You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
ansible/library/authorized_key

224 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext

#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Ansible module to add authorized_keys for ssh logins.
(c) 2012, Brad Olson <brado@movedbylight.com>
This file is part of Ansible
Ansible is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Ansible is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Ansible. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
"""
DOCUMENTATION = '''
---
module: authorized_key
short_description: Adds or removes an SSH authorized key
description:
- Adds or removes an SSH authorized key for a user from a remote host.
version_added: "0.5"
options:
user:
description:
- Name of the user who should have access to the remote host
required: true
default: null
aliases: []
key:
description:
- the SSH public key, as a string
required: true
default: null
path:
description:
- Alternate path to the authorized_keys file
required: false
default: "/home/user/.ssh/authorized_keys"
version_added: "1.2"
manage_dir:
description:
- Whether this module should manage the directory of the authorized_keys file
required: false
choices: [ "yes", "no" ]
default: "yes"
version_added: "1.2"
state:
description:
- whether the given key should or should not be in the file
required: false
choices: [ "present", "absent" ]
default: "present"
description: "Advanced usage with an alternate AuthorizedKeysFile configuration"
author: Brad Olson
'''
EXAMPLES = '''
# Example using key data from a local file on the management machine
authorized_key: user=charlie key='$FILE(/home/charlie/.ssh/id_rsa.pub)
# Using alternate directory locations:
authorized_key: user=charlie key='$FILE(/home/charlie/.ssh/id_rsa.pub)' sshdir='/etc/ssh/authorized_keys/charlie' manage_dir=no
'''
# Makes sure the public key line is present or absent in the user's .ssh/authorized_keys.
#
# Arguments
# =========
# user = username
# key = line to add to authorized_keys for user
# path = path to the user's authorized_keys file (default: ~/.ssh/authorized_keys)
# manage_dir = whether to create, and control ownership of the directory (default: true)
# state = absent|present (default: present)
#
# see example in examples/playbooks
import sys
import os
import pwd
import os.path
import tempfile
import shutil
def keyfile(module, user, write=False, path=None, manage_dir=True):
"""
Calculate name of authorized keys file, optionally creating the
directories and file, properly setting permissions.
:param str user: name of user in passwd file
:param bool write: if True, write changes to authorized_keys file (creating directories if needed)
:param str path: if not None, use provided path rather than default of '~user/.ssh/authorized_keys'
:param bool manage_dir: if True, create and set ownership of the parent dir of the authorized_keys file
:return: full path string to authorized_keys for user
"""
try:
user_entry = pwd.getpwnam(user)
except KeyError, e:
module.fail_json(msg="Failed to lookup user %s: %s" % (user, str(e)))
if path is None:
homedir = user_entry.pw_dir
sshdir = os.path.join(homedir, ".ssh")
keysfile = os.path.join(sshdir, "authorized_keys")
else:
sshdir = os.path.dirname(path)
keysfile = path
if not write:
return keysfile
uid = user_entry.pw_uid
gid = user_entry.pw_gid
if manage_dir in BOOLEANS_TRUE:
if not os.path.exists(sshdir):
os.mkdir(sshdir, 0700)
if module.selinux_enabled():
module.set_default_selinux_context(sshdir, False)
os.chown(sshdir, uid, gid)
os.chmod(sshdir, 0700)
if not os.path.exists(keysfile):
basedir = os.path.dirname(keysfile)
if not os.path.exists(basedir):
os.makedirs(basedir)
try:
f = open(keysfile, "w") #touches file so we can set ownership and perms
finally:
f.close()
if module.selinux_enabled():
module.set_default_selinux_context(keysfile, False)
os.chown(keysfile, uid, gid)
os.chmod(keysfile, 0600)
return keysfile
def readkeys(filename):
if not os.path.isfile(filename):
return []
f = open(filename)
keys = [line.rstrip() for line in f.readlines()]
f.close()
return keys
def writekeys(module, filename, keys):
fd, tmp_path = tempfile.mkstemp('', 'tmp', os.path.dirname(filename))
f = open(tmp_path,"w")
try:
f.writelines( (key + "\n" for key in keys) )
except IOError, e:
module.fail_json(msg="Failed to write to file %s: %s" % (tmp_path, str(e)))
f.close()
module.atomic_replace(tmp_path, filename)
def enforce_state(module, params):
"""
Add or remove key.
"""
user = params["user"]
key = params["key"]
path = params.get("path", None)
manage_dir = params.get("manage_dir", True)
state = params.get("state", "present")
key = key.split('\n')
# check current state -- just get the filename, don't create file
write = False
params["keyfile"] = keyfile(module, user, write, path, manage_dir)
keys = readkeys(params["keyfile"])
# Check our new keys, if any of them exist we'll continue.
for new_key in key:
present = new_key in keys
# handle idempotent state=present
if state=="present":
if present:
continue
keys.append(new_key)
write = True
writekeys(module, keyfile(module, user, write, path, manage_dir), keys)
params['changed'] = True
elif state=="absent":
if not present:
continue
keys.remove(new_key)
write = True
writekeys(module, keyfile(module, user, write, path, manage_dir), keys)
params['changed'] = True
return params
def main():
module = AnsibleModule(
argument_spec = dict(
user = dict(required=True, type='str'),
key = dict(required=True, type='str'),
path = dict(required=False, type='str'),
manage_dir = dict(required=False, type='bool'),
state = dict(default='present', choices=['absent','present'])
)
)
results = enforce_state(module, module.params)
module.exit_json(**results)
# this is magic, see lib/ansible/module_common.py
#<<INCLUDE_ANSIBLE_MODULE_COMMON>>
main()