SSHPASS(1) | Sshpass User Manual | SSHPASS(1) |
sshpass - noninteractive ssh password provider
sshpass [-ffilename|-dnum|-ppassword|-e] [options] command arguments
This manual page documents the sshpass command.
sshpass is a utility designed for running ssh using the mode referred to as "keyboard-interactive" password authentication, but in non-interactive mode.
ssh uses direct TTY access to make sure that the password is indeed issued by an interactive keyboard user. Sshpass runs ssh in a dedicated tty, fooling it into thinking it is getting the password from an interactive user.
The command to run is specified after sshpass' own options. Typically it will be "ssh" with arguments, but it can just as well be any other command. The password prompt used by ssh is, however, currently hardcoded into sshpass.
If no option is given, sshpass reads the password from the standard input. The user may give at most one alternative source for the password:
First and foremost, users of sshpass should realize that ssh's insistance on only getting the password interactively is not without reason. It is close to impossible to securely store the password, and users of sshpass should consider whether ssh's public key authentication provides the same end-user experience, while involving less hassle and being more secure.
The -p option should be considered the least secure of all of sshpass's options. All system users can see the password in the command line with a simple "ps" command. Sshpass makes a minimal attempt to hide the password, but such attempts are doomed to create race conditions without actually solving the problem. Users of sshpass are encouraged to use one of the other password passing techniques, which are all more secure.
In particular, people writing programs that are meant to communicate the password programmatically are encouraged to use an anonymous pipe and pass the pipe's reading end to sshpass using the -d option.
As with any other program, sshpass returns 0 on success. In case of failure, the following return codes are used:
In addition, ssh might be complaining about a man in the middle attack. This complaint does not go to the tty. In other words, even with sshpass, the error message from ssh is printed to standard error. In such a case ssh's return code is reported back. This is typically an unimaginative (and non-informative) "255" for all error cases.
Run rsync over SSH using password authentication, passing the password on the command line:
rsync --rsh='sshpass -p 12345 ssh -l test' host.example.com:path .
To do the same from a bourne shell script in a marginally less exposed way:
SSHPASS=12345 rsync --rsh='sshpass -e ssh -l test' host.example.com:path .
Sshpass is in its infancy at the moment. As such, bugs are highly possible. In particular, if the password is read from stdin (no password option at all), it is possible that some of the input aimed to be passed to ssh will be read by sshpass and lost.
Sshpass utilizes the pty(7) interface to control the TTY for ssh. This interface, at least on Linux, has a misfeature where if no slave file descriptors are open, the master pty returns EIO. This is the normal behavior, except a slave pty may be born at any point by a program opening /dev/tty. This makes it impossible to reliably wait for events without consuming 100% of the CPU.
Over the various versions different approaches were attempted at solving this problem. Any given version of sshpass is released with the belief that it is working, but experience has shown that these things do, occasionally, break. This happened with OpenSSH version 5.6. As of this writing, it is believed that sshpass is, again, working properly.
It seems that HPUX has some non Posix compliant ideas how controlling TTY is detached. sshpass may not work properly on that platform.
January 29, 2021 | Lingnu Open Source Consulting |