_safe_mode; @rye_safe = false; end def safe?; @rye_safe == true; end def enable_quiet_mode; @rye_quiet = true; end def disable_quiet_mode; @rye_quiet = false; end # The most recent value from Box.cd or Box.[] def current_working_directory; @rye_current_working_directory; end # The most recent valud for umask (or 0022) def current_umask; @rye_current_umask; end def info; @rye_info; end def debug; @rye_debug; end def error; @rye_error; end def ostype=(val); @rye_ostype = val; end def impltype=(val); @rye_impltype = val; end def pre_command_hook=(val); @rye_pre_command_hook = val; end def post_command_hook=(val); @rye_post_command_hook = val; end # A Hash. The keys are exception classes, the values are Procs to execute def exception_hook=(val); @rye_exception_hook = val; end # * +host+ The hostname to connect to. The default is localhost. # * +opts+ a hash of optional arguments. # # The +opts+ hash excepts the following keys: # # * :user => the username to connect as. Default: the current user. # * :safe => should Rye be safe? Default: true # * :keys => one or more private key file paths (passwordless login) # * :info => an IO object to print Rye::Box command info to. Default: nil # * :debug => an IO object to print Rye::Box debugging info to. Default: nil # * :error => an IO object to print Rye::Box errors to. Default: STDERR # * :getenv => pre-fetch +host+ environment variables? (default: true) # * :password => the user's password (ignored if there's a valid private key) # # NOTE: +opts+ can also contain any parameter supported by # Net::SSH.start that is not already mentioned above. # def initialize(host='localhost', opts={}) @rye_exception_hook = {} @rye_host = host # These opts are use by Rye::Box and also passed to Net::SSH @rye_opts = { :user => Rye.sysinfo.user, :safe => true, :port => 22, :keys => [], :info => nil, :debug => nil, :error => STDERR, :getenv => true, :quiet => false }.merge(opts) # Close the SSH session before Ruby exits. This will do nothing # if disconnect has already been called explicitly. at_exit { self.disconnect } # @rye_opts gets sent to Net::SSH so we need to remove the keys # that are not meant for it. @rye_safe, @rye_debug = @rye_opts.delete(:safe), @rye_opts.delete(:debug) @rye_info, @rye_error = @rye_opts.delete(:info), @rye_opts.delete(:error) @rye_getenv = {} if @rye_opts.delete(:getenv) # Enable getenv with a hash @rye_ostype, @rye_impltype = @rye_opts.delete(:ostype), @rye_opts.delete(:impltype) @rye_quiet = @rye_opts.delete(:quiet) # Just in case someone sends a true value rather than IO object @rye_debug = STDERR if @rye_debug == true @rye_error = STDERR if @rye_error == true @rye_info = STDOUT if @rye_info == true @rye_opts[:logger] = Logger.new(@rye_debug) if @rye_debug # Enable Net::SSH debugging @rye_opts[:paranoid] = true unless @rye_safe == false # See Net::SSH.start @rye_opts[:keys] = [@rye_opts[:keys]].flatten.compact # Add the given private keys to the keychain that will be used for @rye_host add_keys(@rye_opts[:keys]) # We don't want Net::SSH to handle the keypairs. This may change # but for we're letting ssh-agent do it. # TODO: Check if this should ot should not be enabled. #@rye_opts.delete(:keys) # From: capistrano/lib/capistrano/cli.rb STDOUT.sync = true # so that Net::SSH prompts show up debug "ssh-agent info: #{Rye.sshagent_info.inspect}" debug @rye_opts.inspect end # Change the current working directory (sort of). # # I haven't been able to wrangle Net::SSH to do my bidding. # "My bidding" in this case, is maintaining an open channel between commands. # I'm using Net::SSH::Connection::Session#exec for all commands # which is like a funky helper method that opens a new channel # each time it's called. This seems to be okay for one-off # commands but changing the directory only works for the channel # it's executed in. The next time exec is called, there's a # new channel which is back in the default (home) directory. # # Long story short, the work around is to maintain the current # directory locally and send it with each command. # # rbox.pwd # => /home/rye ($ pwd ) # rbox['/usr/bin'].pwd # => /usr/bin ($ cd /usr/bin && pwd) # rbox.pwd # => /usr/bin ($ cd /usr/bin && pwd) # def [](fpath=nil) if fpath.nil? || fpath.index('/') == 0 @rye_current_working_directory = fpath else # Append to non-absolute paths if @rye_current_working_directory newpath = File.join(@rye_current_working_directory, fpath) @rye_current_working_directory = newpath else @rye_current_working_directory = fpath end end debug "CWD: #{@rye_current_working_directory}" self end # Like [] except it returns an empty Rye::Rap object to mimick # a regular command method. Call with nil key (or no arg) to # reset. def cd(fpath=nil) Rye::Rap.new(self[fpath]) end # Change the current umask (sort of -- works the same way as cd) # The default umask is 0022 def umask=(val='0022') @rye_current_umask = val self end # Reconnect as another user. This is different from su= # which executes subsequent commands via +su -c COMMAND USER+. # * +newuser+ The username to reconnect as # # NOTE: if there is an open connection, it's disconnected # but not reconnected because it's possible it wasn't # connected yet in the first place (if you create the # instance with default settings for example) def switch_user(newuser) return if newuser.to_s == self.user.to_s @rye_opts ||= {} @rye_opts[:user] = newuser disconnect end # Open an interactive SSH session. This only works if STDIN.tty? # returns true. Otherwise it returns the SSH command that would # have been run. This requires the SSH command-line executable (ssh). # * +run+ when set to false, it will return the SSH command as a String # and not open an SSH session. # def interactive_ssh(run=true) debug "interactive_ssh with keys: #{Rye.keys.inspect}" run = false unless STDIN.tty? cmd = Rye.prepare_command("ssh", "#{@rye_opts[:user]}@#{@rye_host}") return cmd unless run system(cmd) end # Add one or more private keys to the SSH Agent. # * +additional_keys+ is a list of file paths to private keys # Returns the instance of Box def add_keys(*additional_keys) if Rye.sysinfo.os == :win32 @rye_opts[:keys] ||= [] @rye_opts[:keys] += additional_keys.flatten return @rye_opts[:keys] end additional_keys = [additional_keys].flatten.compact || [] return if additional_keys.empty? ret = Rye.add_keys(additional_keys) if ret.is_a?(Rye::Rap) debug "ssh-add exit_code: #{ret.exit_code}" debug "ssh-add stdout: #{ret.stdout}" debug "ssh-add stderr: #{ret.stderr}" end self # MUST RETURN self end alias :add_key :add_keys # Return the value of uname in lowercase # This is a temporary fix. We can use SysInfo for this, upload # it, execute it directly, parse the output. def ostype return @rye_ostype if @rye_ostype # simple cache os = self.quietly { uname.first } rescue nil os ||= 'unknown' os &&= os.downcase @rye_ostype = os end def impltype @rye_impltype end # Returns the hash containing the parsed output of "env" on the # remote machine. If the initialize option +:getenv+ was set to # false, this will return an empty hash. # This is a lazy loaded method so it fetches the remote envvars # the first time this method is called. # # puts rbox.getenv['HOME'] # => "/home/gloria" (remote) # # NOTE: This method should not raise an exception under normal # circumstances. # def getenv(key=nil) if @rye_getenv && @rye_getenv.empty? && self.can?(:env) vars = self.quietly { env } rescue [] vars.each do |nvpair| # Parse "GLORIA_HOME=/gloria/lives/here" into a name/value # pair. The regexp ensures we split only at the 1st = sign n, v = nvpair.scan(/\A([\w_-]+?)=(.+)\z/).flatten @rye_getenv[n] = v end end key.nil? ? @rye_getenv : @rye_getenv[key.to_s] end # Add an environment variable. +n+ and +v+ are the name and value. # Returns the instance of Rye::Box def setenv(n, v) debug "Adding env: #{n}=#{v}" debug "prev value: #{@rye_getenv[n]}" @rye_getenv[n] = v (@rye_current_environment_variables ||= {})[n] = v self end alias :add_env :setenv # deprecated? # See Rye.keys def keys; Rye.keys; end # Returns +user@rye_host+ def to_s; '%s@rye_%s' % [user, @rye_host]; end def inspect %q{#<%s:%s name=%s cwd=%s umask=%s env=%s safe=%s opts=%s keys=%s>} % [self.class.to_s, self.host, self.nickname, @rye_current_working_directory, @rye_current_umask, (@rye_current_environment_variables || '').inspect, self.safe, self.opts.inspect, self.keys.inspect] end # Compares itself with the +other+ box. If the hostnames # are the same, this will return true. Otherwise false. def ==(other) @rye_host == other.host end # Returns the host SSH keys for this box def host_key raise "No host" unless @rye_host Rye.remote_host_keys(@rye_host) end # Uses the output of "useradd -D" to determine the default home # directory. This returns a GUESS rather than the a user's real # home directory. Currently used only by authorize_keys_remote. # Only useful before you've logged in. Otherwise check $HOME def guess_user_home(other_user=nil) this_user = other_user || opts[:user] @rye_guessed_homes ||= {} # A simple cache. return @rye_guessed_homes[this_user] if @rye_guessed_homes.has_key?(this_user) # Some junk to determine where user home directories are by default. # We're relying on the command "useradd -D" so this may not work on # different Linuxen and definitely won't work on Windows. # This code will be abstracted out once I find a decent home for it. # /etc/default/useradd, HOME=/home OR useradd -D # /etc/adduser.config, DHOME=/home OR ?? user_defaults = {} ostmp = self.ostype ostmp &&= ostype.to_s if ostmp == "sunos" #nv.scan(/([\w_-]+?)=(.+?)\s/).each do |n, v| # n = 'HOME' if n == 'basedir' # user_defaults[n.upcase] = v.strip #end # In Solaris, useradd -D says the default home path is /home # but that directory is not writable. See: http://bit.ly/IJDD0 user_defaults['HOME'] = '/export/home' elsif ostmp == "darwin" user_defaults['HOME'] = '/Users' elsif ostmp == "win32" user_defaults['HOME'] = 'C:/Documents and Settings' else raw = self.quietly { useradd(:D) } rescue ["HOME=/home"] raw.each do |nv| n, v = nv.scan(/\A([\w_-]+?)=(.+)\z/).flatten user_defaults[n] = v end end @rye_guessed_homes[this_user] = "#{user_defaults['HOME']}/#{this_user}" end # Copy the local public keys (as specified by Rye.keys) to # this box into ~/.ssh/authorized_keys and ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2. # Returns a Rye::Rap object. The private keys files used to generate # the public keys are contained in stdout. # Raises a Rye::ComandError if the home directory doesn't exit. # NOTE: authorize_keys_remote disables safe-mode for this box while it runs # which will hit you funky style if your using a single instance # of Rye::Box in a multithreaded situation. # def authorize_keys_remote(other_user=nil) this_user = other_user || opts[:user] added_keys = [] rap = Rye::Rap.new(self) prevdir = self.current_working_directory # The homedir path is important b/c this is where we're going to # look for the .ssh directory. That's where auth love is stored. homedir = self.guess_user_home(this_user) unless self.file_exists?(homedir) rap.add_exit_code(1) rap.add_stderr("Path does not exist: #{homedir}") raise Rye::CommandError.new(rap) end # Let's go into the user's home directory that we now know exists. self.cd homedir files = ['.ssh/authorized_keys', '.ssh/authorized_keys2'] files.each do |akey_path| if self.file_exists?(akey_path) # TODO: Make Rye::Cmd.incremental_backup self.cp(akey_path, "#{akey_path}-previous") authorized_keys = self.file_download("#{homedir}/#{akey_path}") end authorized_keys ||= StringIO.new Rye.keys.each do |path| info "# Adding public key for #{path}" k = Rye::Key.from_file(path).public_key.to_ssh2 authorized_keys.puts k end # Remove duplicate authorized keys authorized_keys.rewind uniqlines = authorized_keys.readlines.uniq.join authorized_keys = StringIO.new(uniqlines) # We need to rewind so that all of the StringIO object is uploaded authorized_keys.rewind self.mkdir(:p, :m, '700', File.dirname(akey_path)) self.file_upload(authorized_keys, "#{homedir}/#{akey_path}") self.chmod('0600', akey_path) self.chown(:R, this_user.to_s, File.dirname(akey_path)) end # And let's return to the directory we came from. self.cd prevdir rap.add_exit_code(0) rap end # Authorize the current user to login to the local machine via # SSH without a password. This is the same functionality as # authorize_keys_remote except run with local shell