http-ssh-agent
Node.js http agent that allows you to send http requests over ssh.
npm install http-ssh-agent
Usage
Start a http server on a server that you have ssh access to. Since we will be accessing the server using ssh the server can bind to a port that is not open externally.
On your local machine you just create the agent with some ssh options and pass it to a http module.
Using node core
var http = require('http')
var agent = require('http-ssh-agent')
// per default the agent will authenticate using ~/.ssh/id_rsa as your private key
var ssh = agent('username@example.com')
http.get({
port: 8080, // assuming the remote server is running on port 8080
host: '127.0.0.1', // the host is resolved via ssh so 127.0.0.1 -> example.com
agent: ssh // simply pass the agent
}, function(response) {
response.pipe(process.stdout)
})
Using request
var request = require('request')
request('http://127.0.0.1:8080', {agent: ssh}).pipe(process.stdout)
SSH options
Pass additional ssh options as the second argument. See ssh2 connection options for a full list of available options.
var ssh = agent('username@example.com', {
privateKey: 'path-to-private-key', // can also be a buffer,
password: 'ssh-password' // specify a password instead of a key
})
Host verification
The agent will emit a verify
event when it wants you to verify a host fingerprint.
You should validate that the fingerprint is correct and return an error if not.
ssh.on('verify', function(fingerprint, callback) {
console.log('Server fingerprint is', fingerprint)
callback() // pass an error to indicate a bad fingerprint
})
If you do not want to do host validation simply do not listen for the verify
event.
You can also choose to pass the hash to challange against as the verify
option.
Running the tests
To run the tests you need to have a local ssh server running (on OSX enable Remote login
) and have your own public key
whitelisted in .ssh/authorized_keys
.
Then simply run
npm test
License
MIT