How do you use ssh in a shell script?
Asked Answered
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5

19

When I try to use an ssh command in a shell script, the command just sits there. Do you have an example of how to use ssh in a shell script?

Blotto answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:5 Comment(0)
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39

Depends on what you want to do, and how you use it. If you just want to execute a command remotely and safely on another machine, just use

ssh user@host command

for example

ssh user@host ls

In order to do this safely you need to either ask the user for the password during runtime, or set up keys on the remote host.

Dire answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:19 Comment(1)
+1 for completeness, simplicity, and conciseness ... with an example to boot!Wry
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23

First, you need to make sure you've set up password-less (public key login). There are at least two flavors of ssh with slightly different configuration file formats. Check the ssh manpage on your system, consult you local sysadmin or head over to How do I setup Public-Key Authentication?.

To run ssh in batch mode (such as within a shell script), you need to pass a command you want to be run. The syntax is:

ssh host command

If you want to run more than one command at the same time, use quotes and semicolons:

ssh host "command1; command2"

The quotes are needed to protect the semicolons from the shell interpreter. If you left them out, only the first command would be run remotely and all the rest would be run on the local machine.

Blotto answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:34 Comment(1)
Does this exist on Mac OS or is this just a Linux thing? And yes, I did just read how to get this hat. Wanted to post a meaningful comment though.Bellabelladonna
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2

You need to put your SSH public key into the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file on the remote host. Then you'll be able to SSH to that host password-less.

Alternatively you can use ssh-agent. I would recommend against storing the password in the script.

Liven answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:23 Comment(0)
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0

You can use expect command to populate the username/password info.

Blackstock answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:18 Comment(1)
Do you mean the export command? it can be used to set the username (LOGNAME or USER) but imo not the password.Lamarckian
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-3

The easiest way is using a certificate for the user that runs the script.

A more complex one implies adding to stdin the password when the shell command asks for it. Expect, perl libraries, show to the user the prompt asking the password (if is interactive, at least), there are a lot of choices.

Bunch answered 26/8, 2008 at 22:26 Comment(1)
I dont get it, sorry. I do not wonder you have been down-voted. IMHO you should try to be more specific, as it seems that you are guessing around. That surely helps no-one, to be honest.Baker

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