Remote Access/en: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
Sv (Diskussion | Beiträge) Document the Automatic Refresh dropdown toggle and its root-type default |
Sv (Diskussion | Beiträge) Fold the Automatic-Refresh bullets onto single physical lines |
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detect external changes. The default depends on the current root: |
detect external changes. The default depends on the current root: |
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* Local filesystem → '''on''' (10-second cycle, matches the |
* Local filesystem → '''on''' (10-second cycle, matches the long-standing behaviour). |
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* SFTP → '''off'''. Each cycle costs one STAT round-trip per child, which is fine for a handful of local directories but painful over the network. Click Refresh manually when you need to pick up remote changes. |
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long-standing behaviour). |
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* SFTP → '''off'''. Each cycle costs one STAT round-trip |
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per child, which is fine for a handful of local directories but |
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painful over the network. Click Refresh manually when you need |
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to pick up remote changes. |
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When you navigate between local and SFTP roots the toggle flips |
When you navigate between local and SFTP roots the toggle flips |
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Aktuelle Version vom 26. Mai 2026, 18:52 Uhr
| Language: | English |
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Remote access is the ability to drive a remote computer or network from this expecco image — opening shells, running commands, moving files, or driving a test target. Three protocol families are supported, listed in current-recommended order:
- SSH and SFTP (recommended) — encrypted shell + secure file transfer over an SSH-2 tunnel. Pure-Smalltalk implementation in
exept:libcrypt/ssh; no external dependency on OpenSSL or libssh. Use this for anything that touches credentials or sensitive payloads. - Local Command Shell — fork + exec on the local machine. Used for local-tool integration and for the local end of a remote workflow that bridges via another protocol.
- Telnet (legacy) — plain-text terminal session. No encryption, passwords on the wire in clear. Use only when the target hardware has no other option.
SSH and SFTP
The SSH stack covers the full SSH-2 protocol (RFC 4251–4254, RFC 5656, RFC 8709, RFC 8731) plus OpenSSH's chacha20-poly1305 transport cipher and the SFTP v3 file-transfer subsystem (draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02). Two layers:
SSH::Client— programmatic SSH access (remote
exec, TTY shell, agent forwarding, ProxyJump bastion).
SSH::SftpFilename— aFilenamesubclass that lets the rest of ST/X treat a remote SFTP path the same way it treats a local file.
The rest of this section is organised user-task-first: what the user sees and does, the expecco-library hooks below that, then the implementation detail at the end for the curious.
From the FileBrowserV2
Open the location dropdown and paste an sftp:// URL.
The browser tab populates as if it were a local path. Tree
expansion, column sort (name / size / mtime), preview, and
double-click-to-open-in-editor all behave normally. The first
click on a host takes ~200–500 ms (TCP + KEX + auth); subsequent
clicks reuse the pooled connection.
URL syntax:
sftp://[user@]host[:port]/remote/path
User defaults to the local login name, port to 22, path to
/.
The Refresh button in the toolbar (the round-arrow icon between Forward and DirectoryUp) re-reads both the directory tree and the contents pane on demand. Works uniformly for local and SFTP paths; for SFTP it also flushes the per-file STAT cache, so changes made directly on the remote side become visible immediately rather than waiting for the 5-second cache TTL to expire.
The small arrow next to the Refresh icon opens a dropdown with a single checkbox, Automatic Refresh, controlling the background polling task that walks every expanded tree item to detect external changes. The default depends on the current root:
- Local filesystem → on (10-second cycle, matches the long-standing behaviour).
- SFTP → off. Each cycle costs one STAT round-trip per child, which is fine for a handful of local directories but painful over the network. Click Refresh manually when you need to pick up remote changes.
When you navigate between local and SFTP roots the toggle flips automatically — but only if you haven't overridden it for the previous root. An explicit user choice is preserved across navigations.
The Tools menu offers four browser actions, three of them gated on the SSH library being loaded:
- Generate SSH Key Pair... — opens the same key-generation dialog described under #Generating an SSH key pair below.
