refresh-auth now takes ~/.ssh/authorized_keys as an argument, and
it checks that it wrote it last time before rewriting it.
#!/usr/bin/env python
# WARNING
# This script completely destroys your ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
# file every time it is run
# WARNING
import sys
import os
import os.path
import ruleset
import subprocess
if len(sys.argv) != 3:
sys.stderr.write("refresh-auth: wrong number of arguments (%s)\n" % sys.argv)
sys.exit(-1)
akeyfile = sys.argv[1]
wrappercommand = sys.argv[2]
prefix='no-pty,no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding,command='
if os.path.exists(akeyfile):
f = open(akeyfile)
try:
for l in f:
if not l.startswith(prefix):
raise Exception("Safety check failed, delete %s to continue" % akeyfile)
finally:
f.close()
akeys = open(akeyfile + "_new", "w")
for root, dirs, files in os.walk("keys"):
for fn in files:
ffn = os.path.join(root, fn)
if not ruleset.goodpath(ffn):
# ignore any path that contains dodgy characters
continue
keyname = ffn[5:]
p = subprocess.Popen(("ssh-keygen", "-i", "-f", ffn),
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
newkey = p.communicate()[0]
if p.wait() == 0:
klines = [l.strip() for l in newkey.split("\n")]
else:
# Conversion failed, read it directly.
kf = open(ffn)
try:
klines = [l.strip() for l in kf]
finally:
kf.close()
for l in klines:
if len(l):
akeys.write('%s"%s %s" %s\n' % (prefix, wrappercommand, keyname, l))
akeys.close()
os.rename(akeyfile + "_new", akeyfile)