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// Copyright 2015 The Vanadium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// This file was auto-generated via go generate.
// DO NOT UPDATE MANUALLY
/*
Command vsh runs the Vanadium shell, a Tunnel client that can be used to run
shell commands or start an interactive shell on a remote tunneld server.
To open an interactive shell, use:
vsh <object name>
To run a shell command, use:
vsh <object name> <command to run>
The -L flag will forward connections from a local port to a remote address
through the tunneld service. The flag value is localAddress,remoteAddress. E.g.
-L :14141,www.google.com:80
The -R flag will forward connections from a remote port on the tunneld service
to a local address. The flag value is remoteAddress,localAddress. E.g.
-R :14141,www.google.com:80
vsh can't be used directly with tools like rsync because vanadium object names
don't look like traditional hostnames, which rsync doesn't understand. For
compatibility with such tools, vsh has a special feature that allows passing the
vanadium object name via the VSH_NAME environment variable.
$ VSH_NAME=<object name> rsync -avh -e vsh /foo/* v23:/foo/
In this example, the "v23" host will be substituted with $VSH_NAME by vsh and
rsync will work as expected.
Usage:
vsh [flags] <object name> [command]
<object name> is the Vanadium object name of the server to connect to.
[command] is the shell command and args to run, for non-interactive vsh.
The vsh flags are:
-L=[]
Forward local to remote, format is "localAddress,remoteAddress". May be
repeated.
-N=false
Do not execute a shell. Only do port forwarding.
-R=[]
Forward remote to local, format is "remoteAddress,localAddress". May be
repeated.
-T=false
Disable pseudo-terminal allocation.
-local-protocol=tcp
Local network protocol for port forwarding.
-remote-protocol=tcp
Remote network protocol for port forwarding.
-t=false
Force allocation of pseudo-terminal.
The global flags are:
-alsologtostderr=true
log to standard error as well as files
-log_backtrace_at=:0
when logging hits line file:N, emit a stack trace
-log_dir=
if non-empty, write log files to this directory
-logtostderr=false
log to standard error instead of files
-max_stack_buf_size=4292608
max size in bytes of the buffer to use for logging stack traces
-metadata=<just specify -metadata to activate>
Displays metadata for the program and exits.
-stderrthreshold=2
logs at or above this threshold go to stderr
-time=false
Dump timing information to stderr before exiting the program.
-v=0
log level for V logs
-v23.credentials=
directory to use for storing security credentials
-v23.i18n-catalogue=
18n catalogue files to load, comma separated
-v23.namespace.root=[/(dev.v.io:r:vprod:service:mounttabled)@ns.dev.v.io:8101]
local namespace root; can be repeated to provided multiple roots
-v23.proxy=
object name of proxy service to use to export services across network
boundaries
-v23.tcp.address=
address to listen on
-v23.tcp.protocol=wsh
protocol to listen with
-v23.vtrace.cache-size=1024
The number of vtrace traces to store in memory.
-v23.vtrace.collect-regexp=
Spans and annotations that match this regular expression will trigger trace
collection.
-v23.vtrace.dump-on-shutdown=true
If true, dump all stored traces on runtime shutdown.
-v23.vtrace.sample-rate=0
Rate (from 0.0 to 1.0) to sample vtrace traces.
-v23.vtrace.v=0
The verbosity level of the log messages to be captured in traces
-vmodule=
comma-separated list of globpattern=N settings for filename-filtered logging
(without the .go suffix). E.g. foo/bar/baz.go is matched by patterns baz or
*az or b* but not by bar/baz or baz.go or az or b.*
-vpath=
comma-separated list of regexppattern=N settings for file pathname-filtered
logging (without the .go suffix). E.g. foo/bar/baz.go is matched by patterns
foo/bar/baz or fo.*az or oo/ba or b.z but not by foo/bar/baz.go or fo*az
*/
package main