fix deadlock in closing a channel
closing a channel would enter an odd codepath where the lock was grabbed,
some stuff was done, then another function was called where the lock was
grabbed again. unfortunately python locks aren't monitors so this would
deadlock. instead, make the smaller function lock-free with an explicit
notice that you must be holding the lock before calling.
fix utf8, raise packet size, log exceptions, be more lax with sfp servers
explicitly import utf8 encodings for "freezing" (and also because not all
platforms come with utf8, apparently). raise the max acceptable packet size
to 8kB, cuz 2kB was too low. log exceptions at error level instead of debug
level. and don't reject older sftp servers.
fearow date and last-minute fixes
update release date of fearow to 23apr. fix channel._set_closed() to grab
the lock before notifying the in/out buffers that the channel is closed.
try roger's trick for finding the home folder on windows.
add set_keepalive()
add set_keepalive() to set an automatic keepalive mechanism. (while waiting
for a packet on a connection, we periodically check if it's time to send a
keepalive packet.)
add get_username() method for remembering who you auth'd as
add get_username() method for remembering who you auth'd as. also, fix these
bugs:
* "continue" auth response counted as a failure (in server mode).
* try to import 'logging' in py22 before falling back to the fake logger,
in case they have a backported version of 'logger'
* raise the right exception when told to read a private key from a file that
isn't a private key file
* tell channels to close when the transport dies
fix encrypted private key files
the random byte padding on private key files' BER data was confusing openssh,
so switch to null-byte padding, which is slightly less secure but works with
crappy old openssh. also, enforce the mode when writing the private key
file. we really really want it to be 0600. (python seems to ignore the
mode normally.)
support py22, more or less
add roger binns' patches for supporting python 2.2. i hedged a bit on the
logging stuff and just added some trickery to let logging be stubbed out for
python 2.2. this changed a lot of import statements but i managed to avoid
hacking at any of the existing logging.
socket timeouts are required for the threads to notice when they've been
deactivated. worked around it by using the 'select' module on py22.
also fixed the sftp unit tests to cope with a password-protected private key.
make get_remote_server_key() return a PKey object
a good suggestion from roger binns: make get_remote_server_key() just return
a pkey object instead of a tuple of strings. all the strings can be extracted
from the pkey object, as well as other potentially useful things.
add dss key generation too, and fix some bugs
added the ability to generate dss keys and write private dss key files,
similar to rsa. in the process, fixed a couple of bugs with ber encoding
and writing password-encrypted key files. the key has to be padded to the
iblock size of the cipher -- it's very difficult to determine how the others
do this, so i just add random bytes to the end.
fixed the simple demo to use Transport's (host, port) constructor for
simplicity, and fixed a bug where the standard demo's DSS login wouldn't
work.
also, move the common logfile setup crap into util so all the demos can just
call that one.
add global request mechanism
add transport.global_request() to make a global-style request (usually an
extension to the protocol -- like keepalives) and handle requests from the
remote host. incoming requests are now handled and responded to correctly,
which should make openssh-style keepalives work. (before, we would silently
ignore them, which was wrong.)
can now generate rsa keys (not dss yet)
added functionality to ber to create ber streams. added some common methods
to PKey to allow dumping the key to base64 (the format used by openssh for
public key files and host key lists), and a factory for creating a key from
a private key file, and a common way to save private keys. RSAKey luckily
didn't have to change that much.
also added a factory method to RSAKey to generate a new key.
fix some arcana in unpacking private keys
"!= type([])" is a pretty obscure way to say it. let's try "is not list"
which is a lot more readable.