commands. def authorize_keys_local added_keys = [] Rye.keys.each do |path| debug "# Public key for #{path}" k = Rye::Key.from_file(path).public_key.to_ssh2 Rye.shell(:mkdir, :p, :m, '700', '$HOME/.ssh') # Silently create dir if it doesn't exist Rye.shell(:echo, "'#{k}' >> $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys") Rye.shell(:echo, "'#{k}' >> $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys2") Rye.shell(:chmod, '-R', '0600', '$HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys*') added_keys << path end added_keys end # A handler for undefined commands. # Raises Rye::CommandNotFound exception. def method_missing(cmd, *args, &block) if @rye_safe ex = Rye::CommandNotFound.new(cmd.to_s) raise ex unless @rye_exception_hook.has_key? ex.class @rye_exception_hook[Rye::CommandNotFound].call ex else if block.nil? run_command cmd, *args else ex = Rye::CommandNotFound.new(cmd.to_s) raise ex unless @rye_exception_hook.has_key? ex.class end end end alias :execute :method_missing # Returns the command an arguments as a String. def preview_command(*args) prep_args(*args).join(' ') end # Supply a block to be called before every command. It's called # with three arguments: command name, an Array of arguments, user name, hostname # e.g. # rbox.pre_command_hook do |cmd,args,user,host| # ... # end def pre_command_hook(&block) @rye_pre_command_hook = block if block @rye_pre_command_hook end # Supply a block to be called whenever there's an Exception. It's called # with 1 argument: the exception class. If the exception block returns # :retry, the command will be executed again. # # e.g. # rbox.exception_hook(CommandNotFound) do |ex| # STDERR.puts "An error occurred: #{ex.class}" # choice = Annoy.get_user_input('(S)kip (R)etry (A)bort: ') # if choice == 'R' # :retry # elsif choice == 'S' # # do nothing # else # exit # ! # end # end def exception_hook(klass, &block) @rye_exception_hook[klass] = block if block @rye_exception_hook[klass] end # Execute a block in the context of an instance of Rye::Box. # # rbox = Rye::Box.new # # rbox.batch do # ls :l # uname :a # end # OR # rbox.batch(&block) # # The batch can also accept arguments. # # rbox.batch('path/2/file') do |file| # ls :l file # end # # Returns the return value of the block. # def batch(*args, &block) self.instance_exec *args, &block end # Like batch, except it disables safe mode before executing the block. # After executing the block, safe mode is returned back to whichever # state it was previously in. In other words, this method won't enable # safe mode if it was already disabled. def unsafely(*args, &block) previous_state = @rye_safe disable_safe_mode ret = self.instance_exec *args, &block @rye_safe = previous_state ret end # See unsafely (except in reverse) def safely(*args, &block) previous_state = @rye_safe enable_safe_mode ret = self.instance_exec *args, &block @rye_safe = previous_state ret end # Like batch, except it enables quiet mode before executing the block. # After executing the block, quiet mode is returned back to whichever # state it was previously in. In other words, this method won't enable # quiet mode if it was already disabled. # # In quiet mode, the pre and post command hooks are not called. This # is used internally when calling commands like +ls+ to check whether # a file path exists (to prevent polluting the logs). def quietly(*args, &block) previous_state = @rye_quiet enable_quiet_mode ret = self.instance_exec *args, &block @rye_quiet = previous_state ret end # instance_exec for Ruby 1.8 written by Mauricio Fernandez # http://eigenclass.org/hiki/instance_exec if RUBY_VERSION =~ /1.8/ module InstanceExecHelper; end include InstanceExecHelper def instance_exec(*args, &block) # !