Skip to content

A utility to correctly-ish parse valid SSH command line strings into their user/host/command components.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

estheruary/parse-ssh-cl

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

SSH Command Line Parser

What.

This program is called exactly like the ssh binary from OpenSSH, except instead of opening a remote shell it will print the username (if specified), host, port (if specified), and command (if specified) given on the command line.

./parse-ssh-cl -J bastion -X estelle@myhost:1234
User: estelle
Host: myhost
Port: 1234
Command:

./parse-ssh-cl -4 -q -L 8080:localhost:8080 app@prod
User: app
Host: prod
Port:
Command:

./parse-ssh-cl ssh://dev
User:
Host: dev
Port:
Command:

./parse-ssh-cl host ls -l
User:
Host: host
Port:
Command: ls -l

Why?

Because when I use tmux I want to be able to open a shell on a remote host and have the window title show the host I'm connected to. Something that can take an SSH command line string and output the host is an important piece of that puzzle.

How?

  • I looked at the source of OpenSSH (ssh.c) and saw two functions parse_ssh_uri and parse_user_host_port that seemed like they did what I wanted so I just copied them over and tried to compile them standalone.

  • GCC yelled at me about all these missing function definitions so I copied them from around the code base (mostly misc.c).

  • If the function wasn't there I Googled around to find out what random header I needed.

  • I unearthed some heated drama surrounding strlcpy so I decided to copy the implementation from OpenBSD inline rather than link against libbsd.

  • I found greymd/ssh_opt_parse which is honestly better than this project in every conceivable way.

  • I copied the getopt string so that I could ignore all of the options, ran my two functions that now work, and boom, command line parsing just how upstream does it.

Do.

Are you sure you really want to use this thing? Just run make in the source directory and then do whatever with the parse-ssh-cl binary it spits out.

As far as dependencies go just about any distribution's development tools should be more than enough to build and use. It pretty just uses libc.

How do you actually use it in your shell? Anyone who is this deep in shell customization uses ZSH, right?

ssh() {
    if [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
        cur="$(tmux display-message -p '#W')"
        tmux rename-window $(parse-ssh-cl "$@" | awk '/^Host/ { print $2; }')
        command ssh "$@"
        tmux rename-window "$cur"
    else
        exec command ssh "$@"
    fi
}

Never Asked Questions.

Do you support -l and -p parsing? Not yet. That's a great idea me.

What happens if ssh changes options? I'll be sad.

License.

Pretty much all of this code is straight up copy/pasted from OpenSSH and the one function from OpenBSD. After reading the entire LICENSE file from OpenSSH I have concluded that I have no idea if and how I'm supposed to give attribution.

About

A utility to correctly-ish parse valid SSH command line strings into their user/host/command components.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published