Welcome to pysftp’s documentation!

A simple interface to sftp. based on zeth’s ssh.py

Example

import pysftp

with pysftp.Connection('hostname', username='me', password='secret') as sftp:
    with sftp.cd('public')              # temporarily chdir to public
        sftp.put('/my/local/filename')  # upload file to public/ on remote

    sftp.get_r('myfiles', '/backup')    # recursively copy myfiles/ to local

Supports

Tested on Python 2.7, 3.2, 3.3

Build Status

Believed to support Python 3.4

Additional Information

requirements

paramiko >= 1.7.7

Contents:

Cook Book

While in many ways, pysftp is just a thin wrapper over paramiko’s SFTPClient, there are a number of ways that we make it more productive and easier to accomplish common, higher-level tasks. The following snippets show where we add value to this great module. See the API docs for a complete listing.

pysftp.Connection()

The Connection object is the base of pysftp. It supports connections via username and password.

import pysftp
sftp = pysftp.Connection('hostname', username='me', password='secret')
#
# ... do sftp operations
#
sftp.close()    # close your connection to hostname

The Connection object is also context aware so you can use it with a with statement.

import pysftp
with pysftp.Connection('hostname', username='me', password='secret') as sftp:
    #
    # ... do sftp operations
    #
# connection closed automatically at the end of the with-block

Want to use an RSA or DSA key pair, that is simple too.

import pysftp
with pysftp.Connection('hostname', username='me', private_key='/path/to/keyfile') as sftp:
    #
    # ... do sftp operations
    #

If you key is password protected, just add private_key_pass to the argument list.

How about a paramiko.AgentKey ? no problem, just set the private_key equal to it.

import pysftp
with pysftp.Connection('hostname', username='me', private_key=my_agentkey) as sftp:
    #
    # ... do sftp operations
    #

The connection object also allows you to use an IP Address for the host and you can set the port which defaults to 22, as well.

Here is a common scenario, you have your connection information stored in a persistence mechanism, like yamjam and when you access it, it is returned in dictionary form. {'host':'myhost', username:'me', ...} Just send the dict into the connection object like so:

import pysftp
cinfo = {'host':'hostname', 'username':'me', 'password':'secret', 'port':2222}
with pysftp.Connection(**cinfo) as sftp:
    #
    # ... do sftp operations
    #

pysftp.Connection.get()

In addition to the normal paramiko call, you can optionally set the preserve_mtime parameter to True and the operation will make sure that the modification times on the local copy match those on the server.

# ...
sftp.get('myfile', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.get_d()

This pysftp method is an abstraction above get() that allows you to copy all the files in a remote directory to a local path.

# copy all files under public to a local path, preserving modification time
sftp.get_d('public', 'local-backup', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.get_r()

This pysftp method is an abstraction that recursively copies files and directories from the remote to a local path.

# copy all files AND directories under public to a local path
sftp.get_r('public', 'local-backup', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.put()

In addition to the normal paramiko call, you can optionally set the preserve_mtime parameter to True and the operation will make sure that the modification times on the server copy match those on the local.

# copy myfile, to the current working directory on the server, preserving modification time
sftp.put('myfile', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.put_d()

The opposite of get_d(), put_d allows you to copy the contents of a local directory to a remote one via SFTP.

# copy files from images, to remote static/images directory, preserving modification time
sftp.put_d('images', 'static/images', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.put_r()

This method copies all files and directories from a local path to a remote path. It creates directories, and happily succeeds even if the target directories already exist.

# recursively copy files and directories from local static, to remote static,
# preserving modification times on the files
sftp.put_r('static', 'static', preserve_mtime=True)

pysftp.Connection.cd()

This method is a with-context capable version of chdir(). Restoring the original directory when the with statement goes out of scope. It can be called with a remote directory to temporarily change to

with sftp.cd('static'):     # now in ./static
    sftp.chdir('here')      # now in ./static/here
    sftp.chdir('there')     # now in ./static/here/there
# now back to the original current working directory

Or it can be called without a remote directory to just act as a bookmark you want to return to later.

with sftp.cd():             # still in .
    sftp.chdir('static')    # now in ./static
    sftp.chdir('here')      # now in ./static/here
# now back to the original current working directory

pysftp.Connection.chmod()

chmod() is a wrapper around paramiko’s except for the fact it will takes an integer representation of the octal mode. No leading 0 or 0o wanted. We know it’s suppose to be an octal, but who really remembers that?