> method redefined; discarding old instance_exec mname = "__instance_exec_#{Thread.current.object_id.abs}_#{object_id.abs}" InstanceExecHelper.module_eval{ define_method(mname, &block) } begin ret = send(mname, *args) ensure InstanceExecHelper.module_eval{ undef_method(mname) } rescue nil end ret end end # Supply a block to be called after every command. It's called # with one argument: an instance of Rye::Rap. # # When this block is supplied, the command does not raise an # exception when the exit code is greater than 0 (the typical # behavior) so the block needs to check the Rye::Rap object to # determine whether an exception should be raised. def post_command_hook(&block) @rye_post_command_hook = block if block @rye_post_command_hook end # Open an SSH session with +@rye_host+. This called automatically # when you the first comamnd is run if it's not already connected. # Raises a Rye::NoHost exception if +@rye_host+ is not specified. # Will attempt a password login up to 3 times if the initial # authentication fails. # * +reconnect+ Disconnect first if already connected. The default # is true. When set to false, connect will do nothing if already # connected. def connect(reconnect=true) raise Rye::NoHost unless @rye_host return if @rye_ssh && !reconnect disconnect if @rye_ssh debug "Opening connection to #{@rye_host} as #{@rye_opts[:user]}" highline = HighLine.new # Used for password prompt retried = 0 @rye_opts[:keys].compact! # A quick fix in Windows. TODO: Why is there a nil? begin @rye_ssh = Net::SSH.start(@rye_host, @rye_opts[:user], @rye_opts || {}) rescue Net::SSH::HostKeyMismatch => ex STDERR.puts ex.message print "\a" if @rye_info # Ring the bell if highline.ask("Continue? ").strip.match(/\Ay|yes|sure|ya\z/i) @rye_opts[:paranoid] = false retry else raise Net::SSH::HostKeyMismatch end rescue Net::SSH::AuthenticationFailed => ex print "\a" if retried == 0 && @rye_info # Ring the bell once retried += 1 if STDIN.tty? && retried <= 3 STDERR.puts "Passwordless login failed for #{@rye_opts[:user]}" @rye_opts[:password] = highline.ask("Password: ") { |q| q.echo = '' } @rye_opts[:auth_methods] ||= [] @rye_opts[:auth_methods] << 'password' retry else raise Net::SSH::AuthenticationFailed end end # We add :auth_methods (a Net::SSH joint) to force asking for a # password if the initial (key-based) authentication fails. We # need to delete the key from @rye_opts otherwise it lingers until # the next connection (if we switch_user is called for example). @rye_opts.delete :auth_methods if @rye_opts.has_key?(:auth_methods) self end # Close the SSH session with +@rye_host+. This is called # automatically at exit if the connection is open. def disconnect return unless @rye_ssh && !@rye_ssh.closed? begin Timeout::timeout(3) do @rye_ssh.loop(0.3) { @rye_ssh.busy?; } end rescue SystemCallError, Timeout::Error => ex error "Disconnect timeout (was something still running?)" end debug "Closing connection to #{@rye_ssh.host}" @rye_ssh.close end private def debug(msg="unknown debug msg"); @rye_debug.puts msg if @rye_debug; end def error(msg="unknown error msg"); @rye_error.puts msg if @rye_error; end def pinfo(msg="unknown info msg"); @rye_info.print msg if @rye_info; end def info(msg="unknown info msg"); @rye_info.puts msg if @rye_info; end # Add the current environment variables to the beginning of +cmd+ def prepend_env(cmd) return cmd unless @rye_current_environment_variables.is_a?(Hash) env = '' @rye_current_environment_variables.each_pair do |n,v| env << "export #{n}=#{Escape.shell_single_word(v)}; " end [env, cmd].join(' ') end # Execute a command over SSH # # * +args+ is a command name and list of arguments. # The command name is the literal name of the command # that will be executed in the remote shell. The arguments # will be thoroughly escaped and passed to the command. # # rbox = Rye::Box.new # rbox.ls :l, 'arg1', 'arg2' # # is equivalent to # # $ ls -l 'arg1' 'arg2' # # This method will try to connect to the host automatically # but if it fails it will raise a Rye::NotConnected exception. # def run_command(*args) debug "run_command with keys: #{Rye.keys.inspect}" cmd, args = prep_args(*args) connect if !@rye_ssh || @rye_ssh.closed? raise Rye::NotConnected, @rye_host unless @rye_ssh && !