Commit Graph

106 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Avery Pennarun
95ab6e7119 ssyslog.py: use daemon.notice instead of daemon.info
...MacOS X seems to default (in /etc/syslog.conf) to not logging daemon.info
anywhere.  That kind of defeats the purpose, I think.
2011-01-01 00:28:31 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
e6d7c44e27 Merge branch 'daemon'
* daemon:
  daemonization: make sure the firewall subproc sends to syslog too.
  Rearrange daemonization/syslog stuff and make it more resilient.
  run in background (daemon) and option
2011-01-01 00:22:43 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
5bf6e40682 daemonization: make sure the firewall subproc sends to syslog too. 2011-01-01 00:22:09 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
8a5ae1a40a Rearrange daemonization/syslog stuff and make it more resilient.
Rename --background to -D/--daemon, to match other programs (like smbd).

You can now have --syslog even without --daemon.

Avoid using atexit(); try/finally is better.

Don't just close stderr; we'll end up eating error output from ssh!
Instead, redirect stderr to a 'logger' subprocess that will send to syslog.

Delay redirecting stderr until after we know we're daemonizing, so handy
error messages can go to stderr instead of syslog.

Make pidfile stuff more resilient: support already-existing files, files
with strict permissions, outdated files containing an already-dead pid.  Add
a --pidfile option to let you specify the pidfile path.

chdir("/") while daemonizing, so that the filesystem containing $PWD can
later be unmounted without killing the daemon.

fw.done() can't wait on the firewall subprocess on exit when daemonized; we
no longer are the parent of that process.
2010-12-31 23:55:19 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
651b607361 If ssh dies right after starting, we might get ECONNRESET.
Turn it into a nicer-looking fatal error instead of an exception dump.
2010-12-31 23:46:47 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
dc9a5e63c7 Minor tweak to help for the python= option. 2010-12-31 23:46:05 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
33bc55be27 Merge branch 'closing'
* closing:
  Correctly close server connection when client disconnects.
  "Too many open files" shouldn't be a fatal condition.
2010-12-31 22:12:54 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
c3204d2728 Correctly close server connection when client disconnects.
When the server disconnected, we were forwarding that information to the
client.  But we weren't forwarding back the other way when the client
disconnected since there was no callback in place to do that.

Relatedly, when we failed entirely to connect to the server, we didn't notify the
client right away.  Now we do.

Thanks to 'Roger' on the mailing list for pointing out these bugs.
2010-12-31 21:59:36 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
b1edb226a5 "Too many open files" shouldn't be a fatal condition.
It can happen if there are too many sockets open.  If that happens, just
throw away any connections that arrive in the meantime instead of aborting
completely.
2010-12-31 21:32:51 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
7fa1c3c4e4 Listen on localhost:0 instead of 0.0.0.0:0 by default.
This avoids any possible problem caused by other people on your network
using you as a proxy.  If you want to allow this, you can force it back to
the old way using the --listen option.

Thanks to 'tass' on github for reporting portscans that revealed this
potential security problem.
2010-12-31 21:22:40 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
cca69eb496 Don't allow proxying of connections to the proxy port.
Add some cleverness for breaking infinite loops.  Previously we'd only
detect it successfully if you connected to exactly the same IP as we were
listening on, but that was unreliable if we're listening on 0.0.0.0 and you
connected to one of the IP addresses we haven't heard of.

Now, if you try to connect to our listen port on *any* IP, we try binding to
that IP as a local socket; if it works, that's a local IP, and therefore
it's our socket, so reject the connection.  If it doesn't work, it's a
remote IP, so forward it along.

