scala-ssh is a Scala library providing remote shell access via SSH. It builds on SSHJ to provide the following features:
- Remote execution of one or more shell commands
- Access to
stdin
,stdout
,stderr
and exitcode of remote shell commands - Authentication via password or public key
- Host key verification via
known_hosts
file or explicit fingerprint - Convenient configuration of remote host properties via config file, resource or directly in code
- Scala-idiomatic API
The latest release is 0.6.4 and is built against Scala 2.9.3 as well as Scala 2.10.2. It is available from http://repo.spray.io. If you use SBT you can pull in the scala-ssh artifacts with:
resolvers += "spray repo" at "http://repo.spray.io" libraryDependencies += "com.decodified" %% "scala-ssh" % "0.6.4" cross CrossVersion.full
(the trailing "cross CrossVersion.full" modifier is only required for SBT 0.12.x)
SSHJ uses SLF4J for logging, so you might want to also add logback to your dependencies:
libraryDependencies += "ch.qos.logback" % "logback-classic" % "1.0.13"
Additionally, in many cases you will need the following two artifacts, which provide additional cypher and compression support:
libraryDependencies ++= Seq( "org.bouncycastle" % "bcprov-jdk16" % "1.46", "com.jcraft" % "jzlib" % "1.1.2" )
The highest-level API element provided by scala-ssh is the SSH
object. You use it like this:
SSH("example.com") { client => client.exec("ls -a").right.map { result => println("Result:\n" + result.stdOutAsString()) } }
This establishes an SSH connection to host example.com
and gives you an SshClient
instance that you can use
to execute one or more commands on the host.
SSH.apply
has a second (optional) parameter of type HostConfigProvider
, which is essentially a function
returning a HostConfig
instance for a given hostname. A HostConfig
looks like this:
case class HostConfig( login: SshLogin, hostName: String = "", port: Int = 22, connectTimeout: Option[Int] = None, connectionTimeout: Option[Int] = None, commandTimeout: Option[Int] = None, enableCompression: Boolean = false, hostKeyVerifier: HostKeyVerifier = ..., sshjConfig: Config = ... )
It provides all the details required for properly establishing an SSH connection.
If you don't provide an explicit HostConfigProvider
the default one will be used. For every hostname you pass to the
SSH.apply
method this default HostConfigProvider
expects a file ~/.scala-ssh/{hostname}
, which contains the
properties of a HostConfig
in a simple config file format (see below for details). The HostResourceConfig
object
gives you alternative HostConfigProvider
implementations that read the host config from classpath resources.
If the file ~/.scala-ssh/{hostname}
(or the classpath resource {hostname}
) doesn't exist scala-ssh looks for
more general files (or resources) in the following way:
- As long as the first segment of the host name (up to the first
.
) contains one or more digits replace the rightmost of these withX
and look for a respectively named file or resource. Repeat until no digits left. - Drop all characters up to (and including) the first
.
from the host name and look for a respectively named file or resource. - Repeat from 1. as long as there are characters left.
This means that for a host with name node42.tier1.example.com
the following locations (either under
~/.scala-ssh/
or the classpath, depending on the HostConfigProvider
) are tried:
node42.tier1.example.com
node4X.tier1.example.com
nodeXX.tier1.example.com
tier1.example.com
tierX.example.com
example.com
com
A host config file is a UTF8-encoded text file containing key = value
pairs, one per line. Blank lines and lines
starting with a #
character are ignored. This is an example file:
# simple password-based config login-type = password username = bob password = 123 command-timeout = 5000 enable-compression = yes
These key are defined:
- login-type
- required, can be either
password
orkeyfile
- host-name
- optional, if not given the name of the config file is assumed to be the hostname
- port
- optional, the default value is
22
- username
- required
- password
- required for login-type
password
, ignored otherwise - keyfile
- optionally specifies the location of the user keyfile to use with login-type
keyfile
, if not given the default files~/.ssh/id_rsa
and~/.ssh/id_dsa
are tried, ignored for login-typepassword
, if the filename starts with a+
the file is searched in addition to the default locations, if the filename starts withclasspath:
it is interpreted as the name of a classpath resource holding the private key - passphrase
- optionally specifies the passphrase for the keyfile, if not given the keyfile is assumed to be unencrypted,
ignored for login-type
password
- connect-timeout
- optionally specifies the number of milli-seconds that a connection request has to succeed in before triggering a timeout error, default value is 'no timeout'
- connection-timeout
- optionally specifies the number of milli-seconds that an idle connection is held open before being closed due due to idleness, default value is 'no timeout'
- command-timeout
- optionally specifies the number of milli-seconds that a pending response to an issued command is waited for before triggering a timeout error, default value is 'no timeout'
- enable-compression
- optionally adds
zlib
compression to preferred compression algorithms, there is no guarantee that it will be successfully negotiatied, requiresjzlib
on the classpath (see 'installation' chapter) above, default is 'no' - fingerprint
- optionally specifies the fingerprint of the public host key to verify in standard SSH format
(e.g.
4b:69:6c:72:6f:79:20:77:61:73:20:68:65:72:65:21
), if not given the standard~/.ssh/known_hosts
or~/.ssh/known_hosts2
files will be searched for a matching entry, fingerprint verification can be entirely disabled by settingfingerprint = any
scala-ssh is licensed under APL 2.0.
Feedback and contributions to the project, no matter what kind, are always very welcome. However, patches can only be accepted from their original author. Along with any patches, please state that the patch is your original work and that you license the work to the scala-ssh project under the project’s open source license.