In comp.lang.python, lampahome wrote:
> what I tried many times like enter password, but it failed.
> I just want to use ps.stdin.write(password) to send password, but it always
> jump password prompt immediately.
Passwords are frequently read from stderr, not stdin, so that tools can
get a huma
On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 3:25 PM Cameron Simpson wrote:
> However, I repeat my recommendation to use a keypair for the
> authentication, as it avoids needing interactive passwords (and having
> your programme know the password has its own suite of problems to do
> with where that password comes fro
On 17Sep2019 13:02, lampahome wrote:
Note also that since stdin and stdout are pipes and not the terminal
then ssh will not be interactive, and will not allocate a tty at the far
end either. You can get ssh to open a remote tty with the -t option.
But I suspect you don't want stdin=PIPE or stdo
>
> Well, there's a Python library called "paramiko" which implements ssh.
> That might help.
>
> Later I will try lol.
> Note also that since stdin and stdout are pipes and not the terminal
> then ssh will not be interactive, and will not allocate a tty at the far
> end either. You can get ssh t
On 17Sep2019 12:13, lampahome wrote:
Hello, I use python3.5 and found no way to solve this problem
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
ps = Popen('ssh -o \'StrictHostKeyChecking no\' hello@192.168.80.11 \'sudo
sysctl -w vm.drop_caches=3\', stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE,
bufsize=0, shell
Hello, I use python3.5 and found no way to solve this problem
>from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
>ps = Popen('ssh -o \'StrictHostKeyChecking no\' hello@192.168.80.11 \'sudo
sysctl -w vm.drop_caches=3\', stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE,
bufsize=0, shell=True)
> hello@192.168.80.11's password