Thanks to 'tass' on github for noticing the problem.
2010-12-31 21:22:32 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
91f65132be Get rid of ugly quotes on "Accept:" log messages. 2010-12-31 20:54:46 -08:00
Roger
2ef3a301fb run in background (daemon) and option 2010-12-12 12:08:54 +08:00
Avery Pennarun
41fd0348eb Fix a bug when packets are received on a channel after it closes.
Reported by cbowns.
2010-12-11 17:27:12 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
1907048dad Remove the never-used and misleading CMD_CLOSE. 2010-12-09 19:20:09 -08:00
Roger
82e1d1c166 Fix memory leak of MuxWrapper object.
(Note by apenwarr: I used Roger's original patch as the basis for this one,
but implemented it a different way.  All errors are thus my fault, but Roger
gets the credit for actually tracking down the circular reference that
caused the memory leak.)
2010-12-09 19:20:07 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
a497132c01 Add debug messages for counting SockWrapper objects.
You can use this to confirm that a memory leak exists.
2010-12-09 19:20:06 -08:00
Roger
7354600849 Fix a socket leak: delete object after close on both direction.
(Note by apenwarr: seems to still work for me.  The reason the
problem occurred is that reassigning 'handlers' doesn't change it in its
parent; it creates a whole new list, and the caller still owns the old one
with all the dead sockets in it.  The problem seems to have been introduced
in commit 84376284db when I factored the
runonce() functionality out of the client and server but didn't notice this
reassignment.)
2010-12-09 19:20:01 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
918725c485 Oops, earlier ipv6 patch didn't work if no -r option is specified. 2010-12-09 19:20:01 -08:00
Christopher Bowns
95c9b788a0 Add support for IPv6 remote hosts.
Supported sshuttle commands for IPv6:

./sshuttle -r "IPv6:addr" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv
./sshuttle -r "[IPv6:addr]" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv
./sshuttle -r "[IPv6:addr]:22" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv

Technically "invalid" address/port formats, but they can still be parsed because they’re unambiguous, so these also work:

./sshuttle -r "IPv6:addr]" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv
./sshuttle -r "IPv6:addr]:" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv
./sshuttle -r "IPv6:addr]:22" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv
./sshuttle -r "[IPv6:addr" 0.0.0.0/0 -vv

(If you have a Mac with Back To My Mac, use dns-sd to discover the remote host's IPv6 address:
dns-sd -G v4v6 <machine name>.<member name>.members.mac.com )
2010-11-19 15:13:35 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
ef71751846 Add a sshuttle.8 manpage.
You need to have 'pandoc' installed in order to render it from sshuttle.md.
2010-11-09 01:59:51 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
32b4defa9b Add a new --ssh-cmd= option to let you override the ssh command.
Requested by Axel Beckert.
2010-11-09 00:17:01 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
8b7605cc5d Remove the --noserver option.
It didn't work anyway.  Obviously it hasn't been tested (or apparently
needed) in a long time.
2010-11-08 23:59:26 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
bcf1892305 Make password prompting more clear.
Based on suggestions by Jason Grossman and Ed Maste on the mailing list.

We now add a [local su] prefix to the 'su' password prompt (by cheating and
printing it before calling su), and we replace the 'sudo' password prompt
with '[local sudo] Password: ' (by using the little-known and
hopefully-portable -p option).

We no longer call sudo or su if the uid is already 0; otherwise the prefix
on the 'su' prompt would look weird, since su wouldn't ask for a password in
that case.

We don't add a prefix to the ssh password prompt, because it's too hard to
tell if there will *be* an ssh password prompt.  But people will probably
assume that the password request is for the server anyway; few people are
likely to think that 'sshuttle -r myhost.com' is going to prompt for the
*local* password.

Of course none of this is a problem on a modern OS, like Debian, that would
say something like "Password for apenwarr@myhost.com:" instead of just
"Password:".  MacOS doesn't do that, however, so I assume many other OSes
also don't.  Let's try to help them out.
2010-11-08 23:35:16 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
fe742c928d firewall.py: don't die if a given sysctl doesn't exist.
Instead, get a list of known sysctls in the interesting prefix (net.inet.ip)
and check if there's an entry in the list for each sysctl we want to change.
If there isn't, then don't try to change it.

This fixes a problem with FreeBSD, which doesn't have
net.inet.ip.scopedroute but also doesn't need it.  Probably also fixes MacOS
10.5, which probably didn't have that either, but I don't know for sure.

