I have a bash script, hostlist file and an expect script:
Below is the bash script to take inputs from hostlist file and keep looping ssh for multiple servers.
for x in $(cat hostlist); do
./sudoscript.exp $x
done
Below is the expect cum bash script I want to tun and collect outputs of sudo su - command. I just need to get outputs as '0 or non zero values in a file for successful run/execution of 'sudo su - '. I just need to simulate the execution and check if the command runs successfully or not with out actually changing user to admin by doing sudo su -.
#!/bin/bash
#!/usr/bin/expect
spawn ssh [lindex $argv 0]
expect "$"
send "sudo su -\r" exit ; echo $server:$? >> output
Can someone please suggest to complete the script above.
What exactly are you trying to do?
Maybe you're trying to see if it is possible to become root without a password? If that's the case, try:
for x in $(cat hostlist); do
echo $x
ssh $x sudo -l |egrep -w 'NOPASSWD:.*(ALL|/su)'
echo
done
sudo -l will list what you can run. It requires your password unless you have one or more commands that do not require your password (ssh won't run interactively when called with a command and without the -t flag. This is intentional since we don't want that).
The egrep command limits the results to just what can be done without a password as well as either ALL commands or else su itself. (Note, this won't find su if it's in an alias.)
I'm writing a bash shell script that has to be run with admin permissions (sudo).
I'm running the following commands
sudo -u $SUDO_USER touch /home/$SUDO_USER/.kde/share/config/kcmfonts > /dev/null
sudo -u $SUDO_USER echo "[General]\ndontChangeAASettings=true\nforceFontDPI=96" >> /home/$SUDO_USER/.kde/share/config/kcmfonts
The first command succeeds and creates the file. However the second command keeps erroring with the following:
cannot create /home/username/.kde/share/config/kcmfonts: Permission denied
I can't understand why this keeps erroring on permissions. I'm running the command as the user who invoked sudo so I should have access to write to this file. The kcmfonts file is created successfully.
Can someone help me out?
Consider doing this:
echo "some text" | sudo -u $SUDO_USER tee -a /home/$SUDO_USER/filename
The tee command can assist you with directing the output to the file. tee's -a option is for append (like >>) without it you'll clobber the file (like >).
You don't need to execute the left side with elevated privs (although it is just echo, this is a good thing to form as a habit), you only need the elevated privs for writing to the file. So with this command you're only elevating permissions for tee.
sudo -u $SUDO_USER echo "some text" >> /home/$SUDO_USER/filename
sudo executes the command echo "some text" as `$SUDO_USER".
But the redirection is done under your account, not under the $SUDO_USER account. Redirection is handled by the shell process, which is yours and is not under the control of sudo.
Try this:
sudo -u $SUDO_USER sh -c 'echo "some text" >> /home/$SUDO_USER/filename'
That way, the sh process will be executed by $SUDO_USER, and that's the process that will handle the redirection (and will write to the output file).
Depending on the complexity of the command, you may need to play some games with escaping quotation marks and other special characters. If that's too complex (which it may well be), you can create a script:
$ cat foo.sh
#!/bin/sh
echo "some text" >> /home/$SUDO_USER/filename
$ sudo -u $SUDO_USER ./foo.sh
Now it's the ./foo.sh command (which executes as /bin/sh ./foo.sh) that will run under the $SUDO_USER account, and it should have permission to write to the output file.
Can I run a here document script over ssh on remote machine with interactive mode?
Code example is:
ssh -t xijing#ggzshop.com 'bash -s' <<EOF
sudo ls
......Other big scripts......
EOF
double -t won't work properly as well.
-----------------------------One possible solution:-------------------
After a lot of tries, I come up with following answers:
Script=`cat <<'EOF'
sudo ls
.....Big scripts.....
EOF`
ssh -t user#host ${Script}
which will allow user to type password in.
Solution of Xijing appears to work ok for me. However, I did a couple of cosmetic changes. First, for readability I used "dollar-parentheses" instead of backticks. For another thing I don't offer any explanation: Semicolons were needed to separate multiple commands in Script snippet even though commands are written on separate lines. My test:
Script=$( cat <<'HERE'
hostname;
cat /etc/issue;
sudo id
HERE
)
ssh -t user#host ${Script}
Sudo password will be asked in a normal manner, no need to omit that.
No, I don't think you can run interactive scripts like that.
To achieve what you want, you could create dedicated users for your common admin tasks that can run admin commands with sudo without password. Next, setup ssh key authentication to login as the dedicated users and perform the necessary tasks.
It is not necessary to use semicolons to separate multiple commands in Script if there are quotes around it.