@rye_ssh.closed? cmd_clean = Rye.escape(@rye_safe, cmd, args) # This following is the command we'll actually execute. cmd_clean # can be used for logging, otherwise the output is confusing. cmd_internal = prepend_env(cmd_clean) # Add the current working directory before the command if supplied. # The command will otherwise run in the user's home directory. if @rye_current_working_directory cwd = Rye.escape(@rye_safe, 'cd', @rye_current_working_directory) cmd_internal = [cwd, cmd_internal].join(' && ') end # ditto (same explanation as cwd) if @rye_current_umask cwd = Rye.escape(@rye_safe, 'umask', @rye_current_umask) cmd_internal = [cwd, cmd_internal].join(' && ') end ## NOTE: Do not raise a CommandNotFound exception in this method. # We want it to be possible to define methods to a single instance # of Rye::Box. i.e. def rbox.rm()... # can? returns the methods in Rye::Cmd so it would incorrectly # return false. We could use self.respond_to? but it's possible # to get a name collision. I could write a work around but I think # this is good enough for now. ## raise Rye::CommandNotFound unless self.can?(cmd) begin debug "COMMAND: #{cmd_internal}" if !@rye_quiet && @rye_pre_command_hook.is_a?(Proc) @rye_pre_command_hook.call(cmd_clean, user, host, nickname) end rap = Rye::Rap.new(self) rap.cmd = cmd_clean stdout, stderr, ecode, esignal = net_ssh_exec!(cmd_internal) rap.add_stdout(stdout || '') rap.add_stderr(stderr || '') rap.add_exit_code(ecode) rap.exit_signal = esignal #info "stdout: #{rap.stdout}" #info "stderr: #{rap.stderr}" #info "exit_code: #{rap.exit_code}" # It seems a convention for various commands to return -1 # when something only mildly concerning happens. ls even # returns -1 for apparently no reason sometimes. In any # case, the real errors are the ones greater than zero raise Rye::CommandError.new(rap) if ecode != 0 rescue Exception => ex return rap if @rye_quiet choice = nil @rye_exception_hook.each_pair do |klass,act| next unless ex.kind_of? klass choice = act.call(ex, cmd_clean, user, host, nickname) break end if choice == :retry retry elsif choice == :skip # do nothing else raise ex, ex.message end end if !@rye_quiet && @rye_post_command_hook.is_a?(Proc) @rye_post_command_hook.call(rap) end rap end alias :__allow :run_command # Takes a list of arguments appropriate for run_command or # preview_command and returns: [cmd, args]. # Single character symbols with be converted to command line # switches. Example: +:l+ becomes +-l+ def prep_args(*args) args = args.flatten.compact args = args.first.to_s.split(/\s+/) if args.size == 1 cmd = args.shift # Symbols to switches. :l -> -l, :help -> --help args.collect! do |a| if a.is_a?(Symbol) a = (a.to_s.size == 1) ? "-#{a}" : a.to_s end a end [cmd, args] end # Executes +command+ via SSH # Returns an Array with 4 elements: [stdout, stderr, exit code, exit signal] # NOTE: This method needs to be replaced to fully support interactive # commands. This implementation is weird because it's getting just STDOUT and # STDERR responses (check value of "type"). on_data and on_extended_data method # hooks are not used. See the following threads for implementation ideas: # # http://www.ruby-forum.com/topic/141814 # http://www.ruby-forum.com/topic/169997 # def net_ssh_exec!(command) block ||= Proc.new do |channel, type, data, tt| channel[:stdout] ||= "" channel[:stderr] ||= "" if type == :stderr # NOTE: Use sudo to test this since it prompts for a passwords. # Use sudo -K to kill the user's timestamp (ask for a password every time) if data =~ /password:/i ret = Annoy.get_user_input("Password: ", '*') raise Rye::NoPassword if ret.nil? channel.send_data "#{ret}\n" else channel[:stderr] << data end # If someone tries to open an interactive ssh session # through a regular Rye::Box command, Net::SSH will # return the following error and appear to hang. We # catch it and raise the appropriate exception. raise Rye::NoPty if data =~ /Pseudo-terminal will not/ elsif type == :stdout if data =~ /Select gem to uninstall/i puts data ret = Annoy.get_user_input('') raise "No input given" if ret.nil? channel.send_data "#{ret}\n" else channel[:stdout] << data end end end channel = @rye_ssh.exec(command, &block) channel.on_request("exit-status") do |ch, data| # Anything greater than 0 is an error channel[:exit_code] = data.read_long end channel.on_request("exit-signal") do |ch, data| # This should be the POSIX SIGNAL that ended the process channel[:exit_signal] = data.read_long end channel.wait # block until we get a response channel.request_pty do |ch, success| raise Rye::NoPty if !success end ## I'm getting weird behavior with exit codes. Sometimes ## a command which usually returns an exit code will not ## return one the next time it's run. The following crap ## was from the debugging. ##Kernel.sleep 5 ###channel.close #channel.eof! ##p [:active, channel.active?] ##p [:closing, channel.closing?] ##p [:eof, channel.eof?] channel[:exit_code] ||= 0 channel[:exit_code] &&= channel[:exit_code].to_i channel[:stderr].gsub!