# Copyright (C) 2003-2007 Robey Pointer # # 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 distributed 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. """ An interface to override for SFTP server support. """ import os import sys from paramiko.sftp import SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED class SFTPServerInterface (object): """ This class defines an interface for controlling the behavior of paramiko when using the `.SFTPServer` subsystem to provide an SFTP server. Methods on this class are called from the SFTP session's thread, so you can block as long as necessary without affecting other sessions (even other SFTP sessions). However, raising an exception will usually cause the SFTP session to abruptly end, so you will usually want to catch exceptions and return an appropriate error code. All paths are in string form instead of unicode because not all SFTP clients & servers obey the requirement that paths be encoded in UTF-8. """ def __init__(self, server, *largs, **kwargs): """ Create a new SFTPServerInterface object. This method does nothing by default and is meant to be overridden by subclasses. :param .ServerInterface server: the server object associated with this channel and SFTP subsystem """ super(SFTPServerInterface, self).__init__(*largs, **kwargs) def session_started(self): """ The SFTP server session has just started. This method is meant to be overridden to perform any necessary setup before handling callbacks from SFTP operations. """ pass def session_ended(self): """ The SFTP server session has just ended, either cleanly or via an exception. This method is meant to be overridden to perform any necessary cleanup before this `.SFTPServerInterface` object is destroyed. """ pass def open(self, path, flags, attr): """ Open a file on the server and create a handle for future operations on that file. On success, a new object subclassed from `.SFTPHandle` should be returned. This handle will be used for future operations on the file (read, write, etc). On failure, an error code such as `.SFTP_PERMISSION_DENIED` should be returned. ``flags`` contains the requested mode for opening (read-only, write-append, etc) as a bitset of flags from the ``os`` module: - ``os.O_RDONLY`` - ``os.O_WRONLY`` - ``os.O_RDWR`` - ``os.O_APPEND`` - ``os.O_CREAT`` - ``os.O_TRUNC`` - ``os.O_EXCL`` (One of ``os.O_RDONLY``, ``os.O_WRONLY``, or ``os.O_RDWR`` will always be set.) The ``attr`` object contains requested attributes of the file if it has to be created. Some or all attribute fields may be missing if the client didn't specify them. .. note:: The SFTP protocol defines all files to be in "binary" mode. There is no equivalent to Python's "text" mode. :param str path: the requested path (relative or absolute) of the file to be opened. :param int flags: flags or'd together from the ``os`` module indicating the requested mode for opening the file. :param .SFTPAttributes attr: requested attributes of the file if it is newly created. :return: a new `.SFTPHandle` or error code. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def list_folder(self, path): """ Return a list of files within a given folder. The ``path`` will use posix notation (``"/"`` separates folder names) and may be an absolute or relative path. The list of files is expected to be a list of `.SFTPAttributes` objects, which are similar in structure to the objects returned by ``os.stat``. In addition, each object should have its ``filename`` field filled in, since this is important to a directory listing and not normally present in ``os.stat`` results. The method `.SFTPAttributes.from_stat` will usually do what you want. In case of an error, you should return one of the ``SFTP_*`` error codes, such as `.SFTP_PERMISSION_DENIED`. :param str path: the requested path (relative or absolute) to be listed. :return: a list of the files in the given folder, using `.SFTPAttributes` objects. .. note:: You should normalize the given ``path`` first (see the `os.path` module) and check appropriate permissions before returning the list of files. Be careful of malicious clients attempting to use relative paths to escape restricted folders, if you're doing a direct translation from the SFTP server path to your local filesystem. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def stat(self, path): """ Return an `.SFTPAttributes` object for a path on the server, or an error code. If your server supports symbolic links (also known as "aliases"), you should follow them. (`lstat` is the corresponding call that doesn't follow symlinks/aliases.) :param str path: the requested path (relative or absolute) to fetch file statistics for. :return: an `.SFTPAttributes` object for the given file, or an SFTP error code (like `.SFTP_PERMISSION_DENIED`). """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def lstat(self, path): """ Return an `.SFTPAttributes` object for a path on the server, or an error code. If your server supports symbolic links (also known as "aliases"), you should not follow them -- instead, you should return data on the symlink or alias itself. (`stat` is the corresponding call that follows symlinks/aliases.) :param str path: the requested path (relative or absolute) to fetch file statistics for. :type path: str :return: an `.SFTPAttributes` object for the given file, or an SFTP error code (like `.SFTP_PERMISSION_DENIED`). """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def remove(self, path): """ Delete a file, if possible. :param str path: the requested path (relative or absolute) of the file to delete. :return: an SFTP error code `int` like `.SFTP_OK`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def rename(self, oldpath, newpath): """ Rename (or move) a file. The SFTP specification implies that this method can be used to move an existing file into a different folder, and since there's no other (easy) way to move files via SFTP, it's probably a good idea to implement "move" in this method too, even for files that cross disk partition boundaries, if at all possible. .. note:: You should return an error if a file with the same name as ``newpath`` already exists. (The rename operation should be non-desctructive.) :param str oldpath: the requested path (relative or absolute) of the existing file. :param str newpath: the requested new path of the file. :return: an SFTP error code `int` like `.SFTP_OK`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def mkdir(self, path, attr): """ Create a new directory with the given attributes. The ``attr`` object may be considered a "hint" and ignored. The ``attr`` object will contain only those fields provided by the client in its request, so you should use ``hasattr`` to check for the presense of fields before using them. In some cases, the ``attr`` object may be completely empty. :param str path: requested path (relative or absolute) of the new folder. :param .SFTPAttributes attr: requested attributes of the new folder. :return: an SFTP error code `int` like `.SFTP_OK`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def rmdir(self, path): """ Remove a directory if it exists. The ``path`` should refer to an existing, empty folder -- otherwise this method should return an error. :param str path: requested path (relative or absolute) of the folder to remove. :return: an SFTP error code `int` like `.SFTP_OK`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def chattr(self, path, attr): """ Change the attributes of a file. The ``attr`` object will contain only those fields provided by the client in its request, so you should check for the presence of fields before using them. :param str path: requested path (relative or absolute) of the file to change. :param attr: requested attributes to change on the file (an `.SFTPAttributes` object) :return: an error code `int` like `.SFTP_OK`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def canonicalize(self, path): """ Return the canonical form of a path on the server. For example, if the server's home folder is ``/home/foo``, the path ``"../betty"`` would be canonicalized to ``"/home/betty"``. Note the obvious security issues: if you're serving files only from a specific folder, you probably don't want this method to reveal path names outside that folder. You may find the Python methods in ``os.path`` useful, especially ``os.path.normpath`` and ``os.path.realpath``. The default implementation returns ``os.path.normpath('/' + path)``. """ if os.path.isabs(path): out = os.path.normpath(path) else: out = os.path.normpath('/' + path) if sys.platform == 'win32': # on windows, normalize backslashes to sftp/posix format out = out.replace('\\', '/') return out def readlink(self, path): """ Return the target of a symbolic link (or shortcut) on the server. If the specified path doesn't refer to a symbolic link, an error should be returned. :param str path: path (relative or absolute) of the symbolic link. :return: the target `str` path of the symbolic link, or an error code like `.SFTP_NO_SUCH_FILE`. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED def symlink(self, target_path, path): """ Create a symbolic link on the server, as new pathname ``path``, with ``target_path`` as the target of the link. :param str target_path: path (relative or absolute) of the target for this new symbolic link. :param str path: path (relative or absolute) of the symbolic link to create. :return: an error code `int` like ``SFTP_OK``. """ return SFTP_OP_UNSUPPORTED