- SSH Connect... — opens an interactive VT100 terminal to a remote host.
- SFTP Connect... — points this browser tab at a remote filesystem via SFTP.
- Filesystem Info... — shows size, free space and usage of the filesystem holding the currently displayed directory. Works uniformly for local paths and SFTP paths; for SFTP it requires the server to advertise the
statvfs@openssh.comextension (every modern OpenSSH does). Sizes are reported in IEC binary units (MiB, GiB, TiB) — the largest unit yielding a value ≥ 1 is chosen, so a TB-scale volume reads as X TiB rather than 10240 GiB.
From expecco actions
The Expecco RemoteAccess plugin (Expecco::RemoteAccessImportPlugin) exposes the following test actions to the expecco action palette:
- CmdShell - Open SSH Remote Connection — opens an SSH session via the platform's
sshbinary (PuTTY's
plink on Windows).
- CmdShell - Open SSH Remote Connection and PublicKey — same but with explicit public-key authentication.
To run these you need a configured keypair (private key on this
machine, public key in the remote host's
~/.ssh/authorized_keys). Generate one via the dialog
below or via ssh-keygen.
The plugin also adds a settings page at Extras → Settings → Plugins → Remote Access — SSH Keys carrying a single Generate SSH Key Pair... button that opens the same dialog.
Generating an SSH key pair
The dialog (FileBrowserV2 / settings page)
The dialog asks for all parameters in one form:
- Comment — embedded in the generated key (defaults to
stx@<hostname>).
- Storage:
- Save to disk file only — writes
~/.ssh/id_ed25519_stx(or wherever) plus a matching.pubcompanion. - Save to disk AND load into ssh-agent — writes the file and also hands the key to the running ssh-agent.
- Load into ssh-agent only — key lives in agent memory only; gone on agent restart.
- Save to disk file only — writes
- Private key file — full path; disabled in agent-only mode.
- Passphrase / Confirm — empty leaves the on-disk file unencrypted (agent-only mode ignores the passphrase, since the OpenSSH agent wire protocol carries only the decrypted key).
On Generate, the public-key line (the same
ssh-ed25519 AAAA... comment string ssh-keygen
emits) is copied to the system clipboard for pasting into the
remote host's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys.
From a workspace
For headless deployments, sandboxed builds, or scripts,
SSH::Client exposes a pure-Smalltalk key generator
that produces output bit-compatible with
ssh-keygen -t ed25519:
| seed comment priv |
seed := SSH::Client generateEd25519Seed.
comment := 'stx@', OperatingSystem getHostName.
"/ Save passphrase-encrypted to disk"
priv := (Filename homeDirectory / '.ssh' / 'id_ed25519_stx') pathName.
SSH::Client
saveOpenSshEd25519Seed:seed
toFile:priv
comment:comment
passphrase:'choose-something-long'.
"/ AND load into the running agent"
SSH::Client addEd25519SeedToAgent:seed comment:comment.
"/ Print the public-key line to paste into authorized_keys"
Transcript showCR:
(SSH::Client authorizedKeysLineForEd25519Seed:seed comment:comment).
Keys generated this way are interoperable with OpenSSH's own
tooling (ssh-keygen -y -f ... re-derives the public
key, ssh-keygen -p -f ... changes the passphrase,
etc.).
Using the shell tools instead
The traditional path also works:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "stx@your.host" ssh-copy-id user@remotehost ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
Preparing ssh-agent
The agent path is strongly preferred over reading raw keyfiles: it keeps encrypted private keys unlocked once per session, and handles identities (hardware-token-backed keys, KeePassXC entries) that ST/X should never see directly.
ST/X picks the agent path automatically when
$SSH_AUTH_SOCK is set in the process environment
at the time stx is launched. Setting it later from a
workspace does not help.
