To run echo locally:
import spur
shell = spur.LocalShell()
result = shell.run(["echo", "-n", "hello"])
print(result.output) # prints hello
Executing the same command over SSH uses the same interface -- the only difference is how the shell is created:
import spur
shell = spur.SshShell(hostname="localhost", username="bob", password="password1")
with shell:
result = shell.run(["echo", "-n", "hello"])
print(result.output) # prints hello
$ pip install spur
Takes no arguments:
spur.LocalShell()
Requires a hostname. Also requires some combination of a username, password and private key, as necessary to authenticate:
# Use a password
spur.SshShell(
hostname="localhost",
username="bob",
password="password1"
)
# Use a private key
spur.SshShell(
hostname="localhost",
username="bob",
private_key_file="path/to/private.key"
)
# Use a port other than 22
spur.SshShell(
hostname="localhost",
port=50022,
username="bob",
password="password1"
)
Optional arguments:
connect_timeout
-- a timeout in seconds for establishing an SSH connection. Defaults to 60 (one minute).missing_host_key
-- by default, an error is raised when a host key is missing. One of the following values can be used to change the behaviour when a host key is missing:spur.ssh.MissingHostKey.raise_error
-- raise an errorspur.ssh.MissingHostKey.warn
-- accept the host key and log a warningspur.ssh.MissingHostKey.accept
-- accept the host key
shell_type
-- the type of shell used by the host. Defaults tospur.ssh.ShellTypes.sh
, which should be appropriate for most Linux distributions. If the host uses a different shell, such as simpler shells often found on embedded systems, try changingshell_type
to a more appropriate value, such asspur.ssh.ShellTypes.minimal
. The following shell types are currently supported:spur.ssh.ShellTypes.sh
-- the Bourne shell. Supports all features.spur.ssh.ShellTypes.minimal
-- a minimal shell. Several features are unsupported:- Non-existent commands will not raise
spur.NoSuchCommandError
. - The following arguments to
spawn
andrun
are unsupported unless set to their default values:cwd
,update_env
, andstore_pid
.
- Non-existent commands will not raise
look_for_private_keys
-- by default, Spur will search for discoverable private key files in~/.ssh/
. Set toFalse
to disable this behaviour.load_system_host_keys
-- by default, Spur will attempt to read host keys from the user's known hosts file, as used by OpenSSH, and no exception will be raised if the file can't be read. Set toFalse
to disable this behaviour.sock
-- an open socket or socket-like object to use for communication to the target host. For instance:sock=paramiko.proxy.ProxyCommand( "ssh -q -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null" "[email protected] nc -q0 target.example.com 22" )
Examples of socket-like objects include:
paramiko.Channel
paramiko.proxy.ProxyCommand
(unsupported in Python 3 as of writing)
Run a command and wait for it to complete. The command is expected to be
a list of strings. Returns an instance of ExecutionResult
.
result = shell.run(["echo", "-n", "hello"])
print(result.output) # prints hello
Note that arguments are passed without any shell expansion. For
instance, shell.run(["echo", "$PATH"])
will print the literal string
$PATH
rather than the value of the environment variable $PATH
.
Raises spur.NoSuchCommandError
if trying to execute a non-existent
command.
Raises spur.CouldNotChangeDirectoryError
if changing the current directory
to cwd
failed.
Optional arguments:
cwd
-- change the current directory to this value before executing the command.update_env
-- adict
containing environment variables to be set before running the command. If there's an existing environment variable with the same name, it will be overwritten. Otherwise, it is unchanged.store_pid
-- if set toTrue
when callingspawn
, store the process id of the spawned process as the attributepid
on the returned process object. Has no effect when callingrun
.allow_error
--False
by default. IfFalse
, an exception is raised if the return code of the command is anything but 0. IfTrue
, a result is returned irrespective of return code.stdout
-- if notNone
, anything the command prints to standard output during its execution will also be written tostdout
usingstdout.write
.stderr
-- if notNone
, anything the command prints to standard error during its execution will also be written tostderr
usingstderr.write
.encoding
-- if set, this is used to decode any output. By default, any output is treated as raw bytes. If set, the raw bytes are decoded before writing to the passedstdout
andstderr
arguments (if set) and before setting the output attributes on the result.
shell.run(*args, **kwargs)
should behave similarly to
shell.spawn(*args, **kwargs).wait_for_result()
Behaves the same as run
except that spawn
immediately returns an
object representing the running process.
