Copyright (C) 2020 Kenneth Aaron.
flyingrhino AT orcon DOT net DOT nz
Freedom makes a better world: released under GNU GPLv3.
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.en.html
This software can be used by anyone at no cost, however, if you like using my software and can support - please donate money to a children's hospital of your choice.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation: GNU GPLv3. You must include this entire text with your distribution.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
This is the easiest way to install nccm, you can of course install and use nccm in any way you wish.
- Clone the project from the git repository:
git clone https://github.com/flyingrhinonz/nccm nccm.git
cd nccm.git/nccm/
sudo install -m 755 nccm -t /usr/local/bin/
The ssh connections/config file nccm.yml
should be
copied to any one of the following locations, and is
loaded from the first location found:
~/.config/nccm/nccm.yml
~/.nccm.yml
~/nccm.yml
/etc/nccm.yml
Tips on nccm.yml location - if you're a single user then placement of nccm.yml doesn't matter and it's probably easiest to place it in one of the home dir locations. In a multiuser system, placing nccm.yml in each user's home dir will allow each user to use their personalized settings if nccm.yml is present, and if not present then fallback to default settings from /etc/nccm.yml.
nccm requires Python3 to be installed on your machine, which should already be present on most Linux boxes. Most Python library dependencies are already present as part of Python3 however the following may not be present in which case you need to install them manually.
On Debian or similar use apt:
If you want to only use the distro's packages you can do:
sudo apt install python3-yaml yamllint
Or if you prefer to install PyYAML from pip3:
sudo apt install python3-pip yamllint
pip3 install --user PyYAML
On Fedora or similar use dnf:
sudo dnf install python3-pip yamllint
pip3 install --user PyYAML
Before starting, edit the nccm.yml
file and add your
own ssh connections. Formatting YAML is easy and the file
you downloaded from the project page is well documented
and has examples of every supported scenario.
Follow the structure in the file - provide the connection
name at the beginning of a line and sub config items
indented by two spaces. Don't forget the colons - these
are part of the YAML language.
Don't worry about ordering your SSH session blocks in any specific way because nccm gives you "sort by" options within the program.
Once you've finished editing, check your work with yamllint:
yamllint nccm.yml
If no errors are returned, then you've formatted your file correctly, and it's safe to continue.
If nccm is accessible from your path and is executable, typing nccm is all that's required to launch the TUI (terminal user interface). If you see Python 3 exceptions, check whether you have satisfied the dependencies. Any exceptions should mention any package that's missing.
This file is mostly used for ssh connection details, but also supports program settings as follows.
These are global settings, affecting all sessions.
nccm_config_controlmode
:
Controls the cursor movement mode. Two modes are supported:
- std: Cursor keys move the marker as expected.
- focus: Marker and list move independently. The list is designed to move while the marker remains fixed unless it is moved manually.
nccm_config_loglevel
:
Controls log level of messages sent by nccm to syslog.
Use this for debugging. Default level is warning.
Supported levels: debug, info, warning, error, critical
nccm_config_keepalive
:
Sends a message through the encrypted channel every
n seconds (0 to disable) to prevent idle sessions from
being disconnected.
You can customize this on a per-connection basis by using
the setting keepalive: n
(optional).
nccm_config_identity
For public key authentication, normally ssh will load your
private key from the default locations. You can force ssh
to use your own file by putting it's path here. Or set to
false
to let ssh do it's own thing.
You can customize this on a per-connection basis by using
the setting identity: path
(optional).
nccm_config_sshprogram
By default nccm will use the ssh program as found in your
path. If you want to explicitly set the path to ssh, or
you want to use a different program - set it here.
This is a global setting that affects all your connections.
nccm_config_promptuser
By default nccm will connect immediately to the selected
server. Set this value to true
if you want nccm to
prompt the user to press Enter before a connection is made.
In nccm_config_controlmode == std mode:
- Up/Down arrows: Move the marker the traditional way
- Home/End: Jump marker to list first/last entry
- PgUp/PgDn: Page up/down in the list
In nccm_config_controlmode == focus mode:
- Up/Down arrows: Scroll the list up/down
- Home/End: Jump to list first/last entry
- PgUp/PgDn: Page up/down in the list
- Shift Up/Down: Move the marker up/down
- Shift Left/Right: Move the marker to display top/bottom
In both modes:
- Left/Right arrows: Scroll the list horizontally
- Tab: Switch between text boxes
- Enter or Ctrl-m: Connect to the selected entry
- Ctrl-h: Display this help menu
- Ctrl-k: Toggle cursor mode std <--> focus
- Ctrl-q or
- Ctrl-c or
- Ctrl-d: Quit the program
- F1-F5 or !@#$% : Sort by respective column (1-5)
Conn
textbox:
Accepts integer values only (and !@#$% for sorting).
Pressing Enter here will connect to this connection ID,
as corresponding to a valid value in the full
unfiltered list (even if that particular connection
is hidden by unmatching text in the Filter
textbox),
ignoring everything else (Filter
textbox, highlighted
line) - even if they don't match.
