<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd">
<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
<year>2012</year>
<year>2013</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
under the License.
</legalnotice>
<title>Getting Started</title>
<prepared></prepared>
<docno></docno>
<approved></approved>
<date></date>
<rev></rev>
<file>using_ssh.xml</file>
</header>
<section>
<title>General Information</title>
<p>The following examples use the utility function
<seealso marker="ssh#start-0"> ssh:start/0</seealso> to start
all needed applications (<c>crypto</c>, <c>public_key</c>, and <c>ssh</c>).
All examples are run in an Erlang shell, or in a bash shell, using <em>openssh</em>
to illustrate how the <c>ssh</c> application can be used. The
examples are run as the user <c>otptest</c> on a local network where the
user is authorized to log in over <c>ssh</c> to the host <em>tarlop</em>.
</p>
<p>If nothing else is stated, it is presumed that the <c>otptest</c> user
has an entry in the <em>authorized_keys</em> file of <em>tarlop</em>
(allowed to log in over <c>ssh</c> without entering a password).
Also, <em>tarlop</em> is a known host in the <c>known_hosts</c>
file of the user <c>otptest</c>. This means that host-verification
can be done without user-interaction.
</p>
</section>
<section>
<title>Using the Erlang ssh Terminal Client</title>
<p>The user <c>otptest</c>, which has bash as default shell, uses the
<c>ssh:shell/1</c> client to connect to the <em>openssh</em> daemon running on a
host called <em>tarlop</em>:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> {ok, S} = ssh:shell("tarlop").
otptest@tarlop:> pwd
/home/otptest
otptest@tarlop:> exit
logout
3>
</code>
</section>
<section>
<marker id="Running an Erlang ssh Daemon"></marker>
<title>Running an Erlang ssh Daemon</title>
<p>The <c>system_dir</c> option must be a directory containing a host
key file and it defaults to <c>/etc/ssh</c>. For details, see Section
Configuration Files in <seealso
marker="SSH_app">ssh(6)</seealso>.
</p>
<note><p>Normally, the <c>/etc/ssh</c> directory is only readable by root.</p>
</note>
<p>The option <c>user_dir</c> defaults to directory <c>users ~/.ssh</c>.</p>
<p><em>Step 1.</em> To run the example without root privileges,
generate new keys and host keys:</p>
<code>
$bash> ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /tmp/ssh_daemon/ssh_host_rsa_key
[...]
$bash> ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa
[...]
</code>
<p><em>Step 2.</em> Create the file <c>/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/authorized_keys</c>
and add the content of <c>/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa.pub</c>.</p>
<p><em>Step 3.</em> Start the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon:</p>
<code type="erl">
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> {ok, Sshd} = ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
{user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}]).
{ok,<0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
<p><em>Step 4.</em> Use the <em>openssh</em> client from a shell to connect
to the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon:</p>
<code>
$bash> ssh tarlop -p 8989 -i /tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa\
-o UserKnownHostsFile=/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/known_hosts
The authenticity of host 'tarlop' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is 14:81:80:50:b1:1f:57:dd:93:a8:2d:2f:dd:90:ae:a8.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added 'tarlop' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
Eshell V5.10 (abort with ^G)
1>
</code>
<p>There are two ways of shutting down an <c>ssh</c> daemon,
see <em>Step 5a</em> and <em>Step 5b</em>.</p>
<p><em>Step 5a.</em> Shut down the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon so that it
stops the listener but leaves existing connections, started by the listener,
operational:</p>
<code type="erl">
3> ssh:stop_listener(Sshd).
ok
4>
</code>
<p><em>Step 5b.</em> Shut down the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon so that it
stops the listener and all connections started by the listener:</p>
<code type="erl">
3> ssh:stop_daemon(Sshd)
ok
4>
</code>
</section>
<section>
<title>One-Time Execution</title>
<p>In the following example, the Erlang shell is the client process
that receives the channel replies.</p>
<note><p>The number of received messages in this example depends on which OS
and which shell that is used on the machine running the <c>ssh</c> daemon.
See also <seealso marker="ssh_connection#exec-4">ssh_connection:exec/4</seealso>
</p>.</note>
<p>Do a one-time execution of a remote command over <c>ssh</c>:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> {ok, ConnectionRef} = ssh:connect("tarlop", 22, []).
{ok,<0.57.0>}
3>{ok, ChannelId} = ssh_connection:session_channel(ConnectionRef, infinity).
{ok,0}
4> success = ssh_connection:exec(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, "pwd", infinity).
5> flush().