(/bash: line \d+:\s+/, '') if channel[:stderr] [channel[:stdout], channel[:stderr], channel[:exit_code], channel[:exit_signal]] end # * +direction+ is one of :upload, :download # * +recursive+ should be true for directories and false for files. # * +files+ is an Array of file paths, the content is direction specific. # For downloads, +files+ is a list of files to download. The last element # must be the local directory to download to. If downloading a single file # the last element can be a file path. The target can also be a StringIO. # For uploads, +files+ is a list of files to upload. The last element is # the directory to upload to. If uploading a single file, the last element # can be a file path. The list of files can also include StringIO objects. # For both uploads and downloads, the target directory will be created if # it does not exist, but only when multiple files are being transferred. # This method will fail early if there are obvious problems with the input # parameters. An exception is raised and no files are transferred. # Uploads always return nil. Downloads return nil or a StringIO object if # one is specified for the target. def net_scp_transfer!(direction, recursive, *files) unless [:upload, :download].member?(direction.to_sym) raise "Must be one of: upload, download" end if @rye_current_working_directory debug "CWD (#{@rye_current_working_directory})" end files = [files].flatten.compact || [] # We allow a single file to be downloaded into a StringIO object # but only when no target has been specified. if direction == :download if files.size == 1 debug "Created StringIO for download" target = StringIO.new else target = files.pop # The last path is the download target. end elsif direction == :upload raise "Cannot upload to a StringIO object" if target.is_a?(StringIO) if files.size == 1 target = self.getenv['HOME'] || guess_user_home debug "Assuming upload to #{target}" else target = files.pop end # Expand fileglobs (e.g. path/*.rb becomes [path/1.rb, path/2.rb]). # This should happen after checking files.size to determine the target unless @rye_safe files.collect! { |file| Dir.glob File.expand_path(file) } files.flatten! end end # Fail early. We check whether the StringIO object is available to read files.each do |file| if file.is_a?(StringIO) raise "Cannot download a StringIO object" if direction == :download raise "StringIO object not opened for reading" if file.closed_read? # If a StringIO object is at end of file, SCP will hang. (TODO: SCP) file.rewind if file.eof? end end info "#{direction.to_s} to: #{target}" debug "FILES: " << files.join(', ') # Make sure the target directory exists. We can do this only when # there's more than one file because "target" could be a file name if files.size > 1 && !target.is_a?(StringIO) debug "CREATING TARGET DIRECTORY: #{target}" self.mkdir(:p, target) unless self.file_exists?(target) end Net::SCP.start(@rye_host, @rye_opts[:user], @rye_opts || {}) do |scp| transfers = [] prev = "" files.each do |file| debug file.to_s prev = "" transfers << scp.send(direction, file, target, :recursive => recursive) do |ch, n, s, t| line = "%-50s %6d/%-6d bytes" % [n, s, t] spaces = (prev.size > line.size) ? ' '*(prev.size - line.size) : '' pinfo "%s %s \r" % [line, spaces] # update line: "file: sent/total" @rye_info.flush if @rye_info # make sure every line is printed prev = line end end transfers.each { |t| t.wait } # Run file transfers in parallel pinfo (' '*prev.size) << "\r" info $/ end target.is_a?(StringIO) ? target : nil end end end