If this textbox is empty, it will connect to the
connection marked by the highlighted line.
Filter
textbox:
Type any filter text here.
Filtering occurs by searching text present in all visible
columns (does not search in any of the non-visble
settings you made in nccm.yml for example identity or
customargs).
Accepts any printable character and space.
Text is forced to lowercase, and the resulting filtering
is case insensitive.
Pressing Enter will connect to the connection highlighed
in red. This also works if you're in the Conn
textbox
and it's empty.
Textboxes accept backspace to delete one char backwards, inline editing not supported.
Displayed connection list is filtered by the combined
contents of all the fields as you type in real time.
Spaces delimit filters if typed into Filter
textbox
and all filter entries are AND'ed.
nccm_config_controlmode == focus was inspired by vim where you can move your display up/down around your work while keeping your current line selected.
-
Supply initial filtering text. These are considered part of the Filter field and are AND'ed. Examples:
nccm abc xyz
nccm -d ab cd ef
If there is only one match - nccm will connect to it immediately. -
-h or --help : Display the help message.
-
-d or --debug : Force debug verbosity logging, ignoring any other logging settings everywhere else.
-
-m or --man : Display the man page.
F1-F5 keys sort by the respective fields 1-5.
The display shows 4 visible columms but we treat
username and server address as separate columns for
sorting purposes.
The Fn keys may be captured by certain GUIs so we have
an alternative - when focused on Conn
window, press
Shift-1 through 5 (!@#$%) to toggle sorting by the
respective field number. If you type these special
characters in the Filter
textbox they become standard
filters just like any printable character.
Pressing the same key again reverses the sort order.
Column # Column name Sort Alternate sort
-------- ----------- ---- --------------
1 List serial # F1 !
2 Friendly name F2 @
3 User name F3 #
4 Server address F4 $
5 Comment F5 %
From within nccm: use Ctrl-h
to display the help text.
From the command line: use nccm -h
or nccm --help
.
There isn't a man page yet so man nccm
won't work.
Will not store passwords. Please don't request this
feature because it won't be added.
Either use ssh passwordless login (by placing your
public key on the server in .ssh/authorized_keys
- tip:
look up ssh-copy-id
) or store your password in a
password manager and paste it when prompted.
Does not like window resizing and exits gracefully displaying an error message. It's safe to resize the window once connection establishment is in progress or after connected to your server.
Does not support highlighting filter keywords in search results because this results in a messy and confusing display once more than a couple keywords are used.
Text entry is limited to the length of the textboxes which in turn are dictated by the width of your window. This should be enough for most use cases though.
Starting nccm:
The most common problem is missing Python3 dependencies.
Run nccm and read the exception message - it will tell
you what's missing.
The second most common problem is different nccm and
nccm.yml versions. This usually happens if you download
a newer nccm version and use your existing and older
nccm.yml file although the reverse is true too. The error
will normally be in the Load
method and the resulting
exception will resemble something like this (the line
number will most probably be different):
File "/usr/local/bin/nccm", line 481, in Load
.
If this happens, best is to backup your nccm.yml then
download both nccm and nccm.yml, verify that nccm now
works properly, then update the newly downloaded nccm.yml
from your backup copy.
Another common problem is user errors in the nccm.yml file:
try yamllint nccm.yml
. If yamllint passes and
nccm still fails: run as nccm -d
and check syslog for
errors - you may see a message about the connection item
line that fails or at least the last line that succeeded.
Logging:
Look at your syslog file for nccm entries. Depending upon
the verbosity level set in the config file you may not see
much if at all anything.
By default the production level of the script logs WARNING
and above which results in syslog silence until something
bad happens.
Very long log lines are split into multiple lines, with
subsequent lines (not including the first) being prepended
by ....!!LINEWRAPPED!!
.
Increase logging verbosity level to debug using the
-d
or --debug
command line arguments.
To permanently increase logging verbosity change this line
in the nccm.yml
config file to debug:
nccm_config_loglevel: debug
This only comes into effect after the config file has
successfully loaded (does not change the log level for
code that runs before loading the config file).
And to log stuff that happens before the config file is
loaded and before the argument parser sets the debug level,
change this line inside the nccm code:
LogLevel = logging.DEBUG
Extra logging controls can be found in the code under the
Variables that control logging
section.
Also - more debugging calls exist but are commented out in the code due to too much logging. Enable them as required.
If you find bugs please update to the latest version of
nccm first (this may include updating your yaml file in
case the format changed). If the bug persists please report
it through the issues
tab in github.
Take something good and make it better! The code is heavily commented, with the hope that it will make life easier for modders and forkers.
The config file is simple yaml. If you already have a collection of logins elsewhere in an accessible format - writing a script to convert and append fields to nccm.yml is easy.
This program aims to do one thing well - lets you make SSH connections from an ncurses based manager with minimum distraction. Feature requests that keep nccm on focus will be considered.
Big thanks goes to Andrew P. for suggesting features and submitting improvements.