Shell got {ssh_cm,<0.57.0>,{data,0,0,<<"/home/otptest\n">>}}
Shell got {ssh_cm,<0.57.0>,{eof,0}}
Shell got {ssh_cm,<0.57.0>,{exit_status,0,0}}
Shell got {ssh_cm,<0.57.0>,{closed,0}}
ok
6>
</code>
<p>Notice that only the channel is closed. The connection is still up and can
handle other channels:</p>
<code type="erl" >
6> {ok, NewChannelId} = ssh_connection:session_channel(ConnectionRef, infinity).
{ok,1}
...
</code>
</section>
<section>
<title>SFTP Server</title>
<p>Start the Erlang <c>ssh</c> daemon with the SFTP subsystem:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
{user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"},
{subsystems, [ssh_sftpd:subsystem_spec([{cwd, "/tmp/sftp/example"}])]}]).
{ok,<0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
<p>Run the OpenSSH SFTP client:</p>
<code type="erl">
$bash> sftp -oPort=8989 -o IdentityFile=/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/id_rsa\
-o UserKnownHostsFile=/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh/known_hosts tarlop
Connecting to tarlop...
sftp> pwd
Remote working directory: /tmp/sftp/example
sftp>
</code>
</section>
<section>
<title>SFTP Client</title>
<p>Fetch a file with the Erlang SFTP client:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> {ok, ChannelPid, Connection} = ssh_sftp:start_channel("tarlop", []).
{ok,<0.57.0>,<0.51.0>}
3> ssh_sftp:read_file(ChannelPid, "/home/otptest/test.txt").
{ok,<<"This is a test file\n">>}
</code>
</section>
<section>
<title>Creating a Subsystem</title>
<p>A small <c>ssh</c> subsystem that echoes N bytes can be implemented as shown
in the following example:</p>
<code type="erl" >
-module(ssh_echo_server).
-behaviour(ssh_subsystem).
-record(state, {
n,
id,
cm
}).
-export([init/1, handle_msg/2, handle_ssh_msg/2, terminate/2]).
init([N]) ->
{ok, #state{n = N}}.
handle_msg({ssh_channel_up, ChannelId, ConnectionManager}, State) ->
{ok, State#state{id = ChannelId,
cm = ConnectionManager}}.
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, CM, {data, ChannelId, 0, Data}}, #state{n = N} = State) ->
M = N - size(Data),
case M > 0 of
true ->
ssh_connection:send(CM, ChannelId, Data),
{ok, State#state{n = M}};
false ->
<<SendData:N/binary, _/binary>> = Data,
ssh_connection:send(CM, ChannelId, SendData),
ssh_connection:send_eof(CM, ChannelId),
{stop, ChannelId, State}
end;
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, _ConnectionManager,
{data, _ChannelId, 1, Data}}, State) ->
error_logger:format(standard_error, " ~p~n", [binary_to_list(Data)]),
{ok, State};
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, _ConnectionManager, {eof, _ChannelId}}, State) ->
{ok, State};
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, _, {signal, _, _}}, State) ->
%% Ignore signals according to RFC 4254 section 6.9.
{ok, State};
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, _, {exit_signal, ChannelId, _, _Error, _}},
State) ->
{stop, ChannelId, State};
handle_ssh_msg({ssh_cm, _, {exit_status, ChannelId, _Status}}, State) ->
{stop, ChannelId, State}.
terminate(_Reason, _State) ->
ok.
</code>
<p>The subsystem can be run on the host <em>tarlop</em> with the generated keys,
as described in Section <seealso marker="#Running an Erlang ssh Daemon">
Running an Erlang ssh Daemon</seealso>:</p>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2> ssh:daemon(8989, [{system_dir, "/tmp/ssh_daemon"},
{user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}
{subsystems, [{"echo_n", {ssh_echo_server, [10]}}]}]).
{ok,<0.54.0>}
3>
</code>
<code type="erl" >
1> ssh:start().
ok
2>{ok, ConnectionRef} = ssh:connect("tarlop", 8989, [{user_dir, "/tmp/otptest_user/.ssh"}]).
{ok,<0.57.0>}
3>{ok, ChannelId} = ssh_connection:session_channel(ConnectionRef, infinity).
4> success = ssh_connection:subsystem(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, "echo_n", infinity).
5> ok = ssh_connection:send(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, "0123456789", infinity).
6> flush().
{ssh_msg, <0.57.0>, {data, 0, 1, "0123456789"}}
{ssh_msg, <0.57.0>, {eof, 0}}
{ssh_msg, <0.57.0>, {closed, 0}}
7> {error, closed} = ssh_connection:send(ConnectionRef, ChannelId, "10", infinity).
</code>
<p>See also <seealso marker="ssh_channel"> ssh_channel(3)</seealso>.</p>
</section>
</chapter>