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TRAMP checks for the availability of standard programs in the
usual locations. Common tactics include successively trying
test -e
, /usr/bin/test -e
, and /bin/test
-e
. ls -d
is another approach. But these approaches do not
help with these new login patterns.
When TRAMP encounters two-factor logins or additional challenge questions, such as entering birth date or security code or passphrase, TRAMP needs a few more configuration steps to accommodate them.
The difference between a password prompt and a passphrase prompt is that the password for completing the login while the passphrase is for authorizing access to local authentication information, such as the ssh key.
There is no one configuration to accommodate all the variations in login security, especially not the exotic ones. However, TRAMP provides a few tweaks to address the most common ones.
tramp-shell-prompt-pattern
is for remote login shell prompt,
which may not be the same as the local login shell prompt,
shell-prompt-pattern
. Since most hosts use identical prompts,
TRAMP sets a similar default value for both prompts.
TRAMP uses tramp-password-prompt-regexp to distinguish between prompts for passwords and prompts for passphrases. By default, tramp-password-prompt-regexp handles the detection in English language environments. See a localization example below:
(setq tramp-password-prompt-regexp (concat "^.*" (regexp-opt '("passphrase" "Passphrase" ;; English "password" "Password" ;; Deutsch "passwort" "Passwort" ;; Français "mot de passe" "Mot de passe") t) ".*:\0? *"))
Similar localization may be necessary for handling wrong password prompts, for which TRAMP uses tramp-wrong-passwd-regexp.
tset
and other questionsTo suppress inappropriate prompts for terminal type, TRAMP
sets the TERM
to dumb
before the remote login process
begins via the variable tramp-terminal-type
. This will silence
common tset
related prompts.
TRAMP’s strategy for handling such prompts (commonly triggered from login scripts on remote hosts) is to set the environment variables so that no prompts interrupt the shell initialization process.
An alternative approach is to configure TRAMP with strings
that can identify such questions using
tramp-actions-before-shell
. Example:
(defconst my-tramp-prompt-regexp (concat (regexp-opt '("Enter the birth date of your mother:") t) "\\s-*") "Regular expression matching my login prompt question.") (defun my-tramp-action (proc vec) "Enter \"19000101\" in order to give a correct answer." (save-window-excursion (with-current-buffer (tramp-get-connection-buffer vec) (tramp-message vec 6 "\n%s" (buffer-string)) (tramp-send-string vec "19000101")))) (add-to-list 'tramp-actions-before-shell '(my-tramp-prompt-regexp my-tramp-action))
When a user name is the same as a variable name in a local file, such
as .profile, then TRAMP may send incorrect values for
environment variables. To avoid incorrect values, change the local
variable name to something different from the user name. For example,
if the user name is FRUMPLE
, then change the variable name to
FRUMPLE_DIR
.
When the remote host’s .profile is also used for shells other than Bourne shell, then some incompatible syntaxes for commands in .profile may trigger errors in Bourne shell on the host and may not complete client’s TRAMP connections.
One example of a Bourne shell incompatible syntax in .profile:
using export FOO=bar
instead of FOO=bar; export
FOO
. After remote login, TRAMP will trigger an error during
its execution of /bin/sh
on the remote host because Bourne
shell does not recognize the export command as entered in
.profile.
Likewise, (~
) character in paths will cause errors because
Bourne shell does not do (~
) character expansions.
One approach to avoiding these incompatibilities is to make all commands in ~/.shrc and ~/.profile Bourne shell compatible so TRAMP can complete connections to that remote. To accommodate using non-Bourne shells on that remote, use other shell-specific config files. For example, bash can use ~/.bash_profile and ignore .profile.
TRAMP redefines the remote shell prompt internally for robust parsing. This redefinition affects the looks of a prompt in an interactive remote shell through commands, such as M-x shell. Such prompts, however, can be reset to something more readable and recognizable using these TRAMP variables.
TRAMP sets the INSIDE_EMACS
variable in the startup
script file ~/.emacs_SHELLNAME.
SHELLNAME
is bash
or equivalent shell names. Change it by
setting the environment variable ESHELL
in the .emacs as
follows:
(setenv "ESHELL" "bash")
Then re-set the prompt string in ~/.emacs_SHELLNAME as follows:
# Reset the prompt for remote Tramp shells. if [ "${INSIDE_EMACS/*tramp*/tramp}" == "tramp" ] ; then PS1="[\u@\h \w]$ " fi
busybox
/ nc
TRAMP’s nc method uses the nc
command to
install and execute a listener as follows (see tramp-methods
):
# nc -l -p 42
The above command-line syntax has changed with busybox
versions. If nc
refuses the -p
parameter, then
overwrite as follows:
(add-to-list 'tramp-connection-properties `(,(regexp-quote "192.168.0.1") "remote-copy-args" (("-l") ("%r"))))
where ‘192.168.0.1’ is the remote host IP address (see Predefined connection information).
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