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+# Copyright (C) 2003-2005 Robey Pointer <robey@lag.net>
+#
+# This file is part of paramiko.
+#
+# Paramiko is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
+# terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free
+# Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option)
+# any later version.
+#
+# Paramiko is distrubuted in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
+# WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
+# A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more
+# details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
+# along with Paramiko; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
+# 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA.
+
+"""
+Useful functions used by the rest of paramiko.
+"""
+
+from __future__ import generators
+
+import fnmatch
+import sys
+import struct
+import traceback
+import threading
+
+from paramiko.common import *
+
+
+# Change by RogerB - python < 2.3 doesn't have enumerate so we implement it
+if sys.version_info < (2,3):
+ class enumerate:
+ def __init__ (self, sequence):
+ self.sequence = sequence
+ def __iter__ (self):
+ count = 0
+ for item in self.sequence:
+ yield (count, item)
+ count += 1
+
+
+def inflate_long(s, always_positive=False):
+ "turns a normalized byte string into a long-int (adapted from Crypto.Util.number)"
+ out = 0L
+ negative = 0
+ if not always_positive and (len(s) > 0) and (ord(s[0]) >= 0x80):
+ negative = 1
+ if len(s) % 4:
+ filler = '\x00'
+ if negative:
+ filler = '\xff'
+ s = filler * (4 - len(s) % 4) + s
+ for i in range(0, len(s), 4):
+ out = (out << 32) + struct.unpack('>I', s[i:i+4])[0]
+ if negative:
+ out -= (1L << (8 * len(s)))
+ return out
+
+def deflate_long(n, add_sign_padding=True):
+ "turns a long-int into a normalized byte string (adapted from Crypto.Util.number)"
+ # after much testing, this algorithm was deemed to be the fastest
+ s = ''
+ n = long(n)
+ while (n != 0) and (n != -1):
+ s = struct.pack('>I', n & 0xffffffffL) + s
+ n = n >> 32
+ # strip off leading zeros, FFs
+ for i in enumerate(s):
+ if (n == 0) and (i[1] != '\000'):
+ break
+ if (n == -1) and (i[1] != '\xff'):
+ break
+ else:
+ # degenerate case, n was either 0 or -1
+ i = (0,)
+ if n == 0:
+ s = '\000'
+ else:
+ s = '\xff'
+ s = s[i[0]:]
+ if add_sign_padding:
+ if (n == 0) and (ord(s[0]) >= 0x80):
+ s = '\x00' + s
+ if (n == -1) and (ord(s[0]) < 0x80):
+ s = '\xff' + s
+ return s
+
+def format_binary_weird(data):
+ out = ''
+ for i in enumerate(data):
+ out += '%02X' % ord(i[1])
+ if i[0] % 2:
+ out += ' '
+ if i[0] % 16 == 15:
+ out += '\n'
+ return out
+
+def format_binary(data, prefix=''):
+ x = 0
+ out = []
+ while len(data) > x + 16:
+ out.append(format_binary_line(data[x:x+16]))
+ x += 16
+ if x < len(data):
+ out.append(format_binary_line(data[x:]))
+ return [prefix + x for x in out]
+
+def format_binary_line(data):
+ left = ' '.join(['%02X' % ord(c) for c in data])
+ right = ''.join([('.%c..' % c)[(ord(c)+63)//95] for c in data])
+ return '%-50s %s' % (left, right)
+
+def hexify(s):
+ "turn a string into a hex sequence"
+ return ''.join(['%02X' % ord(c) for c in s])
+
+def unhexify(s):
+ "turn a hex sequence back into a string"
+ return ''.join([chr(int(s[i:i+2], 16)) for i in range(0, len(s), 2)])
+
+def safe_string(s):
+ out = ''
+ for c in s:
+ if (ord(c) >= 32) and (ord(c) <= 127):
+ out += c
+ else:
+ out += '%%%02X' % ord(c)
+ return out
+
+# ''.join([['%%%02X' % ord(c), c][(ord(c) >= 32) and (ord(c) <= 127)] for c in s])
+
+def bit_length(n):
+ norm = deflate_long(n, 0)
+ hbyte = ord(norm[0])
+ bitlen = len(norm) * 8
+ while not (hbyte & 0x80):
+ hbyte <<= 1
+ bitlen -= 1
+ return bitlen
+
+def tb_strings():
+ return ''.join(traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info())).split('\n')
+
+def generate_key_bytes(hashclass, salt, key, nbytes):
+ """
+ Given a password, passphrase, or other human-source key, scramble it
+ through a secure hash into some keyworthy bytes. This specific algorithm
+ is used for encrypting/decrypting private key files.
