A simple interface to be able to implement an SFTP Server using Node.js. Based on excellent work by @mscdex - ssh2 and ssh2-streams. Without which none of this would be possible.
In all cases, this library will only ever perform a subset of what can be accomplished with ssh2. If there's something more advanced you need to do and this library won't support it, that one is probably the one to look at. And certainly pull requests would be welcome, too!
The easiest way to get the hang of this library is probably to look at the
server_example.js
to start with, until this documentation gets more fully
fleshed-out.
var SFTPServer=require('node-sftp-server');
var myserver=new SFTPServer(); // some params should go there, like keys?
This returns a new SFTPServer()
object, which is an EventEmitter.
.listen(portnumber)
Listens for an SFTP client to connect to the server on this port.
connect
- passes along a simple context object which has -
- username:
- password:
- method:
You can call .reject()
to reject the connection, or call .accept(callback)
to work with the new connection. The callback will be passed a Session object
as its parameter.
end
- emitted when the user disconnects from the server.
This object is passed to you when you call .accept(callback)
- your callback
should expect to be passed a session object as a parameter. The session object
is an EventEmitter as well.
.on("realpath",path,callback)
- the server wants to determine the 'real' path
for some user. For instance, if a user, when they log in, is immediately deposited
into /home/<username>/
- you could implement that here. Invoke the callback
with the calculated path - e.g. callback("/home/"+username)
. TODO - Error
management here!
.on("stat",path,statkind,statresponder)
- on any of STAT, LSTAT, or FSTAT
requests (the type will be passed in "statkind"). Return the status using
statresponder({mode: , uid:, gid: size: atime:, mtime: })
. Or use any of the
error methods in ##Error Callbacks below
.on("readdir",path,directory_emitter)
- on a directory listing attempt, the
directory_emitter will keep emitting dir
messages with a responder
as a
parameter, allowing you to respond with responder.file(filename)
to return
a file entry in the directory, or responder.end()
if the directory listing
is complete.
.on("readfile",path,writable_stream)
- the client is attempting to read a file
from the server - place or pipe the contents of the file into the writable_stream
.
.on("writefile",path,readable_stream)
- the client is attempting to write a
file to the server - the readable_stream
corresponds to the actual file. You
may .pipe()
that into a writable stream of your own, or use it directly.
.on("delete",path,callback)
- the client wishes to delete a file. Respond with
callback.ok()
or callback.fail()
or any of the other error types
Many of the session events pass some kind of 'responder' or 'callback' object as a parameter. Those typically will have several error conditions that you can use to refuse the request -
responder.fail()
- general failure?responder.nofile()
- no such file or directoryresponder.denied()
- access deniedresponder.bad_message()
- protocol error; bad message (unusual)responder.unsupported()
- operation not supportedresponder.ok()
- success