Project description
Telnet server using gevent or threading.
Copied from http://pytelnetsrvlib.sourceforge.net/ and modified to support gevent, better input handling, clean asynchronous messages and much more. Licensed under the LGPL, as per the SourceForge notes.
This library allows you to easily create a Telnet server, powered by your Python code. The library negotiates with a Telnet client, parses commands, provides an automated help command, optionally provides login queries, then allows you to define your own commands.
You use the library to create your own handler, then pass that handler to a StreamServer or TCPServer to perform the actual connection tasks.
This library includes two flavors of the server handler, one uses separate threads, the other uses greenlets (green pseudo-threads) via gevent.
The threaded version uses a separate thread to process the input buffer and semaphores reading and writing. The provided test server only handles a single connection at a time.
The green version moves the input buffer processing into a greenlet to allow cooperative multi-processing. This results in significantly less memory usage and nearly no idle processing. The provided test server handles a large number of connections.
Install
telnetsrv is available through the Cheeseshop. You can use easy_install or pip to perform the installation.
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$ sudo easy_install telnetsrv $ sudo easy_install gevent |
or
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$ sudo pip install telnetsrv $ sudo pip install gevent |
Note that there are no dependancies defined, but if you want to use the green version, you must also install gevent.
To Use
Import the TelnetHandler base class and command function decorator from either the green class or threaded class, then subclass TelnetHandler to add your own commands which are methods decorated with @command.
Threaded
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from telnetsrv.threaded import TelnetHandler, command class MyHandler(TelnetHandler): ... |
Green
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from telnetsrv.green import TelnetHandler, command class MyHandler(TelnetHandler): ... |
Adding Commands
Commands can be defined by using the command function decorator.
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@command('echo') def command_echo(self, params): ... |
Old Style
Commands can also be defined by prefixing any method with “cmd”. For example, this also creates an echocommand:
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def cmdECHO(self, params): ... |
This method is less flexible and may not be supported in future versions.
Command Parameters
Any command parameters will be passed to this function automatically. The parameters are contained in a list. The user input is parsed similar to the way Bash parses text: space delimited, quoted parameters are kept together and default behavior can be modified with the \ character. If you need to access the raw text input, inspect the self.input.raw variable.
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Telnet Server> echo 1 "2 3" |
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params == ['1', '2 3'] self.input.raw == 'echo 1 "2 3"\n' |
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Telnet Server> echo 1 \ ... 2 "3 ... 4" "5\ ... 6" |
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params == ['1', '2', '3\n4', '56'] |
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Telnet Server> echo 1\ 2 |
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params == ['1 2'] |
Command Help Text
The command’s docstring is used for generating the console help information, and must be formatted with at least 3 lines:
- Line 0: Command parameter(s) if any. (Can be blank line)
- Line 1: Short descriptive text. (Mandatory)
- Line 2+: Long descriptive text. (Can be blank line)
If there is no line 2, line 1 will be used for the long description as well.
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@command('echo') def command_echo(self, params): '''<text to echo> Echo text back to the console. This command simply echos the provided text back to the console. ''' pass |
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Telnet Server> help ? [<command>] - Display help BYE - Exit the command shell ECHO <text to echo> - Echo text back to the console. ... Telnet Server> help echo ECHO <text to echo> This command simply echos the provided text back to the console. Telnet Server> |
Command Aliases
To create an alias for the new command, set the method’s name to a list:
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@command(['echo', 'copy']) def command_echo(self, params): ... |
The decorator may be stacked, which adds each list to the aliases:
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@command('echo') @command(['copy', 'repeat']) @command('ditto') def command_echo(self, params): ... |
Hidden Commands
To hide the command (and any alias for that command) from the help text output, pass in hidden=True to the decorator:
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@command('echo', hidden=True) def command_echo(self, params): ... |
The command will not show when the user invokes help by itself, but the detailed help text will show if the user invokes help echo.
When stacking decorators, any one of the stack may define the hidden parameter to hide the command.
Console Information
These will be provided for inspection.
- TERM
- String ID describing the currently connected terminal
- username
- Set after authentication succeeds, name of the logged in user. If no authentication was requested, will be None.
