module Net module SSH # A general exception class, to act as the ancestor of all other Net::SSH # exception classes. class Exception < ::RuntimeError; end # This exception is raised when authentication fails (whether it be # public key authentication, password authentication, or whatever). class AuthenticationFailed < Net::SSH::Exception; end # This exception is raised when a connection attempt times out. class ConnectionTimeout < Net::SSH::Exception; end # This exception is raised when the remote host has disconnected # unexpectedly. class Disconnect < Net::SSH::Exception; end # This exception is raised when the remote host has disconnected/ # timeouted unexpectedly. class Timeout < Disconnect; end # This exception is primarily used internally, but if you have a channel # request handler (see Net::SSH::Connection::Channel#on_request) that you # want to fail in such a way that the server knows it failed, you can # raise this exception in the handler and Net::SSH will translate that into # a "channel failure" message. class ChannelRequestFailed < Net::SSH::Exception; end # This is exception is primarily used internally, but if you have a channel # open handler (see Net::SSH::Connection::Session#on_open_channel) and you # want to fail in such a way that the server knows it failed, you can # raise this exception in the handler and Net::SSH will translate that into # a "channel open failed" message. class ChannelOpenFailed < Net::SSH::Exception attr_reader :code, :reason def initialize(code, reason) @code, @reason = code, reason super "#{reason} (#{code})" end end # Base class for host key exceptions. When rescuing this exception, you can # inspect the key fingerprint and, if you want to proceed anyway, simply call # the remember_host! method on the exception, and then retry. class HostKeyError < Net::SSH::Exception # the callback to use when #remember_host! is called attr_writer :callback # :nodoc: # situation-specific data describing the host (see #host, #port, etc.) attr_writer :data # :nodoc: # An accessor for getting at the data that was used to look up the host # (see also #fingerprint, #host, #port, #ip, and #key). def [](key) @data && @data[key] end # Returns the fingerprint of the key for the host, which either was not # found or did not match. def fingerprint @data && @data[:fingerprint] end # Returns the host name for the remote host, as reported by the socket. def host @data && @data[:peer] && @data[:peer][:host] end # Returns the port number for the remote host, as reported by the socket. def port @data && @data[:peer] && @data[:peer][:port] end # Returns the IP address of the remote host, as reported by the socket. def ip @data && @data[:peer] && @data[:peer][:ip] end # Returns the key itself, as reported by the remote host. def key @data && @data[:key] end # Tell Net::SSH to record this host and key in the known hosts file, so # that subsequent connections will remember them. def remember_host! @callback.call end end # Raised when the cached key for a particular host does not match the # key given by the host, which can be indicative of a man-in-the-middle # attack. When rescuing this exception, you can inspect the key fingerprint # and, if you want to proceed anyway, simply call the remember_host! # method on the exception, and then retry. class HostKeyMismatch < HostKeyError; end # Raised when there is no cached key for a particular host, which probably # means that the host has simply not been seen before. # When rescuing this exception, you can inspect the key fingerprint and, if # you want to proceed anyway, simply call the remember_host! method on the # exception, and then retry. class HostKeyUnknown < HostKeyError; end end end