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I'm currently writing a deployment framework in PHP. The framework connects to servers and executes commands over SSH. I've been looking for quite a while trying to find a way in PHP to do this better. Here are the requirements. The technique should be able to:

  1. Enter the SSH password programmatically. I know that using SSH keys is the way to go when you want password-less SSH logons, but remember, this is a deployment framework. It could potentially be deploying to 25 servers at a time. It doesn't seem right to require the user to have set up SSH keys to use the framework, and who wants to enter their password 25 times? I'm using Capistrano as a model here - it asks for your password once, then uses it to establish the SSH connections without re-prompting the user. I'm not suggesting the passwords be stored in the deploy script, just (silently) entered once and used until the deploy tasks are finished.

  2. Send output to the PHP script. I would like to be able to intercept the terminal output from each of the SSH sessions independently, modify it, then send it back to the terminal for the user to see. This way, I can prepend the name of the server onto each line of output to show what's going on.

  3. Provide write (as well as read) access to the terminal. It's important that the user (or the script) be able to enter other information into the terminal besides just the SSH password.

  4. Support SSH v2.

Currently, my framework "compiles" the commands from the deploy script into one giant string and executes them by using the SSH command. Each final deploy command looks something like this:

ssh -t -t -p 12345 [email protected] 'command1; command2;'

Each of these SSH commands is executed via PHP's built-in passthru function:

<?php passthru("ssh -t -t -p 12345 [email protected] 'command1; command2;'"); ?>

I have tried using proc_open and nearly all of PHP's other command-executing functions to no avail - none of them provide all the functionality I've listed above. In addition, I've tried several pure PHP SSH implementations, also to no avail. The libraries either don't supply write access to the terminal or don't support SSH v2.

Any help on this would be greatly appreciated - thanks in advance!

3 Answers 3

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Do you consider the following to be an example of write access to the terminal?:

ssh -t -t -p 12345 [email protected] 'command1; command2;'

If so then you can do that with phpseclib's pure PHP SSH implementation. eg.

$ssh = new Net_SSH2(...);
$ssh->login(..., ...);
$ssh->exec('command1; command2;');

If not then (1) I'd say you'd be better off using phpseclib than you are with you're current implementation and (2) if you want what the phpseclib author has referred to as "interactive" support maybe you could try contacting the author? Maybe offer to pay him some money to incentivize him to develop the feature. Looking at the support forums the author seems responsive enough.

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  • Hmm, not a bad suggestion. I tried to use phpseclib before and found it to be pretty good, but without write access. It supports v1 with write access, but not v2. I don't really consider the first command you mentioned to be write access because it's executed using passthru. What I really am looking for are streams to stdin/stdout.
    – Cameron
    Jan 19, 2011 at 21:09
  • I eventually was able to make phpseclib work for what I needed. It doesn't supply write access if you use SSH2, but I don't think it's out of the question to expect users to have keys set up for things like subversion checkouts. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction!
    – Cameron
    Jan 20, 2011 at 21:48
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I'm not sure php is the right tool here. Why not use something that is closer to the shell environment, like a bash script?

The only reason I can imagine you want to use PHP is so you can start the process by clicking a link on a page somewhere, and thereby punch a large hole in whatever security your system supposedly has. But if you really must, then it is still easier to write a script in a more shell friendly language and simply use php as a gateway to invoke the script.

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  • I agree with you, but bash scripting is a lot less flexible than PHP. I'm not planning on using the deployment framework from the web, just from the command line. The framework will mostly be for developers who want to work in a homogeneous environment, i.e. only using PHP for their site and their deploy scripts. It's the same philosophy as having a Ruby deployment framework (Capistrano) that was initially made for rails apps.
    – Cameron
    Jan 19, 2011 at 0:39
  • I don't understand the motivation for a homogeneous environment, nor would I recommend PHP as the language of choice for this task. This should be obvious once you start making system and passthru calls for basic features, you're simply delegating to the shell to make up for shortcomings in the PHP library. Jan 19, 2011 at 1:12
  • Anyway you could probably get some mileage out of using output buffering to capture your terminal output and pipe that where you want it. That's probably what Capistrano does. Jan 19, 2011 at 1:13
  • The output buffering idea is intriguing, but not necessarily real-time. Still, good suggestion. The homogeneous environment thing isn't really a concern for most businesses, but still allows you to use a language you know to do all of your tasks. I find Capistrano to be really confusing (what's with all the colons??), hence my desire to use PHP. Using passthru is really only a stop-gap measure - I've also tried using pure PHP SSH implementations to no avail. (By the way, Capistrano doesn't even use built-in Ruby functions to achieve it's goals - it uses the SSH gem.)
    – Cameron
    Jan 19, 2011 at 21:22
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You can make SSH connection with a PECL extension in PHP. http://php.net/manual/en/book.ssh2.php

$connection = ssh2_connect('server.com', 22);
ssh2_auth_password($connection, 'username', 'password');
$stream1 = ssh2_exec($connection, $command1);
$stream2 = ssh2_exec($connection, $command2);

You can also create a ssh interactive shell with ssh2_shell() if you need to more advanced things.

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  • Good idea, but I seem to remember abandoning that approach when I realized PECL was something you had to build into PHP. I suppose it's not a huge deal to require users to have it, but that could discourage them from using my framework. Good idea though, thanks!
    – Cameron
    Jan 18, 2011 at 23:41
  • Yes i try to avoid PECL as much as possible myself.
    – ztripez
    Jan 18, 2011 at 23:44
  • I guess it all depends on your definition of "as much as possible". If you really need it because no other solution exists, then that makes sense...
    – Cameron
    Jan 18, 2011 at 23:52

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