Reported by Ed Maste.
2010-10-16 20:11:30 -06:00
Avery Pennarun
10ce1ee5d4 ipfw: use 'delete' instead of 'del' to avoid a warning on freebsd.
'del' is an abbreviation that happened to work because of substring matching
in earlier versions of ipfw, but apparently they're planning to remove the
substring matching eventually.  In any case, 'delete' has always worked, so
there's no downside to using that.

Reported by Ed Maste.
2010-10-05 13:29:12 -04:00
Avery Pennarun
a32305a275 server.py: don't send partial hostwatch lists.
If hostwatch has a lot of stuff to say all at once, it would come in more
than one recv() packet, and server.py would send each packet individually as
a CMD_HOST_LIST message.  Unfortunately, client.py (rightly) expects each
CMD_HOST_LIST message to be complete, ie. a correct sequence of rows.

So now server.py makes sure of this.  If there's a leftover bit (ie. an
unterminated line), it saves it for later.

Bug reported by user "Duke" on the mailing list.
2010-10-04 02:47:43 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
ae32fe2a59 Merge branch 'python23' - python 2.3 compatibility
* python23:
  Oops, missed another << operator to replace with _shl().
  socket.SHUT_RD and socket.SHUT_WR don't exist in python 2.3.
  compat/ssubprocess.py: some python versions don't have os.closerange().
  _nb_clean: don't catch EPIPE after all.
  Fix busy-waiting in two situations:
  Factor out common mainloop code between client and server.
  Implement our own left-shift operator to shut up python 2.3 warnings.
  Don't use set() since it's not in python 2.3.
  import and use subprocess.py from python 2.6.
  Remove list comprehensions for python 2.3 compatibility.
2010-10-02 16:34:35 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
5070f2ffcf Oops, missed another << operator to replace with _shl().
For python 2.3, of course.
2010-10-02 15:26:29 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
b219b523c2 socket.SHUT_RD and socket.SHUT_WR don't exist in python 2.3.
Mercifully, socket.socket.shutdown() still does, but it uses hardcoded
integer parameters - and the integers correspond to the SHUT_RD and SHUT_WR
definitions in later versions - so let's just hardcode them ourselves.

See the carnage for yourself:
http://docs.python.org/release/2.3.5/lib/socket-objects.html
2010-10-02 15:24:04 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
52fbb2ebbe compat/ssubprocess.py: some python versions don't have os.closerange().
Like python2.5 on Debian.  It might be a MacOS extension or something.  So
much for the comment in subprocess.py that said "keep this compatible with
python 2.2."
2010-10-01 19:26:56 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
76d576a375 _nb_clean: don't catch EPIPE after all.
EPIPE is a serious error from these places, so we have to actually do
something.  Otherwise the client ends up busy waiting when the server
disconnects by surprise.

Bug noticed in a log from Chetan Kunte.
2010-10-01 18:25:03 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
f6e6515a3c Fix busy-waiting in two situations:
- If you tried to connect to a server that didn't exist, then disconnected
  the client during the 60-second connection timeout, the server would
  busy wait for 60 seconds.

- If you connected to a server and then sent data, but then the server
  disconnected before reading all your data, the server would busy wait.
    (example:  yes | telnet servername 80)
2010-10-01 18:22:36 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
84376284db Factor out common mainloop code between client and server.
Also improve the socket message output a bit.
2010-10-01 17:36:09 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
b0f061e204 Implement our own left-shift operator to shut up python 2.3 warnings.
Apparently left-shift in python 2.3 just *always* prints a warning, even if
we weren't doing anything wrong.  Or maybe it only prints the warning
sometimes.  Anyway, let's just multiply by 2**x instead of using <<x, since
we're not performance-sensitive anyway.
2010-10-01 14:46:34 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
c403a83ab8 Don't use set() since it's not in python 2.3.
Just use a plain list instead.  Technically probably slightly worse
asymptotic behaviour, but it's not like we'll have a million sockets anyway.
2010-10-01 14:38:08 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
da774f3f46 import and use subprocess.py from python 2.6.
This should hopefully let us run even on python 2.3 on really old servers.
2010-10-01 12:11:48 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
7d3028dee2 Remove list comprehensions for python 2.3 compatibility. 2010-10-01 11:55:45 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
518df41049 ssh.py: don't os.setsid().
This prevents ssh from asking for a password successfully.  Error reported
by Chetan Kunte.
2010-10-01 11:35:13 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
76bbbfd67b Catch the exception thrown when ssh can't connect.
Easiest test: give it an invalid hostname.