Raises spur.NoSuchCommandError
if trying to execute a non-existent
command.
Raises spur.CouldNotChangeDirectoryError
if changing the current directory
to cwd
failed.
Open the file at path
. Returns a file-like object.
By default, files are opened in text mode. Appending "b" to the mode will open the file in binary mode.
For instance, to copy a binary file over SSH,
assuming you already have an instance of SshShell
:
with ssh_shell.open("/path/to/remote", "rb") as remote_file:
with open("/path/to/local", "wb") as local_file:
shutil.copyfileobj(remote_file, local_file)
Returned by calls to shell.spawn
. Has the following attributes:
pid
-- the process ID of the process. Only available ifstore_pid
was set toTrue
when callingspawn
.
Has the following methods:
is_running()
-- returnTrue
if the process is still running,False
otherwise.stdin_write(value)
-- writevalue
to the standard input of the process.wait_for_result()
-- wait for the process to exit, and then return an instance ofExecutionResult
. Will raiseRunProcessError
if the return code is not zero andshell.spawn
was not called withallow_error=True
.send_signal(signal)
-- sends the process the signalsignal
. Only available ifstore_pid
was set toTrue
when callingspawn
.
ExecutionResult
has the following properties:
return_code
-- the return code of the commandoutput
-- a string containing the result of capturing stdoutstderr_output
-- a string containing the result of capturing stdout
It also has the following methods:
to_error()
-- return the corresponding RunProcessError. This is useful if you want to conditionally raise RunProcessError, for instance:
result = shell.run(["some-command"], allow_error=True)
if result.return_code > 4:
raise result.to_error()
A subclass of RuntimeError
with the same properties as
ExecutionResult
:
return_code
-- the return code of the commandoutput
-- a string containing the result of capturing stdoutstderr_output
-- a string containing the result of capturing stdout
NoSuchCommandError
has the following properties:
command
-- the command that could not be found
CouldNotChangeDirectoryError
has the following properties:
directory
-- the directory that could not be changed to
Using the the terminology from Semantic Versioning, if the version of spur is X.Y.Z, then X is the major version, Y is the minor version, and Z is the patch version.
While the major version is 0, incrementing the patch version indicates a backwards compatible change. For instance, if you're using 0.3.1, then it should be safe to upgrade to 0.3.2.
Incrementing the minor version indicates a change in the API. This means that any code using previous minor versions of spur may need updating before it can use the current minor version.
Some features are undocumented, and should be considered experimental. Use them at your own risk. They may not behave correctly, and their behaviour and interface may change at any time.
I get the error "Connection refused" when trying to connect to a virtual machine using a forwarded port on localhost
Try using "127.0.0.1"
instead of "localhost"
as the hostname.
Try connecting to the machine using SSH on the command line with the same settings. For instance, if you're using the code:
shell = spur.SshShell(
hostname="remote",
port=2222,
username="bob",
private_key_file="/home/bob/.ssh/id_rsa"
)
with shell:
result = shell.run(["echo", "hello"])
Try running:
ssh bob@remote -p 2222 -i /home/bob/.ssh/id_rsa
If the ssh
command succeeds, make sure that the arguments to
ssh.SshShell
and the ssh
command are the same. If any of the
arguments to ssh.SshShell
are dynamically generated, try hard-coding
them to make sure they're set to the values you expect.
If you're having trouble spawning or running commands over SSH, try passing
shell_type=spur.ssh.ShellTypes.minimal
as an argument to spur.SshShell
.
For instance:
import spur
import spur.ssh
spur.SshShell(
hostname="localhost",
username="bob",
password="password1",
shell_type=spur.ssh.ShellTypes.minimal,
)
This makes minimal assumptions about the features that the host shell supports,
and is especially well-suited to minimal shells found on embedded systems. If
the host shell is more fully-featured but only works with
spur.ssh.ShellTypes.minimal
, feel free to submit an issue.
Commands are run directly rather than through a shell. If you want to use any shell features such as variables and redirection, then you'll need to run those commands within an appropriate shell. For instance:
shell.run(["sh", "-c", "echo $PATH"])
shell.run(["sh", "-c", "ls | grep bananas"])