Channel¶
Abstraction for an SSH2 channel.
-
class
paramiko.channel.
Channel
(chanid)¶ A secure tunnel across an SSH
Transport
. A Channel is meant to behave like a socket, and has an API that should be indistinguishable from the Python socket API.Because SSH2 has a windowing kind of flow control, if you stop reading data from a Channel and its buffer fills up, the server will be unable to send you any more data until you read some of it. (This won’t affect other channels on the same transport – all channels on a single transport are flow-controlled independently.) Similarly, if the server isn’t reading data you send, calls to
send
may block, unless you set a timeout. This is exactly like a normal network socket, so it shouldn’t be too surprising.Instances of this class may be used as context managers.
-
__init__
(chanid)¶ Create a new channel. The channel is not associated with any particular session or
Transport
until the Transport attaches it. Normally you would only call this method from the constructor of a subclass ofChannel
.Parameters: chanid (int) – the ID of this channel, as passed by an existing Transport
.
-
__repr__
()¶ Return a string representation of this object, for debugging.
-
active
= None¶ Whether the connection is presently active
-
chanid
= None¶ Channel ID
-
close
()¶ Close the channel. All future read/write operations on the channel will fail. The remote end will receive no more data (after queued data is flushed). Channels are automatically closed when their
Transport
is closed or when they are garbage collected.
-
closed
= None¶ Whether the connection has been closed
-
exec_command
(command)¶ Execute a command on the server. If the server allows it, the channel will then be directly connected to the stdin, stdout, and stderr of the command being executed.
When the command finishes executing, the channel will be closed and can’t be reused. You must open a new channel if you wish to execute another command.
Parameters: command (str) – a shell command to execute. Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed
-
exit_status_ready
()¶ Return true if the remote process has exited and returned an exit status. You may use this to poll the process status if you don’t want to block in
recv_exit_status
. Note that the server may not return an exit status in some cases (like bad servers).Returns: True
ifrecv_exit_status
will return immediately, elseFalse
.New in version 1.7.3.
-
fileno
()¶ Returns an OS-level file descriptor which can be used for polling, but but not for reading or writing. This is primarily to allow Python’s
select
module to work.The first time
fileno
is called on a channel, a pipe is created to simulate real OS-level file descriptor (FD) behavior. Because of this, two OS-level FDs are created, which will use up FDs faster than normal. (You won’t notice this effect unless you have hundreds of channels open at the same time.)Returns: an OS-level file descriptor ( int
)Warning
This method causes channel reads to be slightly less efficient.
-
get_id
()¶ Return the
int
ID # for this channel.The channel ID is unique across a
Transport
and usually a small number. It’s also the number passed toServerInterface.check_channel_request
when determining whether to accept a channel request in server mode.
-
get_pty
(term='vt100', width=80, height=24, width_pixels=0, height_pixels=0)¶ Request a pseudo-terminal from the server. This is usually used right after creating a client channel, to ask the server to provide some basic terminal semantics for a shell invoked with
invoke_shell
. It isn’t necessary (or desirable) to call this method if you’re going to execute a single command withexec_command
.Parameters: - term (str) – the terminal type to emulate
(for example,
'vt100'
) - width (int) – width (in characters) of the terminal screen
- height (int) – height (in characters) of the terminal screen
- width_pixels (int) – width (in pixels) of the terminal screen
- height_pixels (int) – height (in pixels) of the terminal screen
Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed- term (str) – the terminal type to emulate
(for example,
-
getpeername
()¶ Return the address of the remote side of this Channel, if possible.
This simply wraps
Transport.getpeername
, used to provide enough of a socket-like interface to allow asyncore to work. (asyncore likes to call'getpeername'
.)
-
gettimeout
()¶ Returns the timeout in seconds (as a float) associated with socket operations, or
None
if no timeout is set. This reflects the last call tosetblocking
orsettimeout
.
-
invoke_shell
()¶ Request an interactive shell session on this channel. If the server allows it, the channel will then be directly connected to the stdin, stdout, and stderr of the shell.
Normally you would call
get_pty
before this, in which case the shell will operate through the pty, and the channel will be connected to the stdin and stdout of the pty.When the shell exits, the channel will be closed and can’t be reused. You must open a new channel if you wish to open another shell.
Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed
-
invoke_subsystem
(subsystem)¶ Request a subsystem on the server (for example,
sftp
). If the server allows it, the channel will then be directly connected to the requested subsystem.When the subsystem finishes, the channel will be closed and can’t be reused.
Parameters: subsystem (str) – name of the subsystem being requested. Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed
-
makefile
(*params)¶ Return a file-like object associated with this channel. The optional
mode
andbufsize
arguments are interpreted the same way as by the built-infile()
function in Python.Returns: ChannelFile
object which can be used for Python file I/O.
-
makefile_stderr
(*params)¶ Return a file-like object associated with this channel’s stderr stream. Only channels using
exec_command
orinvoke_shell
without a pty will ever have data on the stderr stream.The optional
mode
andbufsize
arguments are interpreted the same way as by the built-infile()
function in Python. For a client, it only makes sense to open this file for reading. For a server, it only makes sense to open this file for writing.Returns: ChannelStderrFile
object which can be used for Python file I/O.New in version 1.1.
-
makefile_stdin
(*params)¶ Return a file-like object associated with this channel’s stdin stream.
The optional
mode
andbufsize
arguments are interpreted the same way as by the built-infile()
function in Python. For a client, it only makes sense to open this file for writing. For a server, it only makes sense to open this file for reading.Returns: ChannelStdinFile
object which can be used for Python file I/O.New in version 2.6.
-
recv
(nbytes)¶ Receive data from the channel. The return value is a string representing the data received. The maximum amount of data to be received at once is specified by
nbytes
. If a string of length zero is returned, the channel stream has closed.Parameters: nbytes (int) – maximum number of bytes to read. Returns: received data, as a str
/bytes
.Raises: socket.timeout – if no data is ready before the timeout set by settimeout
.
-
recv_exit_status
()¶ Return the exit status from the process on the server. This is mostly useful for retrieving the results of an
exec_command
. If the command hasn’t finished yet, this method will wait until it does, or until the channel is closed. If no exit status is provided by the server, -1 is returned.Warning
In some situations, receiving remote output larger than the current
Transport
or session’swindow_size
(e.g. that set by thedefault_window_size
kwarg forTransport.__init__
) will causerecv_exit_status
to hang indefinitely if it is called prior to a sufficiently largeChannel.recv
(or if there are no threads callingChannel.recv
in the background).In these cases, ensuring that
recv_exit_status
is called afterChannel.recv
(or, again, using threads) can avoid the hang.Returns: the exit code (as an int
) of the process on the server.New in version 1.2.
-
recv_ready
()¶ Returns true if data is buffered and ready to be read from this channel. A
False
result does not mean that the channel has closed; it means you may need to wait before more data arrives.Returns: True
if arecv
call on this channel would immediately return at least one byte;False
otherwise.
-
recv_stderr
(nbytes)¶ Receive data from the channel’s stderr stream. Only channels using
exec_command
orinvoke_shell
without a pty will ever have data on the stderr stream. The return value is a string representing the data received. The maximum amount of data to be received at once is specified bynbytes
. If a string of length zero is returned, the channel stream has closed.Parameters: nbytes (int) – maximum number of bytes to read. Returns: received data as a str
Raises: socket.timeout – if no data is ready before the timeout set by settimeout
.New in version 1.1.
-
recv_stderr_ready
()¶ Returns true if data is buffered and ready to be read from this channel’s stderr stream. Only channels using
exec_command
orinvoke_shell
without a pty will ever have data on the stderr stream.Returns: True
if arecv_stderr
call on this channel would immediately return at least one byte;False
otherwise.New in version 1.1.
-
remote_chanid
= None¶ Remote channel ID
-
request_forward_agent
(handler)¶ Request for a forward SSH Agent on this channel. This is only valid for an ssh-agent from OpenSSH !!!
Parameters: handler – a required callable handler to use for incoming SSH Agent connections Returns: True if we are ok, else False (at that time we always return ok) Raises: SSHException in case of channel problem.
-
request_x11
(screen_number=0, auth_protocol=None, auth_cookie=None, single_connection=False, handler=None)¶ Request an x11 session on this channel. If the server allows it, further x11 requests can be made from the server to the client, when an x11 application is run in a shell session.
From RFC 4254:
It is RECOMMENDED that the 'x11 authentication cookie' that is sent be a fake, random cookie, and that the cookie be checked and replaced by the real cookie when a connection request is received.