Linux / macOS
Most desktop distributions launch an agent automatically as part of the session (gnome-keyring on GNOME, ssh-agent.service on systemd, KWallet on KDE). Verify in a terminal:
echo $SSH_AUTH_SOCK # /run/user/1000/keyring/ssh or similar ssh-add -l # lists loaded identities ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 # load yours if not loaded
If no agent runs at all, add this snippet to your shell rc:
# ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc
if [ -z "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" ]; then
eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" > /dev/null
fi
ST/X must be launched from a shell that has seen this rc — a
desktop launcher started from the file manager does NOT inherit
the variable. Wrap the stx start command in a small script under
~/.local/bin/ that sources the rc first.
The Remote Access settings page (Extras → Settings → Plugins → Remote Access — SSH Keys) shows whether the running image sees an agent.
Permanent setup via systemd
For a truly cross-session agent (survives desktop logouts, comes
up automatically at next login), enable the per-user systemd
unit shipped with most distros' openssh-clients
package:
systemctl --user enable --now ssh-agent.service
Then point SSH_AUTH_SOCK at the user-service socket
in your shell rc (this replaces the eval $(ssh-agent -s)
snippet above):
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK="${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/ssh-agent.socket"
Auto-loading keys on first use
To skip the manual ssh-add step, let OpenSSH load
keys into the agent automatically the first time they are needed.
Add to ~/.ssh/config:
Host *
AddKeysToAgent yes
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
The first SSH connection then prompts for the key passphrase once and hands the unlocked key to the agent; subsequent connections use the cached identity without prompting.
Windows
Windows 10+ ships native OpenSSH including an agent service. One-time setup:
- Open Services (
services.msc) as Administrator. - Find OpenSSH Authentication Agent, set Startup Type to Automatic, click Start.
- In PowerShell:
ssh-add $HOME\.ssh\id_ed25519. - Verify:
ssh-add -l.
The Windows OpenSSH agent listens on a named pipe
(\\.\pipe\openssh-ssh-agent), not a Unix socket. ST/X
supports both transports, but Windows ssh-add does not set
SSH_AUTH_SOCK for you. Add it manually:
- Press Vorlage:Key → type "environment" → "Edit the system environment variables".
- Environment Variables → under User variables, New.
- Name:
SSH_AUTH_SOCK - Value:
\\.\pipe\openssh-ssh-agent - Log out and back in (or restart stx) so the new env propagates.
PowerShell quick-setup
The same setup from an elevated PowerShell prompt, for scripts or unattended provisioning:
# Start the agent now AND on every reboot (permanent).
Set-Service -Name ssh-agent -StartupType Automatic
Start-Service ssh-agent
# Persist SSH_AUTH_SOCK for the user (survives reboots).
[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable(
'SSH_AUTH_SOCK',
'\\.\pipe\openssh-ssh-agent',
'User')
# Load a key (prompts for the passphrase if the file is encrypted).
ssh-add $HOME\.ssh\id_ed25519
For a one-shot agent start without making it persistent (e.g.
single-session test), drop the Set-Service line and
just run Start-Service ssh-agent. The env-var line
can also be omitted if SSH_AUTH_SOCK is only needed
in the current shell — use $env:SSH_AUTH_SOCK = '...'
instead for that session-local form.
On stripped-down Windows installs the ssh-agent service may not be present. Add it once via Settings → Apps → Optional features → OpenSSH Client.
Alternative agents:
- PuTTY pageant — uses its own protocol; NOT supported by ST/X's SSH::Agent. Migrate the keys to OpenSSH.
- Git for Windows ssh-agent — works; point
SSH_AUTH_SOCK at the socket it publishes.
- WSL 2 — a ST/X inside WSL sees WSL's Linux agent normally; a ST/X on the Windows side does not. Bridging needs a helper like
npiperelay+socat.
Verify in the Remote Access settings page (Extras → Settings → Plugins → Remote Access — SSH Keys) — the agent indicator there reports whether the running image sees the agent.
