mirror of
https://github.com/MidnightCommander/mc
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179 lines
5.3 KiB
Fish
179 lines
5.3 KiB
Fish
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FIles transferred over SHell protocol (V 0.0.2)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This protocol was designed for transferring files over a remote shell
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connection (rsh and compatibles). It can be as well used for transfers over
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rsh, and there may be other uses.
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Client sends requests of following form:
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#FISH_COMMAND
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equivalent shell commands,
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which may be multiline
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Only fish commands are defined here, shell equivalents are for your
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information only and will probably vary from implementation to
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implementation. Fish commands always have priority: server is
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expected to execute fish command if it understands it. If it does not,
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however, it can try the luck and execute shell command.
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Server's reply is multiline, but alwyas ends with
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### 000<optional text>
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line. ### is prefix to mark this line, 000 is return code. Return
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codes are superset to those used in ftp.
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There are few new exit codes defined:
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000 don't know; if there were no previous lines, this marks COMPLETE
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success, if they were, it marks failure.
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001 don't know; if there were no previous lines, this marks
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PRELIMinary success, if they were, it marks failure
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Connecting
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~~~~~~~~~~
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Client uses "echo FISH:;/bin/sh" as command executed on remote
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machine. This should make it possible for server to distinguish FISH
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connections from normal rsh/ssh.
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Commands
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~~~~~~~~
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#FISH
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echo; start_fish_server; echo '### 200'
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This command is sent at the begining. It marks that client wishes to
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talk via FISH protocol. #VER command must follow. If server
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understands FISH protocol, it has option to put FISH server somewhere
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on system path and name it start_fish_server.
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#VER 0.0.2 <feature1> <feature2> <...>
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echo '### 000'
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This command is the second one. It sends client version and extensions
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to the server. Server should reply with protocol version to be used,
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and list of extensions accepted.
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VER 0.0.0 <feature2>
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### 200
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#PWD
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pwd; echo '### 200'
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Server should reply with current directory (in form /abc/def/ghi)
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followed by line indicating success.
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#LIST /directory
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ls -lLa $1 | grep '^[^cbt]' | ( while read p x u g s m d y n; do echo "P$p $u.$g
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S$s
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d$m $d $y
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:$n
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"; done )
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ls -lLa $1 | grep '^[cb]' | ( while read p x u g a i m d y n; do echo "P$p $u.$g
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E$a$i
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dD$m $d $y
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:$n
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"; done )
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echo '### 200'
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This allows client to list directory or get status information about
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single file. Output is in following form (any line except :<filename>
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may be ommited):
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P<unix permissions> <owner>.<group>
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S<size>
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d<3-letters month name> <day> <year or HH:MM>
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D<year> <month> <day> <hour> <minute> <second>[.1234]
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E<major-of-device>,<minor>
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:<filename>
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L<filename symlink points to>
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<blank line to separate items>
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Unix permissions are of form X--------- where X is type of
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file. Currently, '-' means regular file, 'd' means directory, 'c', 'b'
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means character and block device, 'l' means symbolic link, 'p' means
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FIFO and 's' means socket.
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'd' has three fields: month (one of strings Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
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Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec), day of month, and third is either single
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number indicating year, or HH:MM field (assume current year in such
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case). As you've probably noticed, this is pretty broken; it is for
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compatibility with ls listing.
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#RETR /some/name
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ls -l /some/name | ( read a b c d x e; echo $x ); echo '### 100'; cat /some/name; echo '### 200'
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Server sends line with filesize on it, followed by line with ### 100
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indicating partial success, then it sends binary data (exactly
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filesize bytes) and follows them with (with no preceeding newline) ###
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200.
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Note that there's no way to abort running RETR command - except
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closing the connection.
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#STOR <size> /file/name
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> /file/name; echo '### 001'; ( dd bs=4096 count=<size/4096>; dd bs=<size%4096> count=1 ) 2>/dev/null | ( cat > %s; cat > /dev/null ); echo '### 200'
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This command is for storing /file/name, which is exactly size bytes
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big. You probably think I went crazy. Well, I did not: that strange
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cat > /dev/null has purpose to discard any extra data which was not
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written to disk (due to for example out of space condition).
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[Why? Imagine uploading file with "rm -rf /" line in it.]
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#CWD /somewhere
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cd /somewhere; echo '### 000'
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It is specified here, but I'm not sure how wise idea is to use this
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one: it breaks stateless-ness of the protocol.
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Following commands should be rather self-explanatory:
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#CHMOD 1234 file
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chmod 1234 file; echo '### 000'
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#DELE /some/path
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rm -f /some/path; echo '### 000'
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#MKD /some/path
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mkdir /some/path; echo '### 000'
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#RMD /some/path
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rmdir /some/path; echo '### 000'
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#RENAME /path/a /path/b
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mv /path/a /path/b; echo '### 000'
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#LINK /path/a /path/b
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ln /path/a /path/b; echo '### 000'
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#SYMLINK /path/a /path/b
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ln -s /path/a /path/b; echo '### 000'
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#CHOWN user /file/name
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chown user /file/name; echo '### 000'
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#CHGRP group /file/name
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chgrp group /file/name; echo '### 000'
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#READ <offset> <size> /path/and/filename
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cat /path/and/filename | ( dd bs=4096 count=<offset/4096> > /dev/null;
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dd bs=<offset%4096> count=1 > /dev/null;
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dd bs=4096 count=<offset/4096>;
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dd bs=<offset%4096> count=1; )
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Returns ### 200 on successfull exit, ### 291 on successfull exit when
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reading ended at eof, ### 292 on successfull exit when reading did not
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end at eof.
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#WRITE <offset> <size> /path/and/filename
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Hmm, shall we define these ones if we know our client is not going to
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use them?
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That's all, folks!
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pavel@ucw.cz
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