2016-09-21 0:59 GMT+09:00 Paul Borman <bor...@google.com>: > I would suggest just putting your package out there and see how it is > received. At some point, if it becomes the defacto package, moving it might > make sense.
OK, I understood. > > I actually wrote an internal SCP package that works with a ssh multiplexer > built on top of crypto/ssh. For various reasons, I am not in a position to > OpenSource the package. I hope your SCP package will be released as an OpenSource. > > It provides a NewSCP that returns an SCP object. You provide NewSCP with a > configuration structure that specifies optional default timestamps, mode, if > -p should be used, and if Start or Shell should be used to make the session > (some SSH servers do not support exec mode (Start)). > > The SCP type only has 3 methods (and one is actually a convenience wrapper): > > func (*SCP) Send(ctx context.Context, dst string, srcs ...string) error > > Send sends the srcs to dst. If srcs has a length greater than 1, or any of > the srcs is a Directory, dst must reference a directory on the remote host. > Send returns any errors encountered. If an error is returned, it may contain > multiple errors. User Errors(err) to retrieve the list of errors. > > func (*SCP) Receive(ctx context.Context, src string, f func(*Incoming) > error) error > > Receive requests the directory or file src from the remote host. For each > directory and file in src, f is called with a populated Incoming structure. > If IsDir is not set then f must either populate W or return an error. In any > event, if f returns an error then that file or directory's transfer is > stopped. If the returned error is wrapped by Fatal{}, the entire SCP session > is shutdown. > > type Incoming struct { > Path string // Name of file on remote host > Mode os.FileMode // Mode of the file on the remote host > MTime time.Time // Last modified time from the remote host > ATime time.Time // Last access time from the remote host > Length int64 // Length of incoming file > IsDir bool // Set if receiving a directory > WErr error // Error encountered during write, if any > W io.Writer // Destination for read data > NoClose bool // Do not close W when finished. > } > > Incoming is where to send information about a file or directory. When an > Incoming is provided to ReceiveFile, W must be set and IsDir must not be > set. If the set W also implements io.Closer, W.Close is called after the > fimal write to W, unless NoClose is set. NoClose is normally only set when > using a single io.Writer for all data (such as os.Stdout). > > The convenience function is: > > func (*SCP) ReceiveFile(ctx context.Context, in *Incoming, src string) error > > ReceiveFile requests the remote host send the file named src. ReceiveFile > writes the received contents to in.W. Path, Mode, MTime and ATime are set > prior to the first write to in.W. MTime and ATime may be the zero value for > time.Time if not provided by the remote host. > > If there is an error writing to in.W, in.WErr is set to the error. in.WErr > is only valid after ReceiveFile returns. If there is an error receiving the > file from the remote host, it is returned. > > You could easily imagine a wrapper that called Receive and provided an > internal function that did whatever needed to be done, or even a stock > function that can be passed to Receive. > > I hope this is helpful. Thanks for the spec about your SCP package. I think it is more general than mine. However most of my cases are copy a single file or a directory, so I think I'd keep my APIs for the moment. I added NewSCP and SCP https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp/commit/b43795fc10ef52b02a76653b643fa5aabb7b85a7 One thing I would like to add is the cancellation support using context.Context. However ssh.Run does not take a context.Context as an argument, so I don't know how to achieve that. https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/crypto/ssh#Session.Run Could you tell me how you implement the cancellation? Thanks, Hiroaki Nakamura > > -Paul > > On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 6:47 AM, Hiroaki Nakamura <hnaka...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> >> Hi Paul, >> Thanks for your feedback! >> >> 2016-09-20 0:02 GMT+09:00 Paul Borman <bor...@google.com>: >> > Adding an scp package is a nice addition. >> >> I agree. >> Should I send a pull request to https://github.com/golang/crypto? >> If yes, what package? golang.org/x/crypto/scp or >> golang.org/x/crypto/ssh/scp? >> >> > You might want to consider simple names like: >> > >> > Send - Sends from []byte to file on remote host >> > SendDir - Send files in dir to a remote host >> > SendFile - Sends the contents of a file to the remote host >> > Fetch - Fetches the contents of a file on remote host into memory >> > FetchFile - Fetches a file from remote host into file on local host >> > FetchDir - Fetches the files in a directory from the remote host >> > >> > These would translate in code to names like scp.SendFile, which is >> > pretty >> > descriptive all by itself. >> >> Thanks for simple and descriptive function names. >> I renamed functions. >> >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp/commit/8cd6d9e5ab17187556e5efc3a666d29b4b561c78 >> >> > >> > For the directory copy, it might be better to have a function return the >> > io.Writer to write the file to, rather than force the files into a >> > directory. This would make it easy to keep the contents in memory, >> > change >> > file names, or whatever. >> >> Yes, I agree it might be better not to force the files in a directory. >> However I don't think having a function return the io.Writer will do >> since we need to read a reply for each scp protocol header or body. >> >> I had read the article below and the openssh source code and >> implemented my scp package https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp. >> >> "How the SCP protocol works (Jan Pechanec's weblog)" >> https://blogs.oracle.com/janp/entry/how_the_scp_protocol_works >> >> I built two structs sourceProtocol and sinkProtocol >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp/blob/master/protocol.go >> >> I had thought to export these structs or make interfaces for that. >> However the implementation of two functions SendDir and FetchDir >> which using these structs become somewhat complex. >> >> >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp/blob/8cd6d9e5ab17187556e5efc3a666d29b4b561c78/source.go#L81-L175 >> >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp/blob/8cd6d9e5ab17187556e5efc3a666d29b4b561c78/sink.go#L111-L223 >> >> So I was not confident about exporting sourceProtocol and sinkProtocol, >> and I did not export them at the time. >> >> If we can define structs, functions or interfaces which are easy to use, >> I'm glad to export them. >> >> Do you have an idea about such structs, functions or interfaces? >> Thanks! >> >> Hiroaki Nakamura >> >> > >> > On Fri, Sep 16, 2016 at 9:41 AM, Hiroaki Nakamura <hnaka...@gmail.com> >> > wrote: >> >> >> >> Hi all, >> >> >> >> I noticed the golang.org/x/crypto/ssh package exists, but the scp >> >> package does not. >> >> So I wrote a scp client library in go. >> >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-scp >> >> >> >> I also wrote a sshd server just usable for testing go-scp. >> >> https://github.com/hnakamur/go-sshd >> >> >> >> Right now, go-scp only exports high level functions which are supposed >> >> to be easy to use. >> >> https://godoc.org/github.com/hnakamur/go-scp >> >> >> >> However I wonder if there APIs can be improved. For example, >> >> better function names and better arguments. >> >> >> >> Could you tell me what you think? >> >> Thanks! >> >> >> >> Hiroaki Nakamura >> >> >> >> -- >> >> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google >> >> Groups >> >> "golang-nuts" group. >> >> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send >> >> an >> >> email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. >> >> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout. >> > >> > > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.