machines. unlike SSL (aka TLS), SSH2 protocol does not require hierarchical
certificates signed by a powerful central authority. you may know SSH2 as
2023-12-18 22:16:05 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: update to 3.4.0.
- :release:`3.4.0 <2023-12-18>`
- :feature:`-` `Transport` grew a new ``packetizer_class`` kwarg for overriding
the packet-handler class used internally. Mostly for testing, but advanced
users may find this useful when doing deep hacks.
- :bug:`-` Address `CVE 2023-48795<https://terrapin-attack.com/>`_ (aka the
"Terrapin Attack", a vulnerability found in the SSH protocol re: \
treatment of
packet sequence numbers) as follows:
- The vulnerability only impacts encrypt-then-MAC digest algorithms in
tandem with CBC ciphers, and ChaCha20-poly1305; of these, Paramiko
currently only implements ``hmac-sha2-(256|512)-etm`` in tandem with
``AES-CBC``. If you are unable to upgrade to Paramiko versions containing
the below fixes right away, you may instead use the
``disabled_algorithms`` connection option to disable the ETM MACs and/or
the CBC ciphers (this option is present in Paramiko >=2.6).
- As the fix for the vulnerability requires both ends of the connection to
cooperate, the below changes will only take effect when the remote end is
OpenSSH >= 9.6 (or equivalent, such as Paramiko in server mode, as of
this patch version) and configured to use the new "strict kex" mode.
Paramiko will always attempt to use "strict kex" mode if offered \
by the
server, unless you override this by specifying ``strict_kex=False`` in
`Transport.__init__`.
- Paramiko will now raise an `SSHException` subclass (`MessageOrderError`)
when protocol messages are received in unexpected order. This includes
situations like receiving ``MSG_DEBUG`` or ``MSG_IGNORE`` during initial
key exchange, which are no longer allowed during strict mode.
- Key (re)negotiation -- i.e. ``MSG_NEWKEYS``, whenever it is encountered
-- now resets packet sequence numbers. (This should be invisible to users
during normal operation, only causing exceptions if the exploit is
encountered, which will usually result in, again, `MessageOrderError`.)
- Sequence number rollover will now raise `SSHException` if it occurs
during initial key exchange (regardless of strict mode status).
Thanks to Fabian Bäumer, Marcus Brinkmann, and Jörg Schwenk for submitting
details on the CVE prior to release.
- :bug:`-` Tweak ``ext-info-(c|s)`` detection during KEXINIT protocol phase;
the original implementation made assumptions based on an OpenSSH
implementation detail.
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2023-12-18 17:25:43 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2) |
Log message:
py-paramiko: convert to wheel.mk
Update dependencies.
Bump PKGREVISION.
|
2023-07-31 18:16:48 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: updated to 3.3.1
3.3.1 2023-07-28
[Bug]: Cleaned up some very old root level files, mostly just to exercise some \
of our doc build and release machinery. This changelog entry intentionally left \
blank! nothing-to-see-here-move-along.gif
3.3.0 2023-07-28
[Feature] Add an explicit max_concurrent_prefetch_requests argument to \
paramiko.client.SSHClient.get and paramiko.client.SSHClient.getfo, allowing \
users to limit the number of concurrent requests used during prefetch. Patch by \
@kschoelhorn, with a test by @bwinston-sdp.
[Feature] Add support and tests for Match final … (frequently used in \
ProxyJump configurations to exclude the jump host) to our SSH config parser. \
Patch by @commonism.
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2023-07-18 17:54:43 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (3) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: updated to 3.2.0
3.2.0 2023-05-25
[Feature]: PKey grew a new .fingerprint property which emits a fingerprint \
string matching the SHA256+Base64 values printed by various OpenSSH tooling (eg \
ssh-add -l, ssh -v). This is intended to help troubleshoot Paramiko-vs-OpenSSH \
behavior and will eventually replace the venerable get_fingerprint method.
[Feature]: PKey grew a new .algorithm_name property which displays the key \
algorithm; this is typically derived from the value of get_name. For example, \
ED25519 keys have a get_name of ssh-ed25519 (the SSH protocol key type field \
value), and now have a algorithm_name of ED25519.
[Feature]: PKey now offers convenience “meta-constructors”, static methods \
that simplify the process of instantiating the correct subclass for a given key \
input.
For example, PKey.from_path can load a file path without knowing a priori what \
type of key it is (thanks to some handy methods within our cryptography \
dependency). Going forwards, we expect this to be the primary method of loading \
keys by user code that runs on “human time” (i.e. where some minor \
efficiencies are worth the convenience).
In addition, PKey.from_type_string now exists, and is being used in some \
internals to load ssh-agent keys.
As part of these changes, PKey and friends grew an identifiers classmethod; this \
is inspired by the supported_key_format_identifiers classmethod (which now \
refers to the new method.) This also includes adding a .name attribute to most \
key classes (which will eventually replace .get_name().
[Feature]: Enhanced AgentKey with new attributes, such as:
Added a comment attribute (and constructor argument); Agent.get_keys() now uses \
this kwarg to store any comment field sent over by the agent. The original \
version of the agent feature inexplicably did not store the comment anywhere.
Agent-derived keys now attempt to instantiate a copy of the appropriate key \
class for access to other algorithm-specific members (eg key size). This is \
available as the .inner_key attribute.
Note
This functionality is now in use in Fabric’s new --list-agent-keys feature, as \
well as in Paramiko’s debug logging.
[Feature] Users of SSHClient can now configure the authentication logic Paramiko \
uses when connecting to servers; this functionality is intended for advanced \
users and higher-level libraries such as Fabric. See auth_strategy for details.