(mostly this is a test to make sure tla is working okay on my laptop.)
include tests in manifest
include the tests in the manifest for dist, and remove some outdated notes in
NOTES about the exported API (this is doc'd wayyy better in epydoc now).
add unit tests
add unit tests for BufferedFile and SFTP (it's a start). remove the demo sftp
client because it was 99% copied from the other demos, which makes it kinda
confusing. the unit tests are a much better example.
finish up client sftp support
added 'stat' to SFTPFile and SFTP, documented 'open' and 'listdir', and added
'rmdir', 'lstat', 'symlink', 'chmod', 'chown', 'utime', 'readlink'.
turned off ultra debugging now that the unit tests are all working.
fix some docs and BufferedFile.readline
fix some documentation and fix readline()'s universal newline support to
always return strings ending with '\n', regardless of how they were in the
original file. (this is an obvious feature of python's universal newline
support that i somehow missed before.)
fix lingering thread bug
this bug has been in there forever and i could never figure out a workaround
till now.
when the python interpreter exits, it doesn't necessarily destroy the
remaining objects or call __del__ on anything, and it will lock up until all
threads finish running. how the threads are supposed to notice the exiting
interpreter has always been sort of a mystery to me.
tonight i figured out how to use the 'atexit' module to register a handler
that runs when the interpreter exits. now we keep a list of active threads
and ask them all to exit on shutdown. no more going to another shell to
kill -9 python! yeah!!
add BufferedFile abstraction
SFTP client mode is mostly functional. there are probably still some bugs
but most of the operations on "file" objects have survived my simple tests.
BufferedFile wraps a simpler stream in something that looks like a python
file (and can even handle seeking if the stream underneath supports it).
it's meant to be subclassed. most of it is ripped out of what used to be
ChannelFile so i can reuse it for sftp -- ChannelFile is now tiny.
SFTP and Message are now exported.
fixed util.format_binary_line to not quote spaces.
Transport constructor can take hostname or address tuple
part of an ongoing attempt to make "simple" versions of some of the API calls,
so you can do common-case operations with just a few calls:
Transport's constructor will now let you pass in a string or tuple instead
of a socket-like object. if you pass in a string, it assumes the string is
a hostname (with optional ":port" segment) and turns that into an address
tuple. if you pass in a tuple, it assumes it's an address tuple. in both
cases, it then creates a socket, connects to the given address, and then
continues as if that was the socket passed in.
the idea being that you can call Transport('example.com') and it will do
the right thing.
pkey no longer raises binascii.Error
catch binascii.Error in the private key decoder and convert it into an
SSHException. there's no reason people should have to care that it was a
decoding error vs. any of the other million things that could be wrong in
a corrupt key file.
document more of Message; add get_int64
all of the get_* methods are now documented, but there's a bit more to do.
get_int64 added for eventual sftp support.
fix MANIFEST.in, change version numbers to 0.9-doduo, fix LPGL notices
fixed MANIFEST.in to include the demo scripts, LICENSE, and ChangeLog.
upped everything to version 0.9-doduo.
fixed the copyright notice, and added the LGPL banner to the top of every
python file.
more docs, and password-protected key files can now be read
lots more documentation, some of it moved out of the README file, which is
now much smaller and less rambling.
repr(Transport) now reports the number of bits used in the cipher.
cleaned up BER to use util functions, and throw a proper exception (the new
BERException) on error. it doesn't ever have to be a full BER decoder, but
it can at least comb its hair and tuck in its shirt.
lots of stuff added to PKey.read_private_key_file so it can try to decode
password-protected key files. right now it only understands "DES-EDE3-CBC"
format, but this is the only format i've seen openssh make so far. if the
key is password-protected, but no password was given, a new exception
(PasswordRequiredException) is raised so an outer layer can ask for a password
and try again.
added public-key support to server mode, more docs
added public-key support to server mode (it can now verify a client signature)
and added a demo of that to the demo_server.py script (user_rsa_key). in the
process, cleaned up the API of PKey so that now it only has to know about
signing and verifying ssh2 blobs, and can be hashed and compared with other
keys (comparing & hashing only the public parts of the key). keys can also
be created from strings now too.
some more documentation and hiding private methods.
lots more documentation, and added Transport.connect()
renamed demo_host_key to demo_rsa_key. moved changelog to a separate file,
and indicated that future changelog entries should be fetched from tla.
tried to clean up "__all__" in a way that makes epydoc still work.
added lots more documentation, and renamed many methods and vars to hide
them as private non-exported API.
