First of all, have you tried in console with ssh [email protected] "sudo -S -p '' dmesg"
. If it also fails, then you might check the sshd
settings and the sudoer
settings.
If it works well, please add some echo between lines, so that we can know exactly when the exception was thrown. I highly doubt that you should change sudo dmesg
to sudo -S -p '' dmesg
.
You might also try my wrapper of paramiko. I can use it smoothly to access any CentOS/SuSE node and perform any commands (w/wo sudo privilege):
#!/usr/bin/python
from StringIO import StringIO
import paramiko
class SshClient:
"A wrapper of paramiko.SSHClient"
TIMEOUT = 4
def __init__(self, host, port, username, password, key=None, passphrase=None):
self.username = username
self.password = password
self.client = paramiko.SSHClient()
self.client.set_missing_host_key_policy(paramiko.AutoAddPolicy())
if key is not None:
key = paramiko.RSAKey.from_private_key(StringIO(key), password=passphrase)
self.client.connect(host, port, username=username, password=password, pkey=key, timeout=self.TIMEOUT)
def close(self):
if self.client is not None:
self.client.close()
self.client = None
def execute(self, command, sudo=False):
feed_password = False
if sudo and self.username != "root":
command = "sudo -S -p '' %s" % command
feed_password = self.password is not None and len(self.password) > 0
stdin, stdout, stderr = self.client.exec_command(command)
if feed_password:
stdin.write(self.password + "
")
stdin.flush()
return {'out': stdout.readlines(),
'err': stderr.readlines(),
'retval': stdout.channel.recv_exit_status()}
if __name__ == "__main__":
client = SshClient(host='host', port=22, username='username', password='password')
try:
ret = client.execute('dmesg', sudo=True)
print " ".join(ret["out"]), " E ".join(ret["err"]), ret["retval"]
finally:
client.close()
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