Fabric’s co-temporal release includes a proof-of-concept use of this feature, \
implementing an auth flow much closer to that of the OpenSSH client (versus \
Paramiko’s legacy behavior). It is strongly recommended that if this interests \
you, investigate replacing any direct use of SSHClient with Fabric’s \
Connection.
Warning
This feature is EXPERIMENTAL; please see its docs for details.
[Feature]: Implement _fields() on AgentKey so that it may be compared (via ==) \
with other PKey instances.
[Bug]: AgentKey had a dangling Python 3 incompatible __str__ method returning \
bytes. This method has been removed, allowing the superclass’ (PKey) method to \
run instead.
[Bug] Since its inception, Paramiko has (for reasons lost to time) implemented \
authentication as a side effect of handling affirmative replies to \
MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST protocol messages. What this means is Paramiko makes one \
such request before every MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST, i.e. every auth attempt.
OpenSSH doesn’t care if clients send multiple service requests, but other \
server implementations are often stricter in what they accept after an initial \
service request (due to the RFCs not being clear). This can result in odd \
behavior when a user doesn’t authenticate successfully on the very first try \
(for example, when the right key for a target host is the third in one’s \
ssh-agent).
This version of Paramiko now contains an opt-in Transport subclass, \
ServiceRequestingTransport, which more-correctly implements service request \
handling in the Transport, and uses an auth-handler subclass internally which \
has been similarly adapted. Users wanting to try this new experimental code path \
may hand this class to SSHClient.connect as its transport_factory kwarg.
Warning
This feature is EXPERIMENTAL and its code may be subject to change.
In addition:
minor backwards incompatible changes exist in the new code paths, most notably \
the removal of the (inconsistently applied and rarely used) event arguments to \
the auth_xxx methods.
GSSAPI support has only been partially implemented, and is untested.
Note
Some minor backwards-compatible changes were made to the existing Transport and \
AuthHandler classes to facilitate the new code. For example, \
Transport._handler_table and AuthHandler._client_handler_table are now \
properties instead of raw attributes.
[Bug] The server-sig-algs and RSA-SHA2 features added around Paramiko 2.9 or so, \
had the annoying side effect of not working with servers that don’t support \
either of those feature sets, requiring use of disabled_algorithms to forcibly \
disable the SHA2 algorithms on Paramiko’s end.
The experimental ServiceRequestingTransport (noted in its own entry in this \
changelog) includes a fix for this issue, specifically by falling back to the \
same algorithm as the in-use pubkey if it’s in the algorithm list (leaving the \
“first algorithm in said list” as an absolute final fallback).
[Bug]: Fixed a very sneaky bug found at the apparently rarely-traveled \
intersection of RSA-SHA2 keys, certificates, SSH agents, and \
stricter-than-OpenSSH server targets. This manifested as yet another “well, if \
we turn off SHA2 at one end or another, everything works again” problem, for \
example with version 12 of the Teleport server endpoint.
This has been fixed; Paramiko tweaked multiple aspects of how it requests agent \
signatures, and the agent appears to do the right thing now.
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2022-11-14 10:28:16 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: updated to 2.12.0
2.12.0 2022-11-04
[Feature] Add a transport_factory kwarg to SSHClient.connect for advanced users \
to gain more control over early Transport setup and manipulation. Thanks to Noah \
Pederson for the patch.
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2022-10-19 15:56:34 by Nia Alarie | Files touched by this commit (26) |
Log message:
fighting a losing battle against py-cryptography rustification, part 2
Switch users to versioned_dependencies.mk.
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2022-07-13 22:06:24 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: updated to 2.11.0
2.11.0 2022-05-16
[Feature]: Add SSH config token expansion (eg %h, %p) when parsing ProxyJump \
directives. Patch courtesy of Bruno Inec.
[Support]: Apply unittest skipIf to tests currently using SHA1 in their critical \
path, to avoid failures on systems starting to disable SHA1 outright in their \
crypto backends (eg RHEL 9). Report & patch via Paul Howarth.
[Support]: Update camelCase method calls against the threading module to be \
snake_case; this and related tweaks should fix some deprecation warnings under \
Python 3.10. Thanks to Karthikeyan Singaravelan for the report, \
@Narendra-Neerukonda for the patch, and to Thomas Grainger and Jun Omae for \
patch workshopping.
[Support]: Recent versions of Cryptography have deprecated Blowfish algorithm \
support; in lieu of an easy method for users to remove it from the list of \
algorithms Paramiko tries to import and use, we’ve decided to remove it from \
our “preferred algorithms” list. This will both discourage use of a weak \
algorithm, and avoid warnings. Credit for report/patch goes to Mike Roest.
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2022-05-05 19:59:35 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (3) | |
Log message:
py-paramiko: updated to 2.10.4
2.10.4 2022-04-25
[Bug]: Servers offering certificate variants of hostkey algorithms (eg \
ssh-rsa-cert-v01@openssh.com) could not have their host keys verified by \
Paramiko clients, as it only ever considered non-cert key types for that part of \
connection handshaking. This has been fixed.
[Bug]: PKey instances’ __eq__ did not have the usual safety guard in place to \
ensure they were being compared to another PKey object, causing occasional \
spurious BadHostKeyException (among other things). This has been fixed. Thanks \
to Shengdun Hua for the original report/patch and to Christopher Papke for the \
final version of the fix.
[Support]: Update camelCase method calls against the threading module to be \
snake_case; this and related tweaks should fix some deprecation warnings under \
Python 3.10. Thanks to Karthikeyan Singaravelan for the report, \
@Narendra-Neerukonda for the patch, and to Thomas Grainger and Jun Omae for \
patch workshopping.
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