#!/usr/bin/env perl
# This is a "local shell" command that works like a remote shell but only for
# the local host. See the usage message for more details.
use strict;
use warnings;
use Getopt::Long;
use English '-no_match_vars';
&Getopt::Long::Configure('bundling');
&Getopt::Long::Configure('require_order');
GetOptions(
'l=s' => \( my $login_name ),
'1|2|4|6|A|a|C|f|g|k|M|N|n|q|s|T|t|V|v|X|x|Y' => sub { }, # Ignore
'b|c|D|e|F|i|L|m|O|o|p|R|S|w=s' => sub { }, # Ignore
'no-cd' => \( my $no_chdir ),
'sudo' => \( my $use_sudo ),
) or &usage;
&usage unless @ARGV > 1;
my $host = shift;
if ($host =~ s/^([^@]+)\@//) {
$login_name = $1;
}
if ($host eq 'lh') {
$no_chdir = 1;
} elsif ($host ne 'localhost') {
die "lsh: unable to connect to host $host\n";
}
my ($home_dir, @cmd);
if ($login_name) {
my ($uid, $gid);
if ($login_name =~ /\D/) {
$uid = getpwnam($login_name);
die "Unknown user: $login_name\n" unless defined $uid;
} else {
$uid = $login_name;
}
($login_name, $gid, $home_dir) = (getpwuid($uid))[0,3,7];
if ($use_sudo) {
unshift @ARGV, "cd '$home_dir' &&" unless $no_chdir;
unshift @cmd, qw( sudo -H -u ), $login_name;
$no_chdir = 1;
} else {
my $groups = "$gid $gid";
while (my ($grgid, $grmembers) = (getgrent)[2,3]) {
if ($grgid != $gid && $grmembers =~ /(^|\s)\Q$login_name\E(\s|$)/o) {
$groups .= " $grgid";
}
}
my ($ruid, $euid) = ($UID, $EUID);
$GID = $EGID = $groups;
$UID = $EUID = $uid;
die "Cannot set ruid: $! (use --sudo?)\n" if $UID == $ruid && $ruid != $uid;
die "Cannot set euid: $! (use --sudo?)\n" if $EUID == $euid && $euid != $uid;
$ENV{USER} = $ENV{USERNAME} = $login_name;
$ENV{HOME} = $home_dir;
}
} else {
$home_dir = (getpwuid($UID))[7];
}
unless ($no_chdir) {
chdir $home_dir or die "Unable to chdir to $home_dir: $!\n";
}
push @cmd, '/bin/sh', '-c', "@ARGV";
exec @cmd;
die "Failed to exec: $!\n";
sub usage
{
die <<EOT;
Usage: lsh [-l USER] [--sudo] [--no-cd] localhost COMMAND [...]
This is a "local shell" command that works like a remote shell but only for the
local host. This is useful for rsync testing or for running a local copy where
the sender and the receiver need to use different options (e.g. --fake-super).
If the -l option is used, we try to become the USER, either directly (when
root) or by using "sudo -H -u USER" (requires --sudo option).
Note that if you pass hostname "lh" instead of "localhost" that the --no-cd
option is implied. The default is to "cd \$HOME" to simulate ssh behavior.
EOT
}
FreeBSD-CVSweb <freebsd-cvsweb@FreeBSD.org>