This way it is just like a command line chmod 644 readme.txt

user group other
rwx  rwx   rwx
421  421   421

user  - read/write = 4+2 = 6
group - read       = 4   = 4
other - read       = 4   = 4
sftp.chmod('readme.txt', 644)

pysftp.st_mode_to_int()

converts an octal mode result back to an integer representation. The .st_mode information returned in SFTPAttribute object .stat(fname).st_mode contains extra things you probably don’t care about, in a form that has been converted from octal to int so you won’t recognize it at first. This function clips the extra bits and hands you the file mode bits in a way you’ll recognize.

>>> attr = sftp.stat('readme.txt')
>>> attr.st_mode
33188
>>> pysftp.st_mode_to_int(attr.st_mode)
644

pysftp.Connection.chown()

pysftp’s method allows you to specify just, gid or the uid or both. If either gid or uid is None (default), then pysftp does a stat to get the current ids and uses that to fill in the missing parameter because the underlying paramiko method requires that you explicitly set both.

NOTE uid and gid are integers and relative to each system. Just because you are uid 102 on your local system, a uid of 102 on the remote system most likely won’t be your login. You will need to do some homework to make sure that you are setting these values as you intended.

pysftp.Connection.cwd()

cwd() is a synonym for chdir(). Its purpose is to make transposing hand typed commands at an sftp command line into those used by pysftp, easier to do.

...
sftp.cwd('public')  # is equivalent to sftp.chdir('public')

pysftp.Connection.pwd

Returns the current working directory. It returns the result of .normalize(‘.’) but makes your code and intention easier to read. Paramiko has a method, getcwd(), that we expose, but that method returns None if chdir() has not been called prior.

...
>>> print(sftp.getcwd())
None
>>> sftp.pwd
u'/home/test'

pysftp.Connection.listdir()

The difference here, is that pysftp’s version returns a sorted list instead of paramiko’s arbitrary order. Sorted by filename.

...
>>> sftp.listdir()
[u'pub', u'readme.sym', u'readme.txt']

pysftp.Connection.listdir_attr()

The difference here, is that pysftp’s version returns a sorted list instead of paramiko’s arbitrary order. Sorted by SFTPAttribute.filename.

...
>>> for attr in sftp.listdir_attr():
...     print attr.filename, attr
...
pub dr-xrwxr-x   1 501      502             5 19 May 23:22 pub
readme.sym lrwxr-xr-x   1 501      502            10 21 May 23:29 readme.sym
readme.txt -r--r--r--   1 501      502          8192 26 May 23:32 readme.txt

pysftp.Connection.makedirs()

A common scenario where you need to create all directories in a path as needed, setting their mode, if created. Takes a mode argument, just like chmod(), that is an integer representation of the mode you want.

...
sftp.makdirs('pub/show/off')  # will happily make all non-existing directories

pysftp.Connection.mkdir()

Just like chmod(), the mode is an integer representation of the octal number to use. Just like the unix cmd, chmod you use 744 not 0744 or 0o744.

...
sftp.mkdir('show', mode=644)  # user r/w, group and other read-only

pysftp.Connection.isdir()

Does all the busy work of stat’ing and dealing with the stat module returning a simple True/False.

...
>>> sftp.isdir('pub')
True

pysftp.Connection.isfile()

Does all the busy work of stat’ing and dealing with the stat module returning a simple True/False.

...
>>> sftp.isfile('pub')
False

pysftp.Connection.exists()

Returns True if a remote entity exists

...
>>> sftp.exists('readme.txt')   # a file
True
>>> sftp.exists('pub')          # a dir
True

pysftp.Connection.lexists()

Like exists(), but returns True for a broken symbolic link

pysftp.Connection.truncate()

Like the underlying .truncate method, by pysftp returns the file’s new size after the operation.

