Net::SSH - Perl extension for secure shell
use Net::SSH qw(ssh issh sshopen2 sshopen3); ssh('user@hostname', $command); issh('user@hostname', $command); ssh_cmd('user@hostname', $command); ssh_cmd( { user => 'user', host => 'host.name', command => 'command', args => [ '-arg1', '-arg2' ], stdin_string => "string\n", } ); sshopen2('user@hostname', $reader, $writer, $command); sshopen3('user@hostname', $writer, $reader, $error, $command);
Simple wrappers around ssh commands.
For an all-perl implementation that does not require the system ssh command, see Net::SSH::Perl instead.
Calls ssh in batch mode.
Prints the ssh command to be executed, waits for the user to confirm, and (optionally) executes the command.
Calls ssh in batch mode. Throws a fatal error if data occurs on the command's STDERR. Returns any data from the command's STDOUT.
If using the hashref-style of passing arguments, possible keys are:
user (optional) host (requried) command (required) args (optional, arrayref) stdin_string (optional) - written to the command's STDIN
Connects the supplied filehandles to the ssh process (in batch mode).
Connects the supplied filehandles to the ssh process (in batch mode).
use Net::SSH qw(sshopen2); use strict; my $user = "username"; my $host = "hostname"; my $cmd = "command"; sshopen2("$user\@$host", *READER, *WRITER, "$cmd") || die "ssh: $!"; while (<READER>) { chomp(); print "$_\n"; } close(READER); close(WRITER);
Q: How do you supply a password to connect with ssh within a perl script using the Net::SSH module?
A: You don't (at least not with this module). Use RSA or DSA keys. See the quick help in the next section and the ssh-keygen(1) manpage.
A #2: See Net::SSH::Expect instead.
Q: My script is "leaking" ssh processes.
A: See perlfaq8/"How do I avoid zombies on a Unix system", IPC::Open2, IPC::Open3 and perlfunc/waitpid.
Type:
ssh-keygen -t rsa
And do not enter a passphrase unless you wanted to be prompted for one during file copying.
Here is what you will see:
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa Generating public/private rsa key pair. Enter file in which to save the key (/home/User/.ssh/id_rsa): Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again: Your identification has been saved in /home/User/.ssh/id_rsa. Your public key has been saved in /home/User/.ssh/id_rsa.pub. The key fingerprint is: 5a:cd:2b:0a:cd:d9:15:85:26:79:40:0c:55:2a:f4:23 User@JEFF-CPU
id_rsa.pub
is your public key. Copy it to ~/.ssh
on target machine.
Put a copy of the public key file on each machine you want to log into.
Name the copy authorized_keys
(some implementations name this file
authorized_keys2
)
Then type:
chmod 600 authorized_keys
Then make sure your home dir on the remote machine is not group or world writeable.
Ivan Kohler <ivan-netssh_pod@420.am>
Assistance wanted - this module could really use a maintainer with enough time to at least review and apply more patches. Or the module should just be deprecated in favor of Net::SSH::Expect or made into an ::Any style compatibility wrapper that uses whatver implementation is avaialble (Net::SSH2, Net::SSH::Perl or shelling out like the module does now). Please email Ivan if you are interested in helping.
John Harrison <japh@in-ta.net> contributed an example for the documentation.
Martin Langhoff <martin@cwa.co.nz> contributed the ssh_cmd command, and Jeff Finucane <jeff@cmh.net> updated it and took care of the 0.04 release.
Anthony Awtrey <tony@awtrey.com> contributed a fix for those still using OpenSSH v1.
Thanks to terrence brannon <tbone@directsynergy.com> for the documentation in the GENERATING AND USING SSH KEYS section.
Copyright (c) 2004 Ivan Kohler. Copyright (c) 2007-2008 Freeside Internet Services, Inc. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Not OO.
Look at IPC::Session (also fsh, well now the native SSH "master mode" stuff)
For a perl implementation that does not require the system ssh command, see Net::SSH::Perl instead.
For a wrapper version that allows you to use passwords, see Net::SSH::Expect instead.
For another non-forking version that uses the libssh2 library, see Net::SSH2.
For a way to execute remote Perl code over an ssh connection see IPC::PerlSSH.
ssh-keygen(1), ssh(1), IO::File, IPC::Open2, IPC::Open3