Script="$( cat <<'HERE'
hostname;
cat /etc/issue;
sudo id
HERE
)"
- ssh -t user#host ${Script}
+ ssh -t user#host "${Script}"
# alternative (not recommended)
# set IFS variable to null string to avoid deletion of newlines \n in unquoted variable expansion
export IFS=''
ssh -t user#host ${Script}
This is what was trying to do:
$ wget -qO- www.example.com/script.sh | sh
which quietly downloads the script and prints it to stdout which is then piped to sh. This unfortunately doesn't quite work, failing to wait for user input at various points, aswell as a few syntax errors.
This is what actually works:
$ wget -qOscript www.example.com/script.sh && chmod +x ./script && ./script
But what's the difference?
I'm thinking maybe piping the file doesn't execute the file, but rather executes each line individually, but I'm new to this kind of thing so I don't know.
When you pipe to sh , stdin of that shell/script will be the pipe. Thus the script cannot take e.g. user input from the console. When you run the script normally, stdin is the console - where you can enter input.
You might try telling the shell to be interactive:
$ wget -qO- www.example.com/script.sh | sh -i
I had the same issue, and after tinkering and googling this is what worked for me.
wget -O - www.example.com/script.sh | sh
This is a follow-on question to the How do you use ssh in a shell script? question. If I want to execute a command on the remote machine that runs in the background on that machine, how do I get the ssh command to return? When I try to just include the ampersand (&) at the end of the command it just hangs. The exact form of the command looks like this:
ssh user#target "cd /some/directory; program-to-execute &"
Any ideas? One thing to note is that logins to the target machine always produce a text banner and I have SSH keys set up so no password is required.
I had this problem in a program I wrote a year ago -- turns out the answer is rather complicated. You'll need to use nohup as well as output redirection, as explained in the wikipedia artcle on nohup, copied here for your convenience.
Nohuping backgrounded jobs is for
example useful when logged in via SSH,
since backgrounded jobs can cause the
shell to hang on logout due to a race
condition [2]. This problem can also
be overcome by redirecting all three
I/O streams:
nohup myprogram > foo.out 2> foo.err < /dev/null &
This has been the cleanest way to do it for me:-
ssh -n -f user#host "sh -c 'cd /whereever; nohup ./whatever > /dev/null 2>&1 &'"
The only thing running after this is the actual command on the remote machine
Redirect fd's
Output needs to be redirected with &>/dev/null which redirects both stderr and stdout to /dev/null and is a synonym of >/dev/null 2>/dev/null or >/dev/null 2>&1.
Parantheses
The best way is to use sh -c '( ( command ) & )' where command is anything.
ssh askapache 'sh -c "( ( nohup chown -R ask:ask /www/askapache.com &>/dev/null ) & )"'
Nohup Shell
You can also use nohup directly to launch the shell:
ssh askapache 'nohup sh -c "( ( chown -R ask:ask /www/askapache.com &>/dev/null ) & )"'
Nice Launch
Another trick is to use nice to launch the command/shell:
ssh askapache 'nice -n 19 sh -c "( ( nohup chown -R ask:ask /www/askapache.com &>/dev/null ) & )"'
If you don't/can't keep the connection open you could use screen, if you have the rights to install it.
user#localhost $ screen -t remote-command
user#localhost $ ssh user#target # now inside of a screen session
user#remotehost $ cd /some/directory; program-to-execute &
To detach the screen session: ctrl-a d
To list screen sessions:
screen -ls
To reattach a session:
screen -d -r remote-command
Note that screen can also create multiple shells within each session. A similar effect can be achieved with tmux.
user#localhost $ tmux
user#localhost $ ssh user#target # now inside of a tmux session
user#remotehost $ cd /some/directory; program-to-execute &
To detach the tmux session: ctrl-b d
To list screen sessions:
tmux list-sessions
To reattach a session:
tmux attach <session number>
The default tmux control key, 'ctrl-b', is somewhat difficult to use but there are several example tmux configs that ship with tmux that you can try.
I just wanted to show a working example that you can cut and paste:
ssh REMOTE "sh -c \"(nohup sleep 30; touch nohup-exit) > /dev/null &\""
You can do this without nohup:
ssh user#host 'myprogram >out.log 2>err.log &'
Quickest and easiest way is to use the 'at' command:
ssh user#target "at now -f /home/foo.sh"
I think you'll have to combine a couple of these answers to get what you want. If you use nohup in conjunction with the semicolon, and wrap the whole thing in quotes, then you get:
ssh user#target "cd /some/directory; nohup myprogram > foo.out 2> foo.err < /dev/null"
which seems to work for me. With nohup, you don't need to append the & to the command to be run. Also, if you don't need to read any of the output of the command, you can use
ssh user#target "cd /some/directory; nohup myprogram > /dev/null 2>&1"
to redirect all output to /dev/null.
This worked for me may times:
ssh -x remoteServer "cd yourRemoteDir; ./yourRemoteScript.sh </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1 & "
You can do it like this...
sudo /home/script.sh -opt1 > /tmp/script.out &
It appeared quite convenient for me to have a remote tmux session using the tmux new -d <shell cmd> syntax like this:
ssh someone#elsewhere 