+
+ @param hashclass: class from L{Crypto.Hash} that can be used as a secure
+ hashing function (like C{MD5} or C{SHA}).
+ @type hashclass: L{Crypto.Hash}
+ @param salt: data to salt the hash with.
+ @type salt: string
+ @param key: human-entered password or passphrase.
+ @type key: string
+ @param nbytes: number of bytes to generate.
+ @type nbytes: int
+ @return: key data
+ @rtype: string
+ """
+ keydata = ''
+ digest = ''
+ if len(salt) > 8:
+ salt = salt[:8]
+ while nbytes > 0:
+ hash = hashclass.new()
+ if len(digest) > 0:
+ hash.update(digest)
+ hash.update(key)
+ hash.update(salt)
+ digest = hash.digest()
+ size = min(nbytes, len(digest))
+ keydata += digest[:size]
+ nbytes -= size
+ return keydata
+
+def load_host_keys(filename):
+ """
+ Read a file of known SSH host keys, in the format used by openssh, and
+ return a compound dict of C{hostname -> keytype ->} L{PKey <paramiko.pkey.PKey>}.
+ The hostname may be an IP address or DNS name. The keytype will be either
+ C{"ssh-rsa"} or C{"ssh-dss"}.
+
+ This type of file unfortunately doesn't exist on Windows, but on posix,
+ it will usually be stored in C{os.path.expanduser("~/.ssh/known_hosts")}.
+
+ @param filename: name of the file to read host keys from
+ @type filename: str
+ @return: dict of host keys, indexed by hostname and then keytype
+ @rtype: dict(hostname, dict(keytype, L{PKey <paramiko.pkey.PKey>}))
+ """
+ import base64
+ from rsakey import RSAKey
+ from dsskey import DSSKey
+
+ keys = {}
+ f = file(filename, 'r')
+ for line in f:
+ line = line.strip()
+ if (len(line) == 0) or (line[0] == '#'):
+ continue
+ keylist = line.split(' ')
+ if len(keylist) != 3:
+ continue
+ hostlist, keytype, key = keylist
+ hosts = hostlist.split(',')
+ for host in hosts:
+ if not keys.has_key(host):
+ keys[host] = {}
+ if keytype == 'ssh-rsa':
+ keys[host][keytype] = RSAKey(data=base64.decodestring(key))
+ elif keytype == 'ssh-dss':
+ keys[host][keytype] = DSSKey(data=base64.decodestring(key))
+ f.close()
+ return keys
+
+def parse_ssh_config(file_obj):
+ """
+ Parse a config file of the format used by OpenSSH, and return an object
+ that can be used to make queries to L{lookup_ssh_host_config}. The
+ format is described in OpenSSH's C{ssh_config} man page. This method is
+ provided primarily as a convenience to posix users (since the OpenSSH
+ format is a de-facto standard on posix) but should work fine on Windows
+ too.
+
+ The return value is currently a list of dictionaries, each containing
+ host-specific configuration, but this is considered an implementation
+ detail and may be subject to change in later versions.
