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lshell is a shell coded in Python, that lets you restrict a user's environment to limited sets of commands, choose to enable/disable any command over SSH (e.g. SCP, SFTP, rsync, etc.), log user's commands, implement timing restriction, and more.

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lshell

lshell is a limited shell coded in Python, that lets you restrict a user's environment to limited sets of commands, choose to enable/disable any command over SSH (e.g. SCP, SFTP, rsync, etc.), log user's commands, implement timing restriction, and more.

Installation

Install via pip

To install limited-shell directly via pip, use the following command:

pip install limited-shell

This will install limited-shell from PyPI along with all its dependencies.

To uninstall, you can run:

pip uninstall limited-shell

Build from source and install locally

If you'd like to build and install limited-shell from the source code (useful if you're making modifications or testing new features), you can follow these steps:

python3 -m pip install build --user
python3 -m build
pip install . --break-system-packages

Uninstall lshell

To uninstall, you can run:

pip uninstall limited-shell

Usage

Via binary

To launch lshell, just execute lshell specifying the location of your configuration file:

lshell --config /path/to/configuration/file

Using lshell in Scripts

You can use lshell directly within a script by specifying the lshell path in the shebang. Ensure your script has a .lsh extension to indicate it is for lshell, and make sure to include the shebang #!/usr/bin/lshell at the top of your script.

For example:

#!/usr/bin/lshell
echo "test"

Configuration

User shell configuration

In order to log a user, you will have to add them to the lshell group:

usermod -aG lshell username

In order to configure a user account to use lshell by default, you must:

chsh -s /usr/bin/lshell user_name

You might need to ensure that lshell is listed in /etc/shells.

lshell.conf

Allowed list

lshell.conf presents a template configuration file. See etc/lshell.conf or the man file for more information.

You can allow commands specifying commands with exact arguments in the allowed list. This means you can define specific commands along with their arguments that are permitted. Commands without arguments can also be specified, allowing any arguments to be passed.

For example:

allowed: ['ls', 'echo asd', 'telnet localhost']

This will:

  • Allow the ls command with any arguments.
  • Allow echo asd but will reject echo with any other arguments (e.g., echo qwe will be rejected).
  • Allow telnet localhost, but not telnet with other hosts (e.g., telnet 192.168.0.1 will be rejected).

Commands that do not include arguments (e.g., ls) can be used with any arguments, while commands specified with arguments (e.g., echo asd) must be used exactly as specified.

User profiles

A [default] profile is available for all users using lshell. Nevertheless, you can create a [username] section or a [grp:groupname] section to customize users' preferences.

Order of priority when loading preferences is the following:

  1. User configuration
  2. Group configuration
  3. Default configuration

The primary goal of lshell, is to be able to create shell accounts with ssh access and restrict their environment to a couple a needed commands and path.

Example

For example User 'foo' and user 'bar' both belong to the 'users' UNIX group:

  • User 'foo': - must be able to access /usr and /var but not /usr/local - use all commands in their PATH except 'su' - has a warning counter set to 5 - has their home path set to '/home/users'

  • User 'bar': - must be able to access /etc and /usr but not /usr/local - is allowed default commands plus 'ping' minus 'ls' - strictness is set to 1 (meaning he is not allowed to type an unknown command)

In this case, my configuration file will look something like this:

# CONFIGURATION START
[global]
logpath         : /var/log/lshell/
loglevel        : 2

[default]
allowed         : ['ls','pwd']
forbidden       : [';', '&', '|'] 
warning_counter : 2
timer           : 0
path            : ['/etc', '/usr']
env_path        : ':/sbin:/usr/foo'
scp             : 1 # or 0
sftp            : 1 # or 0
overssh         : ['rsync','ls']
aliases         : {'ls':'ls --color=auto','ll':'ls -l'}

[grp:users]
warning_counter : 5
overssh         : - ['ls']

[foo]
allowed         : 'all' - ['su']
path            : ['/var', '/usr'] - ['/usr/local']
home_path       : '/home/users'

[bar]
allowed         : + ['ping'] - ['ls'] 
path            : - ['/usr/local']
strict          : 1
scpforce        : '/home/bar/uploads/'
# CONFIGURATION END

More information

More information can be found in the manpage: man -l man/lshell.1 or man lshell.

Running Tests in Docker Containers

You can run the tests in parallel across multiple Linux distributions using Docker Compose. This is helpful for ensuring compatibility and consistency across environments. The following command will launch test services for Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and Alpine distributions simultaneously:

docker-compose up ubuntu_tests debian_tests fedora_tests alpine_tests

Each service will run in parallel and execute the pytest, pylint, and flake8 tests specified in the docker-compose.yml.

Contributions

To contribute, open an issue or send a pull request.

Please use github for all requests: https://github.com/ghantoos/lshell/issues

About

lshell is a shell coded in Python, that lets you restrict a user's environment to limited sets of commands, choose to enable/disable any command over SSH (e.g. SCP, SFTP, rsync, etc.), log user's commands, implement timing restriction, and more.

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