If you omit the auth_cookie, a new secure random 128-bit value will be generated, used, and returned. You will need to use this value to verify incoming x11 requests and replace them with the actual local x11 cookie (which requires some knowledge of the x11 protocol).
If a handler is passed in, the handler is called from another thread whenever a new x11 connection arrives. The default handler queues up incoming x11 connections, which may be retrieved using
Transport.accept
. The handler’s calling signature is:handler(channel: Channel, (address: str, port: int))
Parameters: - screen_number (int) – the x11 screen number (0, 10, etc.)
- auth_protocol (str) – the name of the X11 authentication method used; if none is given,
"MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1"
is used - auth_cookie (str) – hexadecimal string containing the x11 auth cookie; if none is given, a secure random 128-bit value is generated
- single_connection (bool) – if True, only a single x11 connection will be forwarded (by default, any number of x11 connections can arrive over this session)
- handler – an optional callable handler to use for incoming X11 connections
Returns: the auth_cookie used
-
resize_pty
(width=80, height=24, width_pixels=0, height_pixels=0)¶ Resize the pseudo-terminal. This can be used to change the width and height of the terminal emulation created in a previous
get_pty
call.Parameters: Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed
-
send
(s)¶ Send data to the channel. Returns the number of bytes sent, or 0 if the channel stream is closed. Applications are responsible for checking that all data has been sent: if only some of the data was transmitted, the application needs to attempt delivery of the remaining data.
Parameters: s (str) – data to send Returns: number of bytes actually sent, as an int
Raises: socket.timeout – if no data could be sent before the timeout set by settimeout
.
-
send_exit_status
(status)¶ Send the exit status of an executed command to the client. (This really only makes sense in server mode.) Many clients expect to get some sort of status code back from an executed command after it completes.
Parameters: status (int) – the exit code of the process New in version 1.2.
-
send_ready
()¶ Returns true if data can be written to this channel without blocking. This means the channel is either closed (so any write attempt would return immediately) or there is at least one byte of space in the outbound buffer. If there is at least one byte of space in the outbound buffer, a
send
call will succeed immediately and return the number of bytes actually written.Returns: True
if asend
call on this channel would immediately succeed or fail
-
send_stderr
(s)¶ Send data to the channel on the “stderr” stream. This is normally only used by servers to send output from shell commands – clients won’t use this. Returns the number of bytes sent, or 0 if the channel stream is closed. Applications are responsible for checking that all data has been sent: if only some of the data was transmitted, the application needs to attempt delivery of the remaining data.
Parameters: s (str) – data to send. Returns: number of bytes actually sent, as an int
.Raises: socket.timeout – if no data could be sent before the timeout set by settimeout
.New in version 1.1.
-
sendall
(s)¶ Send data to the channel, without allowing partial results. Unlike
send
, this method continues to send data from the given string until either all data has been sent or an error occurs. Nothing is returned.Parameters: s (str) – data to send.
Raises: - socket.timeout – if sending stalled for longer than the timeout set by
settimeout
. - socket.error – if an error occurred before the entire string was sent.
Note
If the channel is closed while only part of the data has been sent, there is no way to determine how much data (if any) was sent. This is irritating, but identically follows Python’s API.
- socket.timeout – if sending stalled for longer than the timeout set by
-
sendall_stderr
(s)¶ Send data to the channel’s “stderr” stream, without allowing partial results. Unlike
send_stderr
, this method continues to send data from the given string until all data has been sent or an error occurs. Nothing is returned.Parameters: s (str) – data to send to the client as “stderr” output.
Raises: - socket.timeout – if sending stalled for longer than the timeout set by
settimeout
. - socket.error – if an error occurred before the entire string was sent.
New in version 1.1.
- socket.timeout – if sending stalled for longer than the timeout set by
-
set_combine_stderr
(combine)¶ Set whether stderr should be combined into stdout on this channel. The default is
False
, but in some cases it may be convenient to have both streams combined.If this is
False
, andexec_command
is called (orinvoke_shell
with no pty), output to stderr will not show up through therecv
andrecv_ready
calls. You will have to userecv_stderr
andrecv_stderr_ready
to get stderr output.If this is
True
, data will never show up viarecv_stderr
orrecv_stderr_ready
.Parameters: combine (bool) – True
if stderr output should be combined into stdout on this channel.Returns: the previous setting (a bool
).New in version 1.1.
-
set_environment_variable
(name, value)¶ Set the value of an environment variable.
