A minimalist Flask extension that serves as a RESTful/HTTP wrapper for python's subprocess API.
- Convert any command-line tool into a REST API service.
- Execute pre-defined shell commands asynchronously and securely via flask's endpoints with dynamic arguments, file upload, callback function capabilities.
- Designed for binary to binary/HTTP communication, development, prototyping, remote control and more.
- Set a script that runs on a succesful POST request to an endpoint of your choice. See Example code.
- Map a base command to an endpoint and pass dynamic arguments to it. See Example code.
- Can also process multiple uploaded files in one command. See Example code.
- This is useful for internal docker-to-docker communications if you have different binaries distributed in micro-containers. See real-life example.
- You can define a callback function/ use signals to listen for process completion. See Example code.
- Maybe want to pass some additional context to the callback function ?
- Maybe intercept on completion and update the result ? See Example code
- You can also apply View Decorators to the exposed endpoint. See Example code.
Note: This extension is primarily meant for executing long-running shell commands/scripts (like nmap, code-analysis' tools) in background from an HTTP request and getting the result at a later time.
- Read the Quickstart from the documentation to get started!
- I also highly recommend the Examples section.
- CHANGELOG.
- Python:
>=v3.6 - Flask
- Flask-Executor
$ pip install flask flask_shell2httpCreate a file called app.py.
from flask import Flask from flask_executor import Executor from flask_shell2http import Shell2HTTP # Flask application instance app = Flask(__name__) executor = Executor(app) shell2http = Shell2HTTP(app=app, executor=executor, base_url_prefix="/commands/") def my_callback_fn(context, future): # optional user-defined callback function print(context, future.result()) shell2http.register_command(endpoint="saythis", command_name="echo", callback_fn=my_callback_fn, decorators=[])Run the application server with, $ flask run -p 4000.
With <10 lines of code, we succesfully mapped the shell command echo to the endpoint /commands/saythis.
This section demonstrates how we can now call/ execute commands over HTTP that we just mapped in the example above.
$ curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"args": ["Hello", "World!"]}' http://localhost:4000/commands/saythisor using python's requests module,
# You can also add a timeout if you want, default value is 3600 seconds data = {"args": ["Hello", "World!"], "timeout": 60} resp = requests.post("http://localhost:4000/commands/saythis", json=data) print("Result:", resp.json())Note: You can see the JSON schema for the POST request here.
returns JSON,
{ "key": "ddbe0a94", "result_url": "http://localhost:4000/commands/saythis?key=ddbe0a94&wait=false", "status": "running" }Then using this key you can query for the result or just by going to the result_url,
$ curl http://localhost:4000/commands/saythis?key=ddbe0a94&wait=true # wait=true so we do not have to pollReturns result in JSON,
{ "report": "Hello World!\n", "key": "ddbe0a94", "start_time": 1593019807.7754705, "end_time": 1593019807.782958, "process_time": 0.00748753547668457, "returncode": 0, "error": null }This was initially made to integrate various command-line tools easily with Intel Owl, which I am working on as part of Google Summer of Code.
The name was inspired by the awesome folks over at msoap/shell2http.