Recently a client of our unexpectedly shifted some important files we collect from an ftp to sftp server. Initially I was under the impression that it would be simple to write or find a java utility that can handle sftp, this has definitely not proven to be the case. What has also compounded this problem is that we are trying to connect to the sftp server from a windows platform (so the definition of where SSH_HOME is on the client gets very confused).
I have been using the apache-commons-vfs library and have managed to get a solution that reliably works for username/password authentication, but as of yet nothing that can reliably handle private/public key authentication.
The following example works for username/password authentication, but I want to adjust it for private/public key authentication.
public static void sftpGetFile(String server, String userName,String password,
String remoteDir, String localDir, String fileNameRegex)
{
File localDirFile = new File(localDir);
FileSystemManager fsManager = null;
if (!localDirFile.exists()) {
localDirFile.mkdirs();
}
try {
fsManager = VFS.getManager();
} catch (FileSystemException ex) {
LOGGER.error("Failed to get fsManager from VFS",ex);
throw new RuntimeException("Failed to get fsManager from VFS", ex);
}
UserAuthenticator auth = new StaticUserAuthenticator(null, userName,password);
FileSystemOptions opts = new FileSystemOptions();
try {
DefaultFileSystemConfigBuilder.getInstance().setUserAuthenticator(opts,
auth);
} catch (FileSystemException ex) {
LOGGER.error("setUserAuthenticator failed", ex);
throw new RuntimeException("setUserAuthenticator failed", ex);
}
Pattern filePattern = Pattern.compile(fileNameRegex);
String startPath = "sftp://" + server + remoteDir;
FileObject[] children;
// Set starting path on remote SFTP server.
FileObject sftpFile;
try {
sftpFile = fsManager.resolveFile(startPath, opts);
LOGGER.info("SFTP connection successfully established to " +
startPath);
} catch (FileSystemException ex) {
LOGGER.error("SFTP error parsing path " +
remoteDir,
ex);
throw new RuntimeException("SFTP error parsing path " +
remoteDir,
ex);
}
// Get a directory listing
try {
children = sftpFile.getChildren();
} catch (FileSystemException ex) {
throw new RuntimeException("Error collecting directory listing of " +
startPath, ex);
}
search:
for (FileObject f : children) {
try {
String relativePath =
File.separatorChar + f.getName().getBaseName();
if (f.getType() == FileType.FILE) {
System.out.println("Examining remote file " + f.getName());
if (!filePattern.matcher(f.getName().getPath()).matches()) {
LOGGER.info(" Filename does not match, skipping file ." +
relativePath);
continue search;
}
String localUrl = "file://" + localDir + relativePath;
String standardPath = localDir + relativePath;
System.out.println(" Standard local path is " + standardPath);
LocalFile localFile =
(LocalFile) fsManager.resolveFile(localUrl);
System.out.println(" Resolved local file name: " +
localFile.getName());
if (!localFile.getParent().exists()) {
localFile.getParent().createFolder();
}
System.out.println(" ### Retrieving file ###");
localFile.copyFrom(f,
new AllFileSelector());
} else {
System.out.println("Ignoring non-file " + f.getName());
}
} catch (FileSystemException ex) {
throw new RuntimeException("Error getting file type for " +
f.getName(), ex);
}
}
FileSystem fs = null;
if (children.length > 0) {
fs = children[0].getFileSystem(); // This works even if the src is closed.
fsManager.closeFileSystem(fs);
}
}
I've got my private key stored in a known location and my public key has been distrubuted to the server (we have tested that these keys work succesfully when connecting using other tools)
I have played around with adding the following line
SftpFileSystemConfigBuilder.getInstance().setIdentities(this.opts, new File[]{new File("c:/Users/bobtbuilder/.ssh/id_dsa.ppk")});
This succesfully loads the private key into the whole framework but it never then uses that key to authenticate further.
Any help or direction most warmly received
ppka putty thing? Shouldnt you be using apem? – prodigitalson Jun 26 '12 at 11:25