Warning
The server may reject this request depending on its
AcceptEnv
setting; such rejections will fail silently (which is common client practice for this particular request type). Make sure you understand your server’s configuration before using!Parameters: Raises: SSHException
– if the request was rejected or the channel was closed
-
set_name
(name)¶ Set a name for this channel. Currently it’s only used to set the name of the channel in logfile entries. The name can be fetched with the
get_name
method.Parameters: name (str) – new channel name
-
setblocking
(blocking)¶ Set blocking or non-blocking mode of the channel: if
blocking
is 0, the channel is set to non-blocking mode; otherwise it’s set to blocking mode. Initially all channels are in blocking mode.In non-blocking mode, if a
recv
call doesn’t find any data, or if asend
call can’t immediately dispose of the data, an error exception is raised. In blocking mode, the calls block until they can proceed. An EOF condition is considered “immediate data” forrecv
, so if the channel is closed in the read direction, it will never block.chan.setblocking(0)
is equivalent tochan.settimeout(0)
;chan.setblocking(1)
is equivalent tochan.settimeout(None)
.Parameters: blocking (int) – 0 to set non-blocking mode; non-0 to set blocking mode.
-
settimeout
(timeout)¶ Set a timeout on blocking read/write operations. The
timeout
argument can be a nonnegative float expressing seconds, orNone
. If a float is given, subsequent channel read/write operations will raise a timeout exception if the timeout period value has elapsed before the operation has completed. Setting a timeout ofNone
disables timeouts on socket operations.chan.settimeout(0.0)
is equivalent tochan.setblocking(0)
;chan.settimeout(None)
is equivalent tochan.setblocking(1)
.Parameters: timeout (float) – seconds to wait for a pending read/write operation before raising socket.timeout
, orNone
for no timeout.
-
shutdown
(how)¶ Shut down one or both halves of the connection. If
how
is 0, further receives are disallowed. Ifhow
is 1, further sends are disallowed. Ifhow
is 2, further sends and receives are disallowed. This closes the stream in one or both directions.Parameters: how (int) – - 0 (stop receiving), 1 (stop sending), or 2 (stop receiving and
- sending).
-
shutdown_read
()¶ Shutdown the receiving side of this socket, closing the stream in the incoming direction. After this call, future reads on this channel will fail instantly. This is a convenience method, equivalent to
shutdown(0)
, for people who don’t make it a habit to memorize unix constants from the 1970s.New in version 1.2.
-
shutdown_write
()¶ Shutdown the sending side of this socket, closing the stream in the outgoing direction. After this call, future writes on this channel will fail instantly. This is a convenience method, equivalent to
shutdown(1)
, for people who don’t make it a habit to memorize unix constants from the 1970s.New in version 1.2.
-
update_environment
(environment)¶ Updates this channel’s remote shell environment.
Note
This operation is additive - i.e. the current environment is not reset before the given environment variables are set.
Warning
Servers may silently reject some environment variables; see the warning in
set_environment_variable
for details.Parameters: environment (dict) – a dictionary containing the name and respective values to set Raises: SSHException
– if any of the environment variables was rejected by the server or the channel was closed
-
-
class
paramiko.channel.
ChannelFile
(channel, mode='r', bufsize=-1)¶ A file-like wrapper around
Channel
. A ChannelFile is created by callingChannel.makefile
.Warning
To correctly emulate the file object created from a socket’s
makefile
method, aChannel
and itsChannelFile
should be able to be closed or garbage-collected independently. Currently, closing theChannelFile
does nothing but flush the buffer.-
__init__
(channel, mode='r', bufsize=-1)¶ Initialize self. See help(type(self)) for accurate signature.
-
__repr__
()¶ Returns a string representation of this object, for debugging.
-
-
class
paramiko.channel.
ChannelStderrFile
(channel, mode='r', bufsize=-1)¶ A file-like wrapper around
Channel
stderr.See
Channel.makefile_stderr
for details.
-
class
paramiko.channel.
ChannelStdinFile
(channel, mode='r', bufsize=-1)¶ A file-like wrapper around
Channel
stdin.See
Channel.makefile_stdin
for details.-
close
()¶ Close the file. Future read and write operations will fail.
-
-
paramiko.channel.
open_only
(func)¶ Decorator for
Channel
methods which performs an openness check.Raises: SSHException
– If the wrapped method is called on an unopenedChannel
.