See Below was confusing because it linked to the entire documentation section.
This provides a direct link to the section explaining why TCP over TCP is a bad idea.
* added sudoers options to command line arguments
* added sudoers options to command line arguments
* template for sudoers file
* Added option for GUI sudo
* added support for GUI sudo
* script for auto adding sudo file
* sudoers auto add works and validates
* small change
* Clean up for CI
* removed code that belongs in another PR
* added path for package bins
* added sudoers bin
* added sudoers-add to setup file
* fixed issue with sudoers bash script
* auto sudoers now works
* added --sudoers-no-modify option
* bin now works with ./run
* removed debug print
* Updated sudoers-add script
* Fixed error passing sudoers config to script
* more dynamic building of sudoers file
* added option to specify sudoers.d file name
* fixed indent issue
* fixed indent issue
* indent issue
* clean up
* formating
* docs
* fix for flags
* Update usage.rst
* removed shell=true
* cleared CI errors
* cleared CI errors
* removed random
* cleared linter issue
* cleared linter issue
* cleared linter issue
* updated sudoers-add script
* safer temp file
* moved bin directory
* moved bin directory
* removed print
* fixed spacing issue
* sudoers commands must only containe upper case latters
* Make hostwatch locale-independent
See #377: hostwatch used to call netstat and parse the result,
without setting the locale.
The problem is converting the binary output to a unicode string,
as the locale may be utf-8, latin-1, or literally anything.
Setting the locale to C avoids this issue, as netstat's source
strings to not use non-ASCII characters.
* Break line, check all other invocations
This commit resolves#297, allowing the buffers used in the latency control to be changed with a command line option ‘--latency-buffer-size’.
We do this by changing a module variable in ssnet.py (similar to the MAX_CHANNEL variable) which seems to be the simplest code change without extensive hacking.
Documentation is also updated.
The changes in a765aa32 removed a more complex pieced of code for parsing which sudo command to use. The %(eb)s no longer refers to any variable and is directly printed to the command line.
%(eb)s is now replaced with ‘sudo’.
Regression was introduced in #337 that is skipping all local traffic,
including DNS. This change makes UDP port 53 (DNS) LOCAL traffic to be
treated as special case.
Fixes#357
* re-organized imports according to pep8
* fixed all remaining pep8 issues
* moved common config into setup.cfg, additionally test `tests`
* removed --select=X -- the errors selected where by default not in
flake8's --ignore list so effectively had no effect
* update .travis.yml to reflect changes in tox.ini
* make travis just use tox in order to avoid code duplaction
* replace py.test with pytest
* fixed .travis.yml
* try different pypy toxenv
* hopefully fixed testenv for pypy
* added pypy basepython, removed unused python2.6
* install dev package before testing (fixes missing coverage)
* fixed empty exception pass blocks with noqa
* Added dummy log message on empty try-except-pass blocks to make dodacy happy :(
* Replaced Exception with BaseException
There's a known issue that makes sshuttle crash if there are too
many routes on the remote host (that don't fit in 64KB). This patch
requests the routes only if auto-nets is specified on the command
line.
This was susceptible to the same deadlock issue that ipt_chain_exists
had and was fixed in d43db80 where if the command returned a significant
amount of output, it wouldn't all be read in, resulting in the
subprocess hanging waiting for the output to be read.
--ns-hosts is available since commit d2ee34d71c
("dns: Added --ns-hosts to tunnel only some requests")
(released as v0.72), but was never documented.
--to-ns is available since commit be559fc78b
("Fix case where there is no --dns.") after several
bugfixes, released as v0.78.4, but was never
documented.
When running sshuttle with a large list of routes it's failing to clean
them up at exit. It returns the following:
$ sshuttle -r user@host.example.com -s /tmp/aws-cidrs.txt
user@host.example.com's password:
client: Connected.
^CAnother app is currently holding the xtables lock; still -9s 0us time ahead to have a chance to grab the lock...
Another app is currently holding the xtables lock; still -19s 0us time ahead to have a chance to grab the lock...
Another app is currently holding the xtables lock; still -29s 0us time ahead to have a chance to grab the lock...
This continues indefinitely. Looking in ps reveals that there are 2
iptables processes running. Killing -9 the first one, allows sshuttle to
continue and clean up successfully.
The problem lies with the use of Popen here. The function currently
returns as soon as it finds a match without consuming everything from
stdout. This means that if there's more output from iptables than will
fit in the buffer it doesn't exit, and therefore doesn't release the
kernel xtables lock.
Before this change, in pf, exclusions used a pass out quick which gave
them higher precedence than any other rule independent of subnet width.
As reported in #265 this causes exclusion from one instance of sshuttle
to also take effect on other instances because quick aborts the
evaluation of rules across all anchors.
This commit changes the precedence of rules so quick can now be
dropped. The new order is defined by the following rule, from
subnet_weight:
"We need to go from smaller, more specific, port ranges, to larger,
less-specific, port ranges. At each level, we order by subnet
width, from most-specific subnets (largest swidth) to
least-specific. On ties, excludes come first."
* Fixes support for OpenBSD (6.1+)
As reported in #219, new versions of OpenBSD ship with a different
pfioc_rule struct. This commit adjusts the offset to match the new struct.
* Fixes tests for OpenBSD 6.1+
Having the tests in a `tests` directory in root is the most common
approach. Also moved pytest's conftest.py into `tests` making the
fixture available for client and server tests.