Auto-loading keys on first use
Windows OpenSSH does not persist agent-loaded keys across
agent restarts. To avoid running ssh-add manually
after each reboot, add the same lazy-load configuration to
%USERPROFILE%\.ssh\config:
Host *
AddKeysToAgent yes
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
OpenSSH then loads the key into the agent on first use (prompts for the passphrase once) and reuses it for the rest of the session.
Configuration
All tunables are class-side on SSH::SftpFilename:
| Accessor | Default | What it controls |
|---|---|---|
#idleEvictionSeconds: |
240 (4 min) | How long a pooled
connection sits idle before the next access proactively closes +
reopens it. Just under typical sshd
|
#attrsCacheTtlSeconds: |
5 | Max age (s) of a
cached STAT before |
#closeAllConnections |
(action) | Tears down every
pooled connection. Useful after a known-bad network event, before a deliberate identity swap, or as part of a clean image shutdown. |
Diagnostics
SemaphoreMonitor
Open SemaphoreMonitor from the Launcher's "Status"
sub-menu. Per-host SFTP mutex appears as
SFTP/<user@host:port>; the pool-wide mutex as
SFTP/pool. Right-click a row:
- Copy Waiters Stack to Clipboard — dumps the last-owner's walkback plus each waiter's, formatted as plain text. Use when a process is wedged in
readWaitinside
withSftpClientDo: and you need to see which SFTP
request it is on.
- Copy List to Clipboard — the whole table, for an email-this-to-someone diagnosis.
- Detect Deadlocks — DFS over the wait-for graph, reports cycles.
Logger
The SSH stack logs interesting events:
warning:on auto-reconnect after a dead connection.warning:when a pool entry is idle-evicted.warning:when an SSH key file cannot be parsed (e.g. legacy PEM, encrypted-without-agent) — the file is skipped, others tried.
Limitations
- SFTP v3 only. No SETSTAT (no remote chmod / chown / utime), no SSH_FXP_READLINK exposed (
#isSymbolicLinkalways
false, #linkInfo returns the regular
stat info). Several SFTPv5+ niceties are nevertheless picked up
via OpenSSH SSH_FXP_EXTENDED requests — see
#OpenSSH SFTP extensions below.
- Per-host serialisation. Two concurrent operations on the same host queue through the host mutex. See #Future work.
#renameTo:fallback has a TOCTOU window. On servers that advertiseposix-rename@openssh.com(every modern OpenSSH does), overwrite is atomic; on the rare server that does not, the receiver is emulated as delete-then-rename and another process can race in between.#isNonEmptyDirectoryis heuristic. Always returns#isDirectory(the accurate answer would cost three round-trips per directory icon, which made the original tree expansion unbearably slow).
Implementation details
For readers wanting the architecture. Five classes, top-down:
| Class | Role |
|---|---|
SSH::SftpFilename |
Filename subclass; the public
API. Maps |
SSH::SftpClient |
SFTP-v3 protocol
(request/response codec, listDir, stat, open, read, write, mkdir). Driven by SftpFilename. |
SSH::Channel |
SSH channel multiplexer
(CHANNEL_OPEN, DATA, EOF, CLOSE, WINDOW_ADJUST). One logical session per Channel instance. |
SSH::Client |
High-level SSH client: opens the
transport, runs KEX, host-key check, userauth, then dispenses Channels. |
SSH::Transport |
Wire layer. Banner + KEXINIT
exchange, ChaCha20-Poly1305 packet framing, sendSeq / recvSeq, heartbeat, SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT. |
OpenSSH SFTP extensions
SFTP v3 (RFC draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02) is intentionally minimal.
OpenSSH ships an open-ended extension mechanism: the server lists
extension names it understands in its SSH_FXP_VERSION
reply, and the client invokes them via
SSH_FXP_EXTENDED(200) packets carrying the extension
name as the first string. Each extension is feature-detected via
SSH::SftpClient>>supportsExtension:; callers fall
back when the server doesn't advertise it.
