@mitchellh suggested we fork `cli` and switch to that.
Since we primarily use the interfaces in `cli`, and the new
fork has not changed those, this is (mostly) a drop-in replacement.
A small fix will be necessary for Vault Enterprise, I believe.
* Adding explicit MPL license for sub-package.
This directory and its subdirectories (packages) contain files licensed with the MPLv2 `LICENSE` file in this directory and are intentionally licensed separately from the BSL `LICENSE` file at the root of this repository.
* Adding explicit MPL license for sub-package.
This directory and its subdirectories (packages) contain files licensed with the MPLv2 `LICENSE` file in this directory and are intentionally licensed separately from the BSL `LICENSE` file at the root of this repository.
* Updating the license from MPL to Business Source License.
Going forward, this project will be licensed under the Business Source License v1.1. Please see our blog post for more details at https://hashi.co/bsl-blog, FAQ at www.hashicorp.com/licensing-faq, and details of the license at www.hashicorp.com/bsl.
* add missing license headers
* Update copyright file headers to BUS-1.1
* Fix test that expected exact offset on hcl file
---------
Co-authored-by: hashicorp-copywrite[bot] <110428419+hashicorp-copywrite[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sarah Thompson <sthompson@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian Kassouf <bkassouf@hashicorp.com>
* Allow vault ssh to accept ssh commands in any ssh compatible format
Previously vault ssh required ssh commands to be in the format
`username@hostname <flags> command`. While this works just fine for human
users this breaks a lot of automation workflows and is not compatible
with the options that the ssh client supports.
Motivation
We currently run ansible which uses vault ssh to connect to hosts.
Ansible generates ssh commands with the format `ssh <flags> -o User=username hostname
command`. While this is a valid ssh command it currently breaks with
vault because vault expects the format to be `username@hostname`. To work
around this we currently use a wrapper script to parse the correct username being set
by ansible and translate this into a vault ssh compatible `username@hostname` format
Changes
* You can now specify arguments in any order that ssh client allows. All
arguments are passed directly to the ssh command and the format isn't
modified in any way.
* The username and port are parsed from the specified ssh command. It
will accept all of the options supported by the ssh command and also
will properly prefer `-p` and `user@` if both options are specified.
* The ssh port is only added from the vault credentials if it hasn't
been specified on the command line