SSH2 Module for Python
Paramiko is a module for python 2.2 (or higher) that implements the
SSH2 protocol for secure (encrypted and authenticated) connections to
remote machines.
Unlike SSL (aka TLS), the SSH2 protocol does not require hierarchical
certificates signed by a powerful central authority. you may know SSH2
as the protocol that replaced telnet and rsh for secure access to
remote shells, but the protocol also includes the ability to open
arbitrary channels to remote services across the encrypted tunnel --
this is how sftp works, for example.
It is written entirely in python (no C or platform-dependent code) and
is released under the GNU LGPL (lesser GPL).
- Developed at devel:languages:python
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
-
8
derived packages
- Download package
-
Checkout Package
osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout openSUSE:Factory:Rebuild/python-paramiko && cd $_
- Create Badge
Refresh
Refresh
Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
paramiko-1.11.0.tar.gz | 0000842743 823 KB | |
python-paramiko.changes | 0000007285 7.11 KB | |
python-paramiko.spec | 0000002108 2.06 KB |
Revision 19 (latest revision is 64)
Stephan Kulow (coolo)
accepted
request 197221
from
Sascha Peilicke (saschpe)
(revision 19)
- update to 1.11.0: * #98: On Windows, when interacting with the PuTTY PAgeant, Paramiko now creates the shared memory map with explicit Security Attributes of the user, which is the same technique employed by the canonical PuTTY library to avoid permissions issues when Paramiko is running under a different UAC context than the PuTTY Ageant process. Thanks to Jason R. Coombs for the patch. * #100: Remove use of PyWin32 in `win_pageant` module. Module was already dependent on ctypes for constructing appropriate structures and had ctypes implementations of all functionality. Thanks to Jason R. Coombs for the patch. * #87: Ensure updates to `known_hosts` files account for any updates to said files after Paramiko initially read them. (Includes related fix to guard against duplicate entries during subsequent `known_hosts` loads.) Thanks to `@sunweaver` for the contribution. (forwarded request 197218 from dirkmueller)
Comments 0