- history
- List containing the command history. This can be manipulated directly.
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@command('info') def command_info(self, params): ''' Provides some information about the current terminal. ''' self.writeresponse( "Username: %s, terminal type: %s" % (self.username, self.TERM) ) self.writeresponse( "Command history:" ) for c in self.history: self.writeresponse(" %r" % c) |
Console Communication
Send Text to the Client
Lower level functions:
self.writeline( TEXT )
self.write( TEXT )
Higher level functions:
self.writemessage( TEXT ) - for clean, asynchronous writing. Any interrupted input is rebuilt.
self.writeresponse( TEXT ) - to emit a line of expected output
self.writeerror( TEXT ) - to emit error messages
The writemessage method is intended to send messages to the console without interrupting any current input. If the user has entered text at the prompt, the prompt and text will be seamlessly regenerated following the message. It is ideal for asynchronous messages that aren’t generated from the direct user input.
Receive Text from the Client
self.readline( prompt=TEXT )
Setting the prompt is important to recreate the user input following a writemessage interruption.
When requesting sensative information from the user (such as requesting a password) the input should not be shown nor should it have access to or be written to the command history. readline accepts two optional parameters to control this, echo and user_history.
self.readline( prompt=TEXT, echo=False, use_history=False )
Handler Options
Override these class members to change the handler’s behavior.
- logging
- Default: pass
- PROMPT
- Default: "Telnet Server> "
- CONTINUE_PROMPT
- Default: "... "
- WELCOME
- Displayed after a successful connection, after the username/password is accepted, if configured.
Default: "You have connected to the telnet server."
- session_start(self)
- Called after the WELCOME text is displayed.
Default: pass
- session_end(self)
- Called after the console is disconnected.
Default: pass
- authCallback(self, username, password)
- Reference to authentication function. If this is not defined, no username or password is requested. Should raise an exception if authentication fails
Default: None
- authNeedUser
- Should a username be requested?
Default: False
- authNeedPass
- Should a password be requested?
Default: False
Handler Display Modification
If you want to change how the output is displayed, override one or all of the write classes. Make sure you call back to the base class when doing so. This is a good way to provide color to your console by using ANSI color commands. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code
- writemessage( TEXT )
- writeresponse( TEXT )
- writeerror( TEXT )
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def writeerror(self, text): '''Write errors in red''' TelnetHandler.writeerror(self, "\x1b[91m%s\x1b[0m" % text ) |
Serving the Handler
Now you have a shiny new handler class, but it doesn’t serve itself - it must be called from an appropriate server. The server will create an instance of the TelnetHandler class for each new connection. The handler class will work with either a gevent StreamServer instance (for the green version) or with a SocketServer.TCPServer instance (for the threaded version).
Threaded
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import SocketServer class TelnetServer(SocketServer.TCPServer): allow_reuse_address = True server = TelnetServer(("0.0.0.0", 8023), MyHandler) server.serve_forever() |
Green
The TelnetHandler class includes a streamserver_handle class method to translate the required fields from a StreamServer, allowing use with the gevent StreamServer (and possibly others).
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import gevent.server server = gevent.server.StreamServer(("", 8023), MyHandler.streamserver_handle) server.server_forever() |
Short Example
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import gevent, gevent.server from telnetsrv.green import TelnetHandler, command class MyTelnetHandler(TelnetHandler): WELCOME = "Welcome to my server." @command(['echo', 'copy', 'repeat']) def command_echo(self, params): '''<text to echo> Echo text back to the console. ''' self.writeresponse( ' '.join(params) ) @command('timer') def command_timer(self, params): '''<time> <message> In <time> seconds, display <message>. Send a message after a delay. <time> is in seconds. If <message> is more than one word, quotes are required. example: > TIMER 5 "hello world!" ''' try: timestr, message = params[:2] time = int(timestr) except ValueError: self.writeerror( "Need both a time and a message" ) return self.writeresponse("Waiting %d seconds...", time) gevent.spawn_later(time, self.writemessage, message) server = gevent.server.StreamServer(("", 8023), MyTelnetHandler.streamserver_handle) server.serve_forever() |
SSH
If the paramiko library is installed, the TelnetHanlder can be used via an SSH server for significantly improved security. paramiko_ssh contains SSHHandler and getRsaKeyFile to make setting up the server trivial. Since the authentication is done prior to invoking the TelnetHandler, any authCallback defined in the TelnetHandler is ignored.
