NAME
Net::SSH::Mechanize - asynchronous ssh command invocation
VERSION
version 0.1.3
SYNOPSIS
Somewhat like POE::Component::OpenSSH
, SSH::Batch
, Net::OpenSSH::Parallel
, App::MrShell
etc, but:
It uses the asynchonous
AnyEvent
event framework.It aims to support sudoing smoothly.
Synchronous usage:
use Net::SSH::Mechanize;
# Create an instance. This will not log in yet.
# All but the host name below are optional.
# Your .ssh/config will be used as normal, so if you
# define ssh settings for a host there they will be picked up.
my $ssh = Net::SSH::Mechanize->new(
host => 'somewhere.com',
user => 'jbloggs',
password => 'secret',
port => 22,
);
my $ssh->login;
my $output = $ssh->capture("id");
# If successful, $output now contains something like:
# uid=1000(jbloggs) gid=1000(jbloggs) groups=1000(jbloggs)
$output = $ssh->sudo_capture("id");
# If successful, $output now contains something like:
# uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)
$ssh->logout;
As you can see, Net::SSH::Mechanize
instance connects to only one host. Net::SSH::Mechanize::Multi manages connections to many.
See below for further examples, and script/gofer
in the distribution source for a working, usable example.
This is work in progress. Expect rough edges. Feedback appreciated.
DESCRIPTION
The point about using AnyEvent
internally is that "blocking" method calls only block the current "thread", and so the above can be used in parallel with (for example) other ssh sessions in the same process (using AnyEvent
, or Coro
). Although a sub-process is spawned for each ssh command, the parent process manages the child processes asynchronously, without blocking or polling.
Here is an example of asynchronous usage, using the <AnyEvent-
condvar>> API. Calls return an <AnyEvent::CondVar
> instance, which you can call the usual ->recv
and ->cb
methods on to perform a blocking wait (within the current thread), or assign a callback to be called on completion (respectively). See AnyEvent.
This is effectively what the example in the synopsis is doing, behind the scenes.
use Net::SSH::Mechanize;
# Create an instance, as above.
my $ssh = Net::SSH::Mechanize->new(
host => 'somewhere.com',
user => 'jbloggs',
password => 'secret',
port => 22,
);
# Accessing ->capture calls ->login automatically.
my $condvar = AnyEvent->condvar;
$ssh->login_async->cb(sub {
my ($session) = shift->recv;
$session->capture_async("id")->cb(sub {
my ($stderr_handle, $result) = shift->recv;
$condvar->send($result);
});
});
# ... this returns immediately. The callbacks assigned will get
# invoked behind the scenes, and we just need to wait and collect
# the result handed to our $condvar.
my $result = $convar->recv;
# If successful, $output now contains something like:
# uid=1000(jbloggs) gid=1000(jbloggs) groups=1000(jbloggs)
$ssh->logout;
You would only need to use this asynchronous style if you wanted to interface with AnyEvent
, and/or add some Expect
-like interaction into the code.
However, see also Net::SSH::Mechanize::Multi
for a more convenient way of running multiple ssh sessions in parallel. It uses Coro to provide a (cooperatively) threaded model.
gofer
The script/
sub-directory includes a command-line tool called gofer
which is designed to accept a list of connection definitions, and execute shell commands supplied in the arguments in parallel on each. See the documentation in the script for more information.
JUSTIFICATION
The problem with all other SSH wrappers I've tried so far is that they do not cope well when you need to sudo. Some of them do it but unreliably (SSH::Batch
), others allow it with some help, but then don't assist with parallel connections to many servers (Net::OpenSSH
). The I tried POE::Component::OpenSSH
, but I found the POE::Component::Generic
implementation forced a painful programming style with long chains of functions, one for each step in an exchange with the ssh process.
Possibly I just didn't try them all, or hard enough, but I really needed something which could do the job, and fell back to re-inventing the wheel. Initial experiments with AnyEvent
and AnyEvent::Subprocess
showed a lot of promise, and the result is this.
CLASS METHODS
$obj = $class->new(%params)
Creates a new instance. Parameters is a hash or a list of key-value parameters. Valid parameter keys are:
connection_params
-
A Net::SSH::Mechanize::ConnectParams instance, which defines a host connection. If this is given, any individual connection parameters also supplied to the constructor (
host
,user
,port
orpassword
), will be ignored.If this is absent, a
Net::SSH::Mechanize::ConnectParams
instance is constructed from any other individual connection parameters - the minimum which must be supplied ishostname
. See below. host
-
The hostname to connect to. Either this or
connection_params
must be supplied. user
-
The user account to log into. If not given, no user will be supplied to
ssh
(this typically means it will use the current user as default). port
-
The port to connect to (
ssh
will default to 22 if this is not specificed). password
-
The password to connect with. This is only required if authentication will be performed, either on log-in or when sudoing.
login_timeout
-
How long to wait before breaking a connection (in seconds). It is passed to
AnyEvent-
timer> handler, whose callback will terminate the session if the period is exceeded. This avoids hung connections when the remote end isn't answering, or isn't answering in a way that will allowNet::SSH::Mechanize
to terminate.The default is 30.
INSTANCE ATTRIBUTES
$params = $obj->connection_params
This is a read-only accessor for the connection_params
instance passed to the constructor (or equivalently, constructed from the constructor parameters).
$session = $obj->session
This is read-only accessor to a lazily-instantiated Net::SSH::Mechanize::Session
instance, which represents the ssh
process. Accessing it causes the session to be created and the remote host to be logged into.
$obj->login_timeout($integer)
=head2 $integer = $obj->login_timeout
This is a read-write accessor to the log-in timeout parameter passed to the constructor.
It is passed to Net::SSH::Mechanize::Session
's constructor, so if you plan to modify it, do so before ->session
has been instantiated or will not have any effect on anything thereafter.
INSTANCE METHODS
login
=head2 login_async
=head2 capture
=head2 capture_async
=head2 sudo_capture
=head2 sudo_capture_async
=head2 logout
These methods exist here for convenience; they delegate to the equivalent Net::SSH::Mechanize::Session
methods.
KNOWN ISSUES
- "unexpected stderr from command: stderr output" in test output
-
Something I haven't yet figured out how to banish properly. However, it does appear to be harmless. Patches welcome.
SEE ALSO
There are a lot of related tools, and this is just in Perl. Probably the most similar are SSH::Batch
, POE::Component::OpenSSH
, and App::MrShell
(which at the time of writing, I've not yet tried.) None use AnyEvent
, so far as I can tell.
SSH::Batch, Net::OpenSSH, Net::OpenSSH::Parallel, Net::SSH, Net::SSH2," Net::SSH::Expect", Net::SSH::Perl, POE::Component::OpenSSH, App::MrShell.
AUTHOR
Nick Stokoe <wulee@cpan.org>
LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011, Nick Stokoe <wulee@cpan.org>
. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY
BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE SOFTWARE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.
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