Reported by Chetan Kunte.
2010-10-01 10:34:20 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
6e336c09bf README: remove the note about MacOS not working. It works now! 2010-10-01 00:43:01 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
f950a3800b BSD: sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 is not necessary.
If your machine is a firewall/router, it affects whether people behind the
router can use your sshuttle connection - in the same way that it affects
whether they can route *anything* through you.  And thus, it should be set
by the admin, not by sshuttle.

sshuttle works fine for the local user either way.

(This also affects MacOS since it's a BSD variant.)
2010-10-01 00:39:30 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
8b4466b802 BSD ipfw: switch from 'established' to 'keep-state/check-state'.
It turns out 'established' doesn't work the way I expected it to from
iptables; it's not stateful.  It just checks the TCP flags to see if the
connection *thinks* it's already established, and follows the rule if so.
That caused the first packet of each new connection to set sent to our
transproxy, but not the subsequent ones, so weird stuff happened.

With this change, any (matching) connection created *after* starting sshuttle
will get forwarded, but pre-existing ones - most importantly, sshuttle's own
ssh connection - will not.

And with this (plus the previous commit), sshuttle works on MacOS, including
10.6!
2010-10-01 00:36:46 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
4bf4f70c67 ssnet: recover slightly more gracefully from an infinite forwarding loop.
If you 'telnet localhost 12300' weird things happen; someday we should
probably auto-detect and avoid that altogether.  But meanwhile, catch EPIPE
if it happens (it's irrelevant) and don't barf with a %d data type for a
value that can apparently sometimes be None.
2010-10-01 00:05:49 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
410b9d4229 Magic incantation to mostly fix MacOS 10.6.
It comes down to this:
   sysctl_set('net.inet.ip.scopedroute', 0)

I say "mostly" because actually it doesn't fix it; sshuttle doesn't know
what to do with the received connection, so there must be a minor bug
remaining somewhere.  I'll fix that next.

Thanks to dkf <dfortunato@gmail.com> on the sshuttle mailing list for
suggesting the magic fix.  He points at this post in particular:
  http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=11558355&#11558355
that gave him the necessary clue.
2010-10-01 00:05:48 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
2ef1c6a4c4 latest options.py from bup, now with tty-width guessing.
as of bup commit bup-0.19-2-gce2ace5.
2010-09-21 18:03:17 -07:00
Frederik Deweerdt
b35cfbd022 hostwatch: add missing errno import
If the ~/.sshuttle.hosts file does not exist, it triggers the following
error:

       Traceback (most recent call last):
         File "./sshuttle", line 80, in <module>
           sys.exit(hostwatch.hw_main(extra))
         File "/home/def/p/sshuttle/hostwatch.py", line 246, in hw_main
           read_host_cache()
         File "/home/def/p/sshuttle/hostwatch.py", line 41, in read_host_cache
           if e.errno == errno.ENOENT:
       NameError: global name 'errno' is not defined

(This only happened if you run 'sshuttle --hostwatch' from the command line
directly, without passing it through assembler.py.)
2010-09-21 17:15:46 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
dcba684766 If netstat -rn returns an error, make that non-fatal.
That only really stops --auto-nets from working; it's mostly harmless
otherwise.  And apparently some locked-down shared hosts don't let you get
the list of routes.
2010-09-04 11:29:11 -07:00
chocolateboy
ee74110cff add option to allow the remote python binary's name/path to be specified 2010-09-03 23:00:26 -07:00
Avery Pennarun
5bf8687ce3 Import latest options.py from bup-0.17.
This has new support for default values in square brackets, so let's use
that.
2010-09-03 23:00:26 -07:00