>>> sftp.truncate('readme.txt', 4096)
4096

pysftp.Connection.walktree()

Is a powerful method that can recursively (default) walk a remote directory structure and calls a user-supplied callback functions for each file, directory or unknown entity it encounters. It is used in the get_x methods of pysftp and can be used with great effect to do your own bidding. Each callback is supplied the pathname of the entity. (form: func(str))

pysftp.Connection.sftp_client

Don’t like how we have over-ridden or modified a paramiko method? Use this attribute to get at paramiko’s original version. Remember, our goal is to augment not supplant paramiko.

pysftp.path_advance

generator to iterate over a file path

...
>>> list(pysftp.path_advance('./pub/example/example01'))
['.', './pub', './pub/example', './pub/example/example01']

pysftp.path_retreat

generator to iterate over a file path in reverse

...
>>> list(pysftp.path_retreat('./pub/example/example01'))
['./pub/example/example01', './pub/example', './pub', '.']

pysftp.reparent

Pythons os.path.join('backup', '/home/test/pub') returns ‘/home/test/pub’, but if you want to copy a directory structure to a new path this won’t do what you want. But, reparent will.

...
 >>> pysftp.reparent('backup', '/home/test/pub')
'backup/./home/test/pub'

pysftp.walktree

Is similar to pysftp.Connection.walktree() except that it walks a local directory structure. It has the same callback mechanism.

pysftp.cd

A with-context aware version of os.chdir for use on the local file system. The yin to pysftp.Connection.cd() yang.

...
>>> import os
>>> os.getcwd()
'/home/jlh/Projects/pysftp/src'
>>> with pysftp.cd('docs'):
...     print os.getcwd()
...
/home/jlh/Projects/pysftp/src/docs
>>> os.getcwd()
'/home/jlh/Projects/pysftp/src'

Remarks

We think paramiko is a great python library and it is the backbone of pysftp. The methods pysftp has created are abstractions that serve a programmer’s productivity by encapsulating many of the higher function use cases of interacting with SFTP. Instead of writing your own code to walk directories and call get and put, dealing with not only paramiko but Python’s own os and stat modules and writing tests (many code snippets on the net are incomplete and don’t account for edge cases) pysftp supplies a complete library for dealing with all three. Leaving you to focus on your primary task.

Paramiko also tries very hard to stay true to Python’s os module, which means sometimes, things are weird or a bit too low level. We think paramiko’s goals are good and don’t believe they should change. Those changes are for an abstraction library like pysftp.

API

A friendly Python SFTP interface.

class pysftp.Connection(host, username=None, private_key=None, password=None, port=22, private_key_pass=None, ciphers=None, log=False)

Connects and logs into the specified hostname. Arguments that are not given are guessed from the environment.

Parameters:
  • host (str) – The Hostname or IP of the remote machine.
  • username (str|None) – Default: None - Your username at the remote machine.
  • private_key (str|obj|None) – Default: None - path to private key file(str) or paramiko.AgentKey
  • password (str|None) – Default: None - Your password at the remote machine.
  • port (int) – Default: 22 - The SSH port of the remote machine.
  • private_key_pass (str|None) – Default: None - password to use, if private_key is encrypted.
  • ciphers (list|None) – Default: None - List of ciphers to use in order.
  • log (bool|str) – Default: False - log connection/handshake details? If set to True, pysftp creates a temporary file and logs to that. If set to a valid path and filename, pysftp logs to that. The name of the logfile can be found at .logfile
Returns:

(obj) connection to the requested host

Raises:
active_ciphers

Get tuple of currently used local and remote ciphers.

Returns:(tuple of str) currently used ciphers (local_cipher, remote_cipher)
cd(remotepath=None)

context manager that can change to a optionally specified remote directory and restores the old pwd on exit.

Parameters:remotepath (str|None) – Default: None - remotepath to temporarily make the current directory
Returns:None
Raises:IOError, if remote path doesn’t exist
chdir(remotepath)

change the current working directory on the remote

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the remote path to change to
Returns:None
Raises:IOError, if path does not exist
chmod(remotepath, mode=777)

set the mode of a remotepath to mode, where mode is an integer representation of the octal mode to use.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path/file to modify
  • mode (int) – Default: 777 - int representation of octal mode for directory
Returns:

None

Raises:

IOError, if the file doesn’t exist

chown(remotepath, uid=None, gid=None)

set uid and/or gid on a remotepath, you may specify either or both. Unless you have permission to do this on the remote server, you will raise an IOError: 13 - permission denied

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path/file to modify
  • uid (int) – the user id to set on the remotepath
  • gid (int) – the group id to set on the remotepath
Returns:

None

Raises:

IOError, if you don’t have permission or the file doesn’t exist

close()

Closes the connection and cleans up.

cwd(remotepath)

change the current working directory on the remote

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the remote path to change to
Returns:None
Raises:IOError, if path does not exist
execute(command)

Execute the given commands on a remote machine. The command is executed without regard to the remote pwd.