The stack uses four of the OpenSSH extensions today:
posix-rename@openssh.com— atomic rename-with-overwrite. Picked up automatically by
SftpFilename>>renameTo:; the delete-then-rename
fallback only fires on servers that lack it.
hardlink@openssh.com— create a POSIX hard link. Exposed asSftpFilename>>createHardLinkAs:.statvfs@openssh.com— POSIX
statvfs(3)-shape filesystem stats. Exposed as
SftpFilename>>fileSystemInfo; the result is
shape-compatible with OperatingSystem getDiskInfoOf:
so callers can treat local and remote uniformly. Drives the
Tools → Filesystem Info... menu entry described at the
top of this page.
fsync@openssh.com— flush server-side write buffer to disk on an open handle. Available on the low-level
SftpClient>>fsyncHandle:; not yet plumbed
into a Filename-level "durable write" API.
The remaining OpenSSH extensions
(lsetstat@openssh.com, fstatvfs@openssh.com)
are recognised in the advertised-extensions list but not wrapped at
Filename level — there's no Filename-side caller for them yet.
Connection pooling
Every SftpFilename instance pointing at the same
user@host:port triple shares one
SSH::Client plus one SSH::SftpClient.
Pool is class-side, guarded by a single
ConnectionPoolMutex:
- Lazy bring-up — TCP + KEX + userauth + SFTP INIT happens on the first SFTP operation, not on
forUrl:. - Per-host serialisation — SFTP requests on a given host are serialised through a
RecursionLocknamed
SFTP/<user@host:port> (visible in
SemaphoreMonitor).
- Idle eviction — unused for longer than
idleEvictionSeconds, the entry is proactively
closed + reopened on the next access.
- Auto-reconnect — a transport-level failure (broken pipe, EOF, MNU on nil socket) evicts the dead pool entry, opens a fresh client, retries the request once. Application-level SFTP STATUS errors propagate immediately.
Future work
Tracked but not yet implemented:
- Multi-channel parallelism per host — today one TCP + one SFTP channel per host means N concurrent requests serialise. Pipelining over multiple SshClients in the pool (preferred), or a transport-level reader process demultiplexing to per-channel inboxes, would let the tree pane keep listing while the content pane reads a large file.
- Accurate
#isNonEmptyDirectoryvia OPEN_DIR + READ_DIR (first batch only) + CLOSE — three RTTs per probe; needs SftpClient to pipeline requests before this pays off. - SFTP v5/v6 negotiation for extended attrs and FTP-style canonicalisation. (Atomic-overwrite rename is already handled via the OpenSSH
posix-rename@openssh.comextension; see #OpenSSH SFTP extensions.)
Command Shell
Local command shell on this expecco machine. Typical applications: local command-line, running a local helper tool, bridging a remote workflow to a local utility.
The Expecco RemoteAccess plugin exposes:
- CmdShell - Open
- CmdShell - Close
No credentials, no network — runs as the expecco process's own user. Output streams to expecco's log.
Telnet
Warning Telnet is a legacy protocol with no encryption. Passwords are transmitted in plain text on the wire; anyone on the network path can read them. Use Telnet ONLY when the target device has no other option (typically: old industrial controllers, lab instruments, embedded measurement equipment without an SSH stack). For everything else use #SSH and SFTP.
The expecco plugin exposes:
- Telnet - Open Remote Connection With Login
- Telnet - Execute Remote Command
- Example - Remote Device Control via Telnet (internal demo)
The Telnet protocol (RFC 854) is a bidirectional 8-bit byte stream over TCP, with in-band control sequences for terminal options. A connection is established to a target host:port; after optional in-band login, both sides can send data.
See also
- SSH::Client — the SSH layer (exec, TTY, agent forwarding, ProxyJump).
- FileBrowserV2 — the main UI client of this stack.
- Claude Code — uses the same SSH stack for its HTTPS transport.
- RFC 4251 (SSH-2 Architecture)
- RFC 854 (Telnet Protocol)