Bash extract user for a particular host from ssh config file
Asked Answered
S

3

9

I'm writing a bash script where I need to obtain a particular user from an ssh config file. The ssh config file looks a little something like this:

HOST blag
    HostName blag.net.au
    Port 2683
    User blaguser
Host bloo
  User ABCDEF
  IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
HOST biff
    HostName biff.net.au
    Port 2683
    User biffuser

I want to obtain the string 'ABCDEF' and put it in a variable, by searching for Host bloo.

I was able to use the answer at https://superuser.com/questions/791374/get-variable-values-from-config-file/791387#791387?newreg=6626dd5535194d0180a91b6ace31e16f to read the config file but it assigns the array with the last host entry in the file.

I'm able to delete the host entry with this answer How can I remove a Host entry from an ssh config file?. The sed command here could be edited to extract the correct User but I'm not sure precisely how

I'm having a lot of trouble with it. Can anyone assist? An answer which uses sed would be preferable.

Stites answered 11/7, 2016 at 10:8 Comment(3)
var=$(awk '/^Host bloo$/{x=1}x&&/User/{print $2;exit}' ssh.conf)Eppes
@Eppes Noice. Works perfect, if you add this as an answer I'll accept it.Stites
Note that openssh config is not case sensitive, which might get you fooled. Using ssh itself will shield you from these details. Check my answer below.Do
D
11

You can use ssh configuration test mode to parse the configuration file and return you the expected value:

ssh -G hostname | grep "^user "

This should work since openssh-6.8.

Do answered 11/7, 2016 at 11:0 Comment(3)
I have version 6.6.1 sadly.Stites
2 years later, found my own question again but this time running OpenSSH 7.4 so this answer is better. Just be careful about checking for a hostname that doesn't exist in the config. It'll return whatever user you run the command as. That's pretty easy to check for but you might be expecting nothing.Stites
If you have a Host * with a User set it will always be that one no matter what.Hollyhock
G
4

Adding to @Jakuje's correct answer. This one will return only the username

$ ssh -G hostname | grep -m1 -oP "(?<=user ).*"
ubuntu

where grep parameters mean

-m1 - stop reading after first matches

-o - print only the matching part of the line

-P - use Perl compatible positive look behind regex

Generate answered 7/4, 2020 at 22:8 Comment(1)
Not really of concern here, but I guess this regex will be quite slow. You can make it a lot easier with cut: ssh -G hostname | grep "^user " | head -1 | cut -d " " -f2-Cogitable
S
3

As per 123's comment above:

var=$(awk '/^Host bloo$/{x=1}x&&/User/{print $2;exit}' ssh.conf)

That will assign value ABCDEF to var.

Stites answered 15/7, 2016 at 9:36 Comment(0)

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