blob: 2f5a08093e75c31f72984c1f83999d9a2d816288 [file] [log] [blame]
#
# Copyright 2007 Google Inc. Released under the GPL v2
"""
This module defines the SSHHost class.
Implementation details:
You should import the "hosts" package instead of importing each type of host.
SSHHost: a remote machine with a ssh access
"""
import sys, re, traceback, logging
from autotest_lib.client.common_lib import error, pxssh
from autotest_lib.server import utils
from autotest_lib.server.hosts import abstract_ssh
class SSHHost(abstract_ssh.AbstractSSHHost):
"""
This class represents a remote machine controlled through an ssh
session on which you can run programs.
It is not the machine autoserv is running on. The machine must be
configured for password-less login, for example through public key
authentication.
It includes support for controlling the machine through a serial
console on which you can run programs. If such a serial console is
set up on the machine then capabilities such as hard reset and
boot strap monitoring are available. If the machine does not have a
serial console available then ordinary SSH-based commands will
still be available, but attempts to use extensions such as
console logging or hard reset will fail silently.
Implementation details:
This is a leaf class in an abstract class hierarchy, it must
implement the unimplemented methods in parent classes.
"""
def _initialize(self, hostname, *args, **dargs):
"""
Construct a SSHHost object
Args:
hostname: network hostname or address of remote machine
"""
super(SSHHost, self)._initialize(hostname=hostname, *args, **dargs)
self.setup_ssh()
def ssh_command(self, connect_timeout=30, options='', alive_interval=300):
"""
Construct an ssh command with proper args for this host.
"""
options = "%s %s" % (options, self.master_ssh_option)
base_cmd = abstract_ssh.make_ssh_command(user=self.user, port=self.port,
opts=options,
hosts_file=self.known_hosts_fd,
connect_timeout=connect_timeout,
alive_interval=alive_interval)
return "%s %s" % (base_cmd, self.hostname)
def _run(self, command, timeout, ignore_status, stdout, stderr,
connect_timeout, env, options, stdin, args):
"""Helper function for run()."""
ssh_cmd = self.ssh_command(connect_timeout, options)
if not env.strip():
env = ""
else:
env = "export %s;" % env
for arg in args:
command += ' "%s"' % utils.sh_escape(arg)
full_cmd = '%s "%s %s"' % (ssh_cmd, env, utils.sh_escape(command))
result = utils.run(full_cmd, timeout, True, stdout, stderr,
verbose=False, stdin=stdin,
stderr_is_expected=ignore_status)
# The error messages will show up in band (indistinguishable
# from stuff sent through the SSH connection), so we have the
# remote computer echo the message "Connected." before running
# any command. Since the following 2 errors have to do with
# connecting, it's safe to do these checks.
if result.exit_status == 255:
if re.search(r'^ssh: connect to host .* port .*: '
r'Connection timed out\r$', result.stderr):
raise error.AutoservSSHTimeout("ssh timed out", result)
if "Permission denied." in result.stderr:
msg = "ssh permission denied"
raise error.AutoservSshPermissionDeniedError(msg, result)
if not ignore_status and result.exit_status > 0:
raise error.AutoservRunError("command execution error", result)
return result
def run(self, command, timeout=3600, ignore_status=False,
stdout_tee=utils.TEE_TO_LOGS, stderr_tee=utils.TEE_TO_LOGS,
connect_timeout=30, options='', stdin=None, verbose=True, args=()):
"""
Run a command on the remote host.
@see common_lib.hosts.host.run()
@param connect_timeout: connection timeout (in seconds)
@param options: string with additional ssh command options
@param verbose: log the commands
@raises AutoservRunError: if the command failed
@raises AutoservSSHTimeout: ssh connection has timed out
"""
if verbose:
logging.debug("Running (ssh) '%s'" % command)
# Start a master SSH connection if necessary.
self.start_master_ssh()
env = " ".join("=".join(pair) for pair in self.env.iteritems())
try:
return self._run(command, timeout, ignore_status, stdout_tee,
stderr_tee, connect_timeout, env, options,
stdin, args)
except error.CmdError, cmderr:
# We get a CmdError here only if there is timeout of that command.
# Catch that and stuff it into AutoservRunError and raise it.
raise error.AutoservRunError(cmderr.args[0], cmderr.args[1])
def run_short(self, command, **kwargs):
"""
Calls the run() command with a short default timeout.
Args:
Takes the same arguments as does run(),
with the exception of the timeout argument which
here is fixed at 60 seconds.
It returns the result of run.
"""
return self.run(command, timeout=60, **kwargs)
def run_grep(self, command, timeout=30, ignore_status=False,
stdout_ok_regexp=None, stdout_err_regexp=None,
stderr_ok_regexp=None, stderr_err_regexp=None,
connect_timeout=30):
"""
Run a command on the remote host and look for regexp
in stdout or stderr to determine if the command was
successul or not.
Args:
command: the command line string
timeout: time limit in seconds before attempting to
kill the running process. The run() function
will take a few seconds longer than 'timeout'
to complete if it has to kill the process.
ignore_status: do not raise an exception, no matter
what the exit code of the command is.
stdout_ok_regexp: regexp that should be in stdout
if the command was successul.
stdout_err_regexp: regexp that should be in stdout
if the command failed.
stderr_ok_regexp: regexp that should be in stderr
if the command was successul.
stderr_err_regexp: regexp that should be in stderr
if the command failed.
Returns:
if the command was successul, raises an exception
otherwise.
Raises:
AutoservRunError:
- the exit code of the command execution was not 0.
- If stderr_err_regexp is found in stderr,
- If stdout_err_regexp is found in stdout,
- If stderr_ok_regexp is not found in stderr.
- If stdout_ok_regexp is not found in stdout,
"""
# We ignore the status, because we will handle it at the end.
result = self.run(command, timeout, ignore_status=True,
connect_timeout=connect_timeout,
stderr_is_expected=ignore_status)
# Look for the patterns, in order
for (regexp, stream) in ((stderr_err_regexp, result.stderr),
(stdout_err_regexp, result.stdout)):
if regexp and stream:
err_re = re.compile (regexp)
if err_re.search(stream):
raise error.AutoservRunError(
'%s failed, found error pattern: "%s"' % (command,
regexp), result)
for (regexp, stream) in ((stderr_ok_regexp, result.stderr),
(stdout_ok_regexp, result.stdout)):
if regexp and stream:
ok_re = re.compile (regexp)
if ok_re.search(stream):
if ok_re.search(stream):
return
if not ignore_status and result.exit_status > 0:
raise error.AutoservRunError("command execution error", result)
def setup_ssh_key(self):
logging.debug('Performing SSH key setup on %s:%d as %s.' %
(self.hostname, self.port, self.user))
try:
host = pxssh.pxssh()
host.login(self.hostname, self.user, self.password,
port=self.port)
public_key = utils.get_public_key()
host.sendline('mkdir -p ~/.ssh')
host.prompt()
host.sendline('chmod 700 ~/.ssh')
host.prompt()
host.sendline("echo '%s' >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys; " %
public_key)
host.prompt()
host.sendline('chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys')
host.prompt()
host.logout()
logging.debug('SSH key setup complete.')
except:
logging.debug('SSH key setup has failed.')
try:
host.logout()
except:
pass
def setup_ssh(self):
if self.password:
try:
self.ssh_ping()
except error.AutoservSshPingHostError:
self.setup_ssh_key()