Parameters:command (str) – the command to execute.
Returns:(list of str) representing the results of the command
Raises:Any exception raised by command will be passed through.
exists(remotepath)

Test whether a remotepath exists.

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the remote path to verify
Returns:(bool) True, if remotepath exists, else False
get(remotepath, localpath=None, callback=None, preserve_mtime=False)

Copies a file between the remote host and the local host.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path and filename, source
  • localpath (str) – the local path and filename to copy, destination. If not specified, file is copied to local current working directory
  • callback (callable) – optional callback function (form: func(int, int)) that accepts the bytes transferred so far and the total bytes to be transferred.
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - make the modification time(st_mtime) on the local file match the time on the remote. (st_atime can differ because stat’ing the localfile can/does update it’s st_atime)
Returns:

None

Raises:

IOError

get_d(remotedir, localdir, preserve_mtime=False)

get the contents of remotedir and write to locadir. (non-recursive)

Parameters:
  • remotedir (str) – the remote directory to copy from (source)
  • localdir (str) – the local directory to copy to (target)
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - preserve modification time on files
Returns:

None

Raises:
get_r(remotedir, localdir, preserve_mtime=False)

recursively copy remotedir structure to localdir

Parameters:
  • remotedir (str) – the remote directory to copy from
  • localdir (str) – the local directory to copy to
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - preserve modification time on files
Returns:

None

Raises:
getcwd()

return the current working directory on the remote. This is a wrapper for paramiko’s method and not to be confused with the SFTP command, cwd.

Returns:(str) the current remote path. None, if not set.
getfo(remotepath, flo, callback=None)

Copy a remote file (remotepath) to a file-like object, flo.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path and filename, source
  • flo – open file like object to write, destination.
  • callback (callable) – optional callback function (form: func(int, int)) that accepts the bytes transferred so far and the total bytes to be transferred.
Returns:

(int) the number of bytes written to the opened file object

Raises:

Any exception raised by operations will be passed through.

isdir(remotepath)

return true, if remotepath is a directory

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the path to test
Returns:(bool)
isfile(remotepath)

return true if remotepath is a file

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the path to test
Returns:(bool)
lexists(remotepath)

Test whether a remotepath exists. Returns True for broken symbolic links

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the remote path to verify
Returns:(bool), True, if lexists, else False
listdir(remotepath='.')

return a list of files/directories for the given remote path. Unlike, paramiko, the directory listing is sorted.

Parameters:remotepath (str) – path to list on the server
Returns:(list of str) directory entries, sorted
listdir_attr(remotepath='.')

return a list of SFTPAttribute objects of the files/directories for the given remote path. The list is in arbitrary order. It does not include the special entries ‘.’ and ‘..’.

The returned SFTPAttributes objects will each have an additional field: longname, which may contain a formatted string of the file’s attributes, in unix format. The content of this string will depend on the SFTP server.

Parameters:remotepath (str) – path to list on the server
Returns:(list of SFTPAttributes), sorted
logfile

return the name of the file used for logging or False it not logging

Returns:(str)logfile or (bool) False
lstat(remotepath)

return information about file/directory for the given remote path, without following symbolic links. Otherwise, the same as .stat()

Parameters:remotepath (str) – path to stat
Returns:(obj) SFTPAttributes object
makedirs(remotedir, mode=777)

create all directories in remotedir as needed, setting their mode to mode, if created.

If remotedir already exists, silently complete. If a regular file is in the way, raise an exception.

Parameters:
  • remotedir (str) – the directory structure to create
  • mode (int) – Default: 777 - int representation of octal mode for directory
Returns:

None

Raises:

OSError

mkdir(remotepath, mode=777)

Create a directory named remotepath with mode. On some systems, mode is ignored. Where it is used, the current umask value is first masked out.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – directory to create`
  • mode (int) – Default: 777 - int representation of octal mode for directory
Returns:

None

normalize(remotepath)

Return the expanded path, w.r.t the server, of a given path. This can be used to resolve symlinks or determine what the server believes to be the pwd, by passing ‘.’ as remotepath.

