Net::Netrc provides an interface to the ftp(1) .netrc file containing login information for FTP (or other) servers.
require 'net/netrc' rc = Net::Netrc.locate('ftp.example.com') or raise ".netrc missing or no entry found" puts rc.login puts rc.password puts rc.name
The .netrc file is a plain text file containing login information. It is typically located in the user's home directory. (See rcname for specific details on how the .netrc file is located.)
On Unix platforms, the .netrc must be owned by the process' effective user id and must not be group- or world-writable, or a SecurityError will be raised.
The .netrc file contains whitespace-separated tokens. Tokens containing whitespace must be enclosed in double quotes. The following tokens are recognized:
Identifies a remote machine name. locate searches sequentially for a matching machine token. Once a match is found, subsequent tokens are processed until either EOF is reached or another machine (or default) token is parsed.
Identifies remote user name.
Supplies remote password.
Supplies an additional account password.
Begins a macro definition, which ends with the next blank line encountered. Ignored by Net::Netrc.
Defines default account information. The login information here will be returned if a matching machine token is not found during parsing. If supplied, default must appear after any machine entries.
The following is an example of a .netrc file:
machine host1.austin.century.com login fred password bluebonnet default login john password ranger
given a machine name, returns a Net::Netrc object containing the matching entry for that name, or the default entry. If no match is found and no default entry exists, nil is returned.
The returned object's machine, login, password, and account attributes will be set to the corresponding values from the .netrc file entry. machine will be nil if the default .netrc entry was used. The other attributes will be nil if the corresponding token in the .netrc file was not present.
io is a previously-opened IO object. If not supplied, rcopen is called to locate and open the .netrc file. io will be closed when this method returns.
# File lib/net/netrc.rb, line 186 def Netrc.locate(mach, io = nil) need_close = false if io.nil? io = rcopen or return nil need_close = true end entry = nil key = nil inmacdef = false begin while line = io.gets if inmacdef inmacdef = false if line.strip.empty? next end toks = line.scan(/"((?:\\.|[^"])*)"|((?:\\.|\S)+)/).flatten.compact toks.each { |t| t.gsub!(/\\(.)/, '\1') } while toks.length > 0 tok = toks.shift if key entry = new if key == 'machine' && tok == mach entry.send "#{key}=", tok if entry key = nil end case tok when 'default' return entry if entry entry = new when 'machine' return entry if entry key = 'machine' when 'login', 'password', 'account' key = tok when 'macdef' inmacdef = true break end end end ensure io.close if need_close end entry end
Returns name of .netrc file
If the environment variable NETRC is set, it is used as the name of the .netrc file. Otherwise, a search is made for .netrc (and _netrc on Windows) in the following locations. The first existing file found will be returned.
User's home directory as returned by Etc.getpwuid
ENV['HOME'] directory
On Windows platforms, the following additional locations are checked:
ENV['USERPROFILE']
ENV['HOMEPATH']
ENV['HOMEDRIVE'] + ENV['HOMEDIR']
# File lib/net/netrc.rb, line 122 def Netrc.rcname # use file indicated by NETRC environment variable if defined return ENV['NETRC'] if ENV['NETRC'] dirs = [] files = ['.netrc'] # build candidate list of directories to check pw = Etc.getpwuid dirs << pw.dir if pw dirs << ENV['HOME'] if IS_WIN32 dirs << ENV['USERPROFILE'] dirs << ENV['HOMESHARE'] dirs << ENV['HOMEDRIVE'] + ENV['HOMEPATH'] || '' if ENV['HOMEDRIVE'] files << '_netrc' end # return first found file dirs.compact.each do |dir| files.each do |file| name = File.join(dir, file) return name if File.exist?(name) end end # nothing found nil end
opens .netrc file, returning File object if successful. name is the name of the .netrc file to open. If omitted, rcname is used to locate the file.
returns nil if the file does not exist.
On non-Windows platforms, raises SecurityError if the file is not owned by the current user or if it is readable or writable by other than the current user.
# File lib/net/netrc.rb, line 162 def Netrc.rcopen(name = nil) name ||= rcname or return nil return nil unless File.exist?(name) unless IS_WIN32 s = File.stat(name) raise SecurityError, "Not owner: #{name}" unless s.owned? raise SecurityError, "Bad permissions: #{name}" if s.mode & 077 != 0 end File.open(name, 'r') end
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