Node.js ssh2-exec
The Node.js ssh2-exec
package extends the ssh2
module to provide transparent usage between the child_process.exec
and ssh2.prototype.exec
functions. It was originally developped for and is still use by Nikita to run actions both locally and over SSH.
Installation
This is OSS and licensed under the MIT license.
npm install ssh2-exec
ssh2-exec
module usage
The default module expose an API similar to the native NodeJS API. Its signature is:
exec(sshOrNull, command, [options], [callback])
Or
exec(options, [callback])
Like in the native NodeJS API, the callback is not required in case you wish to work with the returned child stream. The "sshOrNull" and "command" arguments are also facultative because they could be provided respectively as the "ssh" and "command" property of the options object.
Valid options
properties are:
ssh
SSH connection if the command must run remotelycommand
Command to run unless provided as first argumentcwd
Current working directoryend
Close the SSH connection on exit, default to true if an ssh connection instance is provided.env
An environment to use for the execution of the command.pty
Set to true to allocate a pseudo-tty with defaults, or an object containing specific pseudo-tty settings. Apply only to SSH remote commands.cwd
Apply only to local commands.uid
Apply only to local commands.gid
Apply only to local commands.
See the ssh2 and ssh2-connect modules on how to create a new SSH connection.
ssh2-exec/promises
module usage
Note, until version 0.7.3
, the module was named ssh2-exec/promise
. The promise
resolution is still working. However, it will be removed in an upcoming version in favor of ssh2-exec/promises
in order to be consistent with the Node.js node:fs/promises
module.
The promise module is an alternative to the callback usage. Like with the callback, use it if stdout
and stderr
are not too large and fit in memory.
const {stdout, stderr, code} = await exec(sshOrNull, command, [options])
Or
const {stdout, stderr, code} = await exec(options)
If the exit code is not 0
, the thrown error object contains the stdout
, stderr
, and code
properties.
Examples
A command, a configuration object and a callback:
import { connect } from "ssh2-connect";
import { exec } from "ssh2-exec";
connect({ host: localhost }, (err, ssh) => {
exec("ls -la", { ssh: ssh }, (err, stdout, stderr, code) => {
console.info(stdout, stderr, code);
});
});
A configuration object with a ssh2 connection and working a the return child object:
import { connect } from "ssh2-connect";
import { exec } from "ssh2-exec";
connect({ host: localhost }, function (err, ssh) {
child = exec(
{
command: "ls -la",
ssh: ssh,
},
function (err, stdout, stderr, code) {
console.info(stdout);
},
);
child.stdout.on("data", function (data) {
console.info(data);
});
child.stderr.on("data", function (data) {
console.error(data);
});
child.on("exit", function (code) {
console.info("Exit", code);
});
});
Development
Tests are executed with mocha. To install it, simple run npm install
, it will install mocha and its dependencies in your project "node_modules" directory.
To run the tests:
npm test
Release
Versions are incremented using semantic versioning. To create a new version and publish it to NPM, run:
npm run release
The publication is handled by the GitHub action.
Contributors
The project is sponsored by Adaltas based in Paris, France. Adaltas offers support and consulting on distributed systems, big data and open source.