Parameters:remotepath (str) – path to be normalized
Returns:(str) normalized form of the given path
Raises:IOError, if remotepath can’t be resolved
open(remote_file, mode='r', bufsize=-1)

Open a file on the remote server.

See http://paramiko-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api/sftp.html?highlight=open#paramiko.sftp_client.SFTPClient.open for details.

Parameters:
  • remote_file (str) – name of the file to open.
  • mode (str) – mode (Python-style) to open file (always assumed binary)
  • bufsize (int) – Default: -1 - desired buffering
Returns:

(obj) SFTPFile, a handle the remote open file

Raises:

IOError, if the file could not be opened.

put(localpath, remotepath=None, callback=None, confirm=True, preserve_mtime=False)

Copies a file between the local host and the remote host.

Parameters:
  • localpath (str) – the local path and filename
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path, else the remote pwd and filename is used.
  • callback (callable) – optional callback function (form: func(int, int)) that accepts the bytes transferred so far and the total bytes to be transferred..
  • confirm (bool) – whether to do a stat() on the file afterwards to confirm the file size
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - make the modification time(st_mtime) on the remote file match the time on the local. (st_atime can differ because stat’ing the localfile can/does update it’s st_atime)
Returns:

(obj) SFTPAttributes containing attributes about the given file

Raises:
  • IOError – if remotepath doesn’t exist
  • OSError – if localpath doesn’t exist
put_d(localpath, remotepath, confirm=True, preserve_mtime=False)

Copies a local directory’s contents to a remotepath

Parameters:
  • localpath (str) – the local path to copy (source)
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path to copy to (target)
  • confirm (bool) – whether to do a stat() on the file afterwards to confirm the file size
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - make the modification time(st_mtime) on the remote file match the time on the local. (st_atime can differ because stat’ing the localfile can/does update it’s st_atime)
Returns:

None

Raises:
  • IOError – if remotepath doesn’t exist
  • OSError – if localpath doesn’t exist
put_r(localpath, remotepath, confirm=True, preserve_mtime=False)

Recursively copies a local directory’s contents to a remotepath

Parameters:
  • localpath (str) – the local path to copy (source)
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path to copy to (target)
  • confirm (bool) – whether to do a stat() on the file afterwards to confirm the file size
  • preserve_mtime (bool) – Default: False - make the modification time(st_mtime) on the remote file match the time on the local. (st_atime can differ because stat’ing the localfile can/does update it’s st_atime)
Returns:

None

Raises:
  • IOError – if remotepath doesn’t exist
  • OSError – if localpath doesn’t exist
putfo(flo, remotepath=None, file_size=0, callback=None, confirm=True)

Copies the contents of a file like object to remotepath.

Parameters:
  • flo – a file-like object that supports .read()
  • remotepath (str) – the remote path.
  • file_size (int) – the size of flo, if not given the second param passed to the callback function will always be 0.
  • callback (callable) – optional callback function (form: func(int, int)) that accepts the bytes transferred so far and the total bytes to be transferred..
  • confirm (bool) – whether to do a stat() on the file afterwards to confirm the file size
Returns:

(obj) SFTPAttributes containing attributes about the given file

Raises:

TypeError, if remotepath not specified, any underlying error

pwd

return the current working directory

Returns:(str) current working directory

Return the target of a symlink (shortcut). The result will be an absolute pathname.

Parameters:remotelink (str) – remote path of the symlink
Returns:(str) absolute path to target
remove(remotefile)

remove the file @ remotefile, remotefile may include a path, if no path, then pwd is used. This method only works on files

Parameters:remotefile (str) – the remote file to delete
Returns:None
Raises:IOError
rename(remote_src, remote_dest)

rename a file or directory on the remote host.

Parameters:
  • remote_src (str) – the remote file/directory to rename
  • remote_dest (str) – the remote file/directory to put it
Returns:

None

Raises:

IOError

rmdir(remotepath)

remove remote directory

Parameters:remotepath (str) – the remote directory to remove
Returns:None
security_options

return the available security options recognized by paramiko.

