7.6 KiB
title: "Editing remote files with Emacs, comfortably" description: "Edit remote files with Emacs using SSH and a wrapper for emacsclient." date: "2019-05-08T15:59:00+02:00" draft: false tags: ["emacs", "ssh"] ---
It took me a long time to collect all the bits and pieces I needed to make editing remote files with Emacs work the way I want, with a simple command that works via SSH. I hope I can save you some time by stitching it here together into a tutorial. I assume you use use-package in my examples.
Emacs server & TRAMP
We start with Emacs’s good old inbuilt
server. The
default is to use an UNIX domain socket; We have to change that to TCP to be able to
receive input from our remote hosts. The server will bind to 127.0.0.1. Pick a
strong password that is exactly 64 characters long and a port
above 1023. I
chose 51313 because if we substitute the digits for letters in the Latin
alphabet, we get E M A C. The server will create the file
~/.emacs.d/server/server
with the IP, port and password in it. This file needs
to be distributed to every host that should be able to access the server.
{{< highlight elisp >}} ;; Run server if: ;; - Our EUID is not 0, ;; - We are not logged in via SSH, ;; - It is not already running. (unless (equal (user-real-uid) 0) (unless (getenv "SSH_CONNECTION") (use-package server :init (setq server-use-tcp t server-port 51313 server-auth-key ; 64 chars, saved in ~/.emacs.d/server/server. "looph8oow3Aph5ahje1eek1aish3Ohthu4Paengae0iketohGhaemi2iek5ae4ee") :config (unless (eq (server-running-p) t) ; Run server if not t. (server-start))))) {{< / highlight >}}
The server expects filenames as input, we can’t just feed it the file. The
package TRAMP allow us to use remote file
paths with Emacs with the help of SSH. I have modified
tramp-password-prompt-regexp
to look for verification code prompts from the
Google Authenticator PAM
module.
Note
|
My modification overwrites the original value of tramp-password-prompt-regexp ,
which has a bunch of localized variants of “password” in it. You can view the
original value with C-h v tramp-password-prompt-regexp .
|
{{< highlight elisp >}} (use-package tramp :custom (tramp-use-ssh-controlmaster-options nil) ; Don't override SSH config. (tramp-default-method "ssh") ; ssh is faster than scp and supports ports. (tramp-password-prompt-regexp ; Add verification code support. (concat "^.*" (regexp-opt '("passphrase" "Passphrase" "password" "Password" "Verification code") t) ".*:\0? *"))) {{< / highlight >}}
SSH
In order to avoid having to enter our password again and again, we can edit our
SSH configuration to reuse existing
connections. The following configuration will create an UNIX domain socket per
host and re-use that for all further connections to this host. It will also
forward the Emacs server port, that we picked earlier, to every host we
connect to. We will have to create ~/.ssh/sockets/
before we use the new
configuration.
Warning
|
These sockets allow for unauthenticated access to every host you are connected to. While this is very convenient, it is also a security risk. The sockets are only usable by your user and root (file mode 0600). |
Warning
|
Everyone on the remote host can connect to the port you forward. They will still need the password, but you might not want to do this if you don’t trust the other users. |
{{< highlight cfg >}} Host fc??:* fd??:* 192.168.* server1.example.com server2.example.com # Reuse connections. ControlMaster auto # Close socket 600s after after last connection closes. ControlPersist 600 # Set path for sockets. ControlPath ~/.ssh/sockets/%r@%h-%p # Forward Emacs-server port. RemoteForward 127.0.0.1:51313 127.0.0.1:51313 {{< / highlight >}}
Wrapper for emacsclient
Using file paths in TRAMP notation gets annoying really quick. Thankfully Andy Skelton created a wrapper script; I extended it with the ability to become root using sudo and an option to use it with local servers. This file needs to be distributed to every host that should be able to access the server.
{{< highlight bash >}} #!/bin/bash # Open file on a remote Emacs server. # https://andy.wordpress.com/2013/01/03/automatic-emacsclient/ with added sudo. params=() sudo=0 local=0 for p in "${@}"; do if [[ "${p}" == "-n" ]]; then params+=( "${p}" ) elif [[ "${p:0:1}" == "+" ]]; then params+=( "${p}" ) elif [[ "${p}" == "--sudo" ]]; then # This only works if the user can access the file. sudo=1 elif [[ "${p}" == "--local" ]]; then # Use local server, for use with --sudo. local=1 else if [[ $(id -u) -eq 0 || ${sudo} -eq 1 ]]; then if [[ ${local} -eq 0 ]]; then params+=( "/ssh:$(hostname -f)|sudo:$(hostname -f):"$(readlink -f $p) ) else params+=( "/sudo:localhost:"$(readlink -f $p) ) fi else params+=( "/ssh:$(hostname -f):"$(readlink -f $p) ) fi fi done emacsclient -f ~/.emacs.d/server/server "${params[@]}" {{< / highlight >}}
Shell configuration
Now we should set VISUAL
and EDITOR
to the wrapper and set up some nice,
short aliases. In my examples I assume we called our wrapper emacsremote
. The
argument -f
causes emacsclient to not try to use UNIX domain sockets (and
print an error message).
Note
|
I wrote the following code for Zsh, but it should also work for Bash. |
{{< highlight zsh >}} # Set preferred editor. if which emacsclient > /dev/null; then VISUAL="$(which emacsclient) -f ~/.emacs.d/server/server -a emacs" if [[ -n "${SSH_CONNECTION}" ]]; then # Logged in via SSH. if which emacsremote > /dev/null; then VISUAL="$(which emacsremote)" fi elif [[ $(id -u) -eq 0 ]] && which emacsremote > /dev/null; then # Edit files as root in the Emacs instance run by the current user. VISUAL="$(which emacsremote) --sudo --local" fi elif which emacs > /dev/null; then VISUAL="$(which emacs)" elif which vim > /dev/null; then VISUAL="$(which vim)" elif which nano > /dev/null; then VISUAL="$(which nano)" fi export VISUAL export EDITOR="${VISUAL}" {{< / highlight >}}
{{< highlight zsh >}} if [[ "${VISUAL}" =~ "emacs(client|remote)" ]]; then alias e="${VISUAL} -n" if [[ "${VISUAL}" =~ "emacsremote$" ]]; then # Don't block the terminal until the file is closed. alias se="${VISUAL} -n --sudo" elif which emacsremote >/dev/null && [[ -z "${SSH_CONNECTION}" ]]; then # Edit files as root in the Emacs instance run by the current user. alias se="$(which emacsremote) -n --sudo --local" fi else alias e="${VISUAL}" alias se="sudo ${VISUAL}" fi {{< / highlight >}}
To detect SSH connections after using sudo -i
, we have to tell sudo to
preserve the environment variable SSH_CONNECTION
.
{{< highlight zsh >}} echo 'Defaults env_keep += "SSH_CONNECTION"' >> /etc/sudoers.d/ssh_vars {{< / highlight >}}
Updates
-
Updated on 2019-05-12 to include the
-f
argument for emacsclient.