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分类: LINUX

2009-12-10 09:44:03

(1)ssh连接正常,但是当使用sftp或者scp时出现Received message too long (or "Bad packet length") 1399791731

$ sftp user@yourIP
Connecting to XX.XX.XX.XX...
user@XX.XX.XX.XX's password:
Received message too long 1399791731

这个通常是由于在服务器端,有过多的输出造成的,例如在~/.bashrc下加入了echo命令,
$cat ~/.bashrc
So so so lag.
So so so lag.
So so so lag.
So so so lag.
这个时候就会出现以上错误。

附上ssh FAQ相关部分,

SSH Frequently Asked Questions

When I try to use sftp or scp2, I get a message like this:

Received message too long (or "Bad packet length") 1416586337

and the connection fails. What's wrong?


sftp and scp2 both actually work by running ssh in a subprocess, to connect to the remote host and run the file-transfer server (usually named sftp-server). For instance, the command sftp server might result in the following command being run (OpenSSH):

ssh server -s -oForwardX11=no -oForwardAgent=no -oProtocol=2 sftp

scp2/sftp and sftp-server use a special file-transfer protocol, which they speak over this SSH session. The protocol is in fact based on the same packet protocol used by SSH.

In order for this to work, the SSH session must be "clean" — that is, it must have on it only information transmitted by the programs at either end. What often happens, though, is that there are statements in either the system or per-user shell startup files on the server (.bashrc, .profile, /etc/csh.cshrc, .login, etc.) which output text messages on login, intended to be read by humans (like fortune, echo "Hi there!", etc.). Such code should only produce output on interactive logins, when there is a tty attached to standard input. If it does not make this test, it will insert these text messages where they don't belong: in this case, polluting the protocol stream between scp2/sftp and sftp-server. The first four bytes of the text gets interpreted as a 32-bit packet length, which will usually be a wildly large number, provoking the error message above. Notice that:

1416586337 decimal = 546F6461 hex = "Toda" ASCII

suggesting a string beginning "Today..." (or maybe "Thank-you" in transliterated Hebrew).

The reason the shell startup files are relevant at all, is that sshd employs the user's shell when starting any programs on the user's behalf (using e.g. /bin/sh -c "command"). This is a Unix tradition, and has advantages:

  • The user's usual setup (command aliases, environment variables, umask, etc.) are in effect when remote commands are run.
  • The common practice of setting an account's shell to /bin/false to disable it will prevent the owner from running any commands, should authentication still accidentally succeed for some reason.
There has been a lot of argument about whether this is the right behavior, since having sshd instead exec sftp-server directly, without the shell, would avoid this frequent problem. I personally feel that using the shell is the right thing to do: having startup files that emit text messages when there is no user to read them is just a mistake. SSH2 has a Boolean configuration statement AllowCshrcSourcingWithSubsystems, set false by default, which causes sshd2 to pass the -f flag to the shell when running subsystem programs (sftp-server is run as an SSH-2 "subsystem"). With most shells, -f causes the shell to omit the normal startup file processing. This prevents the corruption problem, but introduces other difficulties. With file transfers, the umask setting is important, and people are confused when they find that the umask they set in their ~/.login file works with random remote commands (e.g. ssh server touch foo), but is mysteriously ignored when using scp2/sftp.
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