Returns:(obj) security preferences of the ssh transport. These are tuples of acceptable .ciphers, .digests, .key_types, and key exchange algorithms .kex, listed in order of preference.
sftp_client

give access to the underlying, connected paramiko SFTPClient object

see http://paramiko-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api/sftp.html?highlight=sftpclient

Params:None
Returns:(obj) the active SFTPClient object
stat(remotepath)

return information about file/directory for the given remote path

Parameters:remotepath (str) – path to stat
Returns:(obj) SFTPAttributes

create a symlink for a remote file on the server

Parameters:
  • remote_src (str) – path of original file
  • remote_dest (str) – path of the created symlink
Returns:

None

Raises:

any underlying error, IOError if something already exists at remote_dest

timeout
(float|None) Default: None -
get or set the underlying socket timeout for pending read/write ops.
Returns:(float|None) seconds to wait for a pending read/write operation before raising socket.timeout, or None for no timeout
truncate(remotepath, size)

Change the size of the file specified by path. Used to modify the size of the file, just like the truncate method on Python file objects. The new file size is confirmed and returned.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – remote file path to modify
  • size (int|long) – the new file size
Returns:

(int) new size of file

Raises:

IOError, if file does not exist

remove the file @ remotefile, remotefile may include a path, if no path, then pwd is used. This method only works on files

Parameters:remotefile (str) – the remote file to delete
Returns:None
Raises:IOError
walktree(remotepath, fcallback, dcallback, ucallback, recurse=True)

recursively descend, depth first, the directory tree rooted at remotepath, calling discreet callback functions for each regular file, directory and unknown file type.

Parameters:
  • remotepath (str) – root of remote directory to descend, use ‘.’ to start at pwd
  • fcallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for a regular file. (form: func(str))
  • dcallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for a directory. (form: func(str))
  • ucallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for an unknown file type. (form: func(str))
  • recurse (bool) – Default: True - should it recurse
Returns:

None

Raises:
exception pysftp.ConnectionException(host, port)

Exception raised for connection problems

Attributes:
message – explanation of the error
exception pysftp.CredentialException(message)

Exception raised for credential problems

Attributes:
message – explanation of the error
class pysftp.WTCallbacks

an object to house the callbacks, used internally

Variables:
  • flist – list of files currently traversed
  • dlist – list of directories currently traversed
  • ulist – list of unknown entities currently traversed
dir_cb(pathname)

called for directories, appends pathname to .dlist

Parameters:pathname (str) – directory path
file_cb(pathname)

called for regular files, appends pathname to .flist

Parameters:pathname (str) – file path
unk_cb(pathname)

called for unknown file types, appends pathname to .ulist

Parameters:pathname (str) – unknown entity path
pysftp.cd(localpath=None)

context manager that can change to a optionally specified local directory and restores the old pwd on exit.

Parameters:localpath (str|None) – Default: None - local path to temporarily make the current directory
Returns:None
Raises:OSError, if local path doesn’t exist
pysftp.path_advance(thepath, sep='/')

generator to iterate over a file path forwards

Parameters:
  • thepath (str) – the path to navigate forwards
  • sep (str) – Default: os.sep - the path separator to use
Returns:

(iter)able of strings

pysftp.path_retreat(thepath, sep='/')

generator to iterate over a file path in reverse

Parameters:
  • thepath (str) – the path to retreat over
  • sep (str) – Default: os.sep - the path separator to use
Returns:

(iter)able of strings

pysftp.reparent(newparent, oldpath)

when copying or moving a directory structure, you need to re-parent the oldpath. When using os.path.join to calculate this new path, the appearance of a / root path at the beginning of oldpath, supplants the newparent and we don’t want this to happen, so we need to make the oldpath root appear as a child of the newparent.

Param:str newparent: the new parent location for oldpath (target)
Parameters:oldpath (str) – the path being adopted by newparent (source)
Returns:(str) resulting adoptive path
pysftp.st_mode_to_int(val)

SFTAttributes st_mode returns an stat type that shows more than what can be set. Trim off those bits and convert to an int representation. if you want an object that was chmod 711 to return a value of 711, use this function

Parameters:val (int) – the value of an st_mode attr returned by SFTPAttributes
Returns int:integer representation of octal mode
pysftp.walktree(localpath, fcallback, dcallback, ucallback, recurse=True)

on the local file system, recursively descend, depth first, the directory tree rooted at localpath, calling discreet callback functions for each regular file, directory and unknown file type.