Green
If using the green version of the TelnetHandler, you must use Gevent’s monkey patch_all prior to importing from paramiko_ssh.
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from gevent import monkey; monkey.patch_all() from telnetsrv.paramiko_ssh import SSHHandler, getRsaKeyFile |
Operation Overview
The SocketServer/StreamServer sets up the socket then passes that to an SSHHandler class which authenticates then starts the SSH transport. Within the SSH transport, the client requests a PTY channel (and possibly other channel types, which are denied) and the SSHHandler sets up a TelnetHandler class as the PTY for the channel. If the client never requests a PTY channel, the transport will disconnect after a timeout.
SSH Host Key
To thwart man-in-the-middle attacks, every SSH server provides an RSA key as a unique fingerprint. This unique key should never change, and should be stored in a local file or a database. The getRsaKeyFilemakes this easy by reading the given key file if it exists, or creating the key if it does not. The result should be read once and set in the class definition.
Easy way:
- host_key = getRsaKeyFile( FILENAME )
- If the FILENAME can be read, the RSA key is read in and returned as an RSAKey object. If the file can’t be read, it generates a new RSA key and stores it in that file.
Long way:
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from paramiko_ssh import RSAKey # Make a new key - should only be done once per server during setup new_key = RSAKey.generate(1024) save_to_my_database( 'server_fingerprint', str(new_key) ) ... host_key = RSAKey( data=get_from_my_database('server_fingerprint') ) |
SSH Authentication
Users can authenticate with just a username, a username/publickey or a username/password. Up to three callbacks can be defined, and if all three are defined, all three will be tried before denying the authentication attempt. An SSH client will always provide a username. If no authCallbackXX is defined, the SSH authentication will be set to “none” and any username will be able to log in.
- authCallbackUsername(self, username)
- Reference to username-only authentication function. Define this function to permit specific usernames to log in without any futher authentication. Raise any exception to deny this authentication attempt.
If defined, this is always tried first.
Default: None
- authCallbackKey(self, username, key)
- Reference to username/key authentication function. If this is defined, users can log in the SSH client automatically with a key. Raise any exception to deny this authentication attempt.
Default: None
- authCallback(self, username, password)
- Reference to username/password authentication function. If this is defined, a password is requested. Raise any exception to deny this authentication attempt.
If defined, this is always tried last.
Default: None
SSHHandler uses Paramiko’s ServerInterface as one of its base classes. If you are familiar with Paramiko, feel free to instead override the authentication callbacks as needed.
Short SSH Example
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from gevent import monkey; monkey.patch_all() import gevent.server from telnetsrv.paramiko_ssh import SSHHandler, getRsaKeyFile from telnetsrv.green import TelnetHandler, command class MyTelnetHandler(TelnetHandler): WELCOME = "Welcome to my server." @command(['echo', 'copy', 'repeat']) def command_echo(self, params): '''<text to echo> Echo text back to the console. ''' self.writeresponse( ' '.join(params) ) class MySSHHandler(SSHHandler): # Set the unique host key host_key = getRsaKeyFile('server_fingerprint.key') # Instruct this SSH handler to use MyTelnetHandler for any PTY connections telnet_handler = MyTelnetHandler def authCallbackUsername(self, username): # These users do not require a password if username not in ['john', 'eric', 'terry', 'graham']: raise RuntimeError('Not a Python!') def authCallback(self, username, password): # Super secret password: if password != 'concord': raise RuntimeError('Wrong password!') # Start a telnet server for just the localhost on port 8023. (Will not request any authentication.) telnetserver = gevent.server.StreamServer(('127.0.0.1', 8023), MyTelnetHandler.streamserver_handle) telnetserver.start() # Start an SSH server for any local or remote host on port 8022 sshserver = gevent.server.StreamServer(("", 8022), MySSHHandler.streamserver_handle) sshserver.serve_forever() |
Longer Example
See https://github.com/ianepperson/telnetsrvlib/blob/master/test.py