+
+ @param file_obj: a file-like object to read the config file from
+ @type file_obj: file
+ @return: opaque configuration object
+ @rtype: object
+ """
+ ret = []
+ config = { 'host': '*' }
+ ret.append(config)
+
+ for line in file_obj:
+ line = line.rstrip('\n').lstrip()
+ if (line == '') or (line[0] == '#'):
+ continue
+ if '=' in line:
+ key, value = line.split('=', 1)
+ key = key.strip().lower()
+ else:
+ # find first whitespace, and split there
+ i = 0
+ while (i < len(line)) and not line[i].isspace():
+ i += 1
+ if i == len(line):
+ raise Exception('Unparsable line: %r' % line)
+ key = line[:i].lower()
+ value = line[i:].lstrip()
+
+ if key == 'host':
+ # do we have a pre-existing host config to append to?
+ matches = [c for c in ret if c['host'] == value]
+ if len(matches) > 0:
+ config = matches[0]
+ else:
+ config = { 'host': value }
+ ret.append(config)
+ else:
+ config[key] = value
+
+ return ret
+
+def lookup_ssh_host_config(hostname, config):
+ """
+ Return a dict of config options for a given hostname. The C{config} object
+ must come from L{parse_ssh_config}.
+
+ The host-matching rules of OpenSSH's C{ssh_config} man page are used, which
+ means that all configuration options from matching host specifications are
+ merged, with more specific hostmasks taking precedence. In other words, if
+ C{"Port"} is set under C{"Host *"} and also C{"Host *.example.com"}, and
+ the lookup is for C{"ssh.example.com"}, then the port entry for
+ C{"Host *.example.com"} will win out.
+
+ The keys in the returned dict are all normalized to lowercase (look for
+ C{"port"}, not C{"Port"}. No other processing is done to the keys or
+ values.
+
+ @param hostname: the hostname to lookup
+ @type hostname: str
+ @param config: the config object to search
+ @type config: object
+ """
+ matches = [x for x in config if fnmatch.fnmatch(hostname, x['host'])]
+ # sort in order of shortest match (usually '*') to longest
+ matches.sort(key=lambda x: len(x['host']))
+ ret = {}
+ for m in matches:
+ ret.update(m)
+ del ret['host']
+ return ret
+
+def mod_inverse(x, m):
+ # it's crazy how small python can make this function.
+ u1, u2, u3 = 1, 0, m
+ v1, v2, v3 = 0, 1, x
+
+ while v3 > 0:
+ q = u3 // v3
+ u1, v1 = v1, u1 - v1 * q
+ u2, v2 = v2, u2 - v2 * q
+ u3, v3 = v3, u3 - v3 * q
+ if u2 < 0:
+ u2 += m
+ return u2
+
+_g_thread_ids = {}
+_g_thread_counter = 0
+_g_thread_lock = threading.Lock()
+def get_thread_id():
+ global _g_thread_ids, _g_thread_counter, _g_thread_lock
+ tid = id(threading.currentThread())
+ try:
+ return _g_thread_ids[tid]
+ except KeyError:
+ _g_thread_lock.acquire()
+ try:
+ _g_thread_counter += 1
+ ret = _g_thread_ids[tid] = _g_thread_counter
+ finally:
+ _g_thread_lock.release()
+ return ret
+
+def log_to_file(filename, level=DEBUG):
+ "send paramiko logs to a logfile, if they're not already going somewhere"
+ l = logging.getLogger("paramiko")
+ if len(l.handlers) > 0:
+ return
+ l.setLevel(level)
+ f = open(filename, 'w')
+ lh = logging.StreamHandler(f)
+ lh.setFormatter(logging.Formatter('%(levelname)-.3s [%(asctime)s.%(msecs)03d] thr=%(_threadid)-3d %(name)s: %(message)s',
+ '%Y%m%d-%H:%M:%S'))
+ l.addHandler(lh)
+
+# make only one filter object, so it doesn't get applied more than once
+class PFilter (object):
+ def filter(self, record):
+ record._threadid = get_thread_id()
+ return True
+_pfilter = PFilter()
+
+def get_logger(name):
+ l = logging.getLogger(name)
+ l.addFilter(_pfilter)
+ return l