Parameters:
  • localpath (str) – root of remote directory to descend, use ‘.’ to start at pwd
  • fcallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for a regular file. (form: func(str))
  • dcallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for a directory. (form: func(str))
  • ucallback (callable) – callback function to invoke for an unknown file type. (form: func(str))
  • recurse (bool) – Default: True - should it recurse
Returns:

None

Raises:

OSError, if localpath doesn’t exist

SecurityOptions

a simple object returned with available Security Options

see http://paramiko-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api/transport.html?highlight=ciphers#paramiko.transport.SecurityOptions for details

Change Log

  • 0.2.9 (dev)
    • in progress
  • 0.2.8 (current, released 2014-05-28)
    • created pysftp.walktree() for walking local directories
    • added param recurse to pysftp.Connection.walktree() to allow it to do another trick
    • created put_d() to put the contents of a local directory to a remote one
    • created a context manager chdir method, pysftp.Connection.cd()
    • created put_r() to recursively put the contents of a local directory to a remote one
    • fixed a bug with st_mode_to_int() on py3 (#52)
    • listdir_attr() now returns a sorted list, sorted on filename
    • created pysftp.cd() with-context version of os.chdir for local directories
    • created docs, cookbook to show off some of the notable features of pysftp
  • 0.2.7 (released 2014-05-24)
    • created pysftp.Connection.walktree(), recursively walk, depth first, a remote directory structure. Used as the base of get_r(). See tests/test_walktree.py for examples.
    • added unlink() as synonym for remove()
    • added normalize()
    • created get_r() to recursively copy remote directories to a local path
    • created pwd to return the current working directory
    • created cwd() as synonym for chdir()
    • modified listdir() to return a sorted list instead of an arbitrary one
    • added readlink(), always returns an absolute path
    • created get_d() to copy the remote directory to a local path (non-recursive)
    • added timeout to set the read/write timeout of the underlying channel for pending read/write ops
    • added listdir_attr(), wrapper for paramiko method
    • added truncate(), method returns the new file size
    • improved DRY’ness of test suite
  • 0.2.6 (released 2014-05-17)
  • 0.2.5 (released 2014-05-15)
    • added ciphers parameter to Connection object
    • added active_ciphers to return local and remote cipher in use
    • added security_options, where you can get available ciphers, among other information
    • enhanced logging, and added documentation and tests
  • 0.2.4 (released 2014-05-13)
    • Connection can be used in a with statement
    • add remove()
    • added support for callback and confirm params to put()
    • added support for callback on get()
    • added support for open()
    • fixed password bug and now differentiates between an empty string and None
    • added support for paramiko.AgentKey to be passed in as the private_key for Connection
    • added support for mkdir()
    • added support for rmdir()
    • added support for stat() and lstat()
    • added helper function, st_mode_to_int(),to convert the st_mode value back into a common integer representation
    • added getfo()
    • added putfo()
  • 0.2.3 (released 2014-05-10)
    • host code on pypi to keep pip happy
    • move code to bitbucket
    • enhance testing
    • README.rst and LICENSE named properly
    • cleaner error handling
  • 0.2.2
    • additions
      • chdir(self, path) - change the current working directory on the remote
      • getcwd(self) - return the current working directory on the remote
      • listdir(self, path=’.’)return a list of files for the given path

Contributing

You can contribute to the project in a number of ways. Code is always good, bugs are interesting but tests make your famous!

Bug reports or feature enhancements that include a test are given preferential treatment. So instead of voting for an issue, write a test.

Code

  1. Fork the repository on Bitbucket .
  2. Make a virtualenv, clone the repos, install the deps from pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
  3. Write any new tests needed and ensure existing tests continue to pass without modification.
  1. Setup CI testing on drone.io for your Fork. See current script .
  2. Some tests can not be run against the public SFTP server, as it is read-only, to run tests that put or modify, you will need to setup an ssh daemon on your local machine and create a user: test with password of test1357 – Tests that can only be run locally are skipped using the @skip_if_ci decorator
  1. Ensure that your name is added to the end of the Authors file using the format Name <email@domain.com> (url), where the (url) portion is optional.
  2. Submit a Pull Request to the project on Bitbucket.

Docs

We use sphinx to build the docs. make html is your friend, see docstrings for details on params, etc.

Bug Reports

If you encounter a bug or some surprising behavior, please file an issue on our tracker

Authors

Contributors of code, tests and documentation to the project who have agreed to have their work enjoined into the project and project license (BSD).

Acknowledgment

Indices and tables