Transport's ModulusPack is now a static member, so it only has to be loaded
once, and can then be used by any future Transport object.
added Transport.connect(), which tries to wrap all the SSH2 negotiation and
authentication into one method. you should be able to create a Transport,
call connect(), and then create channels.
hook up server-side kex-gex; add more documentation
group-exchange kex should work now on the server side. it will only be
advertised if a "moduli" file has been loaded (see the -gasp- docs) so we
don't spend hours (literally. hours.) computing primes. some of the logic
was previously wrong, too, since it had never been tested.
fixed repr() string for Transport/BaseTransport. moved is_authenticated to
Transport where it belongs.
added lots of documentation (but still only about 10% documented). lots of
methods were made private finally.
fix up new paramiko/ folder.
moved SSHException to a new file (ssh_exception.py) and turned paramiko.py
into an __init__.py file. i'm still not entirely sure how this normally
works, so i may have done something wrong, but it's supposed to work the
same as before.
fix a deadlock/race in handle_eof & close
(patch from fred gansevles)
add locking around the eof handler and the close() call, so we can't be in
both simultaneously.
fix dss key signing
(expanded on a patch from fred gansevles)
add a demo dss key for server mode, and fix some bugs that had caused the dss
signing stuff to never work before. the demo_server is a bit more verbose
now, too. both key types (RSAKey & DSSKey) now have a function to return the
fingerprint of the key, and both versions of read_private_key_file() now raise
exceptions on failure, instead of just silently setting "valid" to false.
in server mode, don't offer keys we don't have
(from Paolo Losi) in server mode, when advertising which key methods we
support, don't list methods that we don't have any existing keys for.
cleaned up server code, renamed some files & classes
renamed demo-server.py and demo-host-key to demo_server.py and
demo_host_key, just to be consistent.
renamed SSHException -> SecshException.
generalized the mechanism where Channel decides whether to allow
different channel requests: 4 of the main ones (pty, window-change,
shell, and subsystem) go through easily override-able methods now.
you could probably make an actual ssh shell server.
gave ChannelFile a repr().
turned off ultra debugging in the demos. demo_server creates a
subclass of Channel to allow pty/shell and sets an event when the
shell request is made, so that it knows when it can start sending
the fake bbs.
renamed to charmander and updated some of the distutils files.
notes about the exported api
just wrote some quick notes (for a few of the classes) about which
methods are intended to be the exported API. python has no decent
way of distinguishing private vs public.
big chunk of work which makes server code 95% done
fixed auth check methods to return just a result (failed, succeeded,
partially succeeded) and always use get_allowed_auths to determine the
list of allowed auth methods to return.
channel's internal API changed a bit to allow for client-side vs.
server-side channels. we now honor the "want-reply" bit from channel
requests. in server mode (for now), we automatically allow pty-req
and shell requests without doing anything.
ChannelFile was fixed up a bit to support universal newlines. readline
got rewritten: the old way used the "greedy" read call from ChannelFile,
which won't work if the socket doesn't have that much data buffered and
ready. now it uses recv directly, and tracks the different newlines.
demo-server.py now answers to a single shell request (like a CLI ssh
tool will make) and does a very simple demo pretending to be a BBS.
transport: fixed a bug with parsing the remote side's banner. channel
requests are passed to another method in server mode, to determine if
we should allow it. new allowed channels are added to an accept queue,
and a new method 'accept' (with timeout) will block until the next
incoming channel is ready.
change kex-gex server code to generate primes by hand
added a util function "generate_prime" to compare to the incredibly slow C
version, but it's no faster of course. i think kex-gex from the server is
just not going to be feasible without having a separate thread generate some
primes in the background to have handy when a request comes in. so in short,
this still doesn't work.
also i put bit_length into util and a tb_strings function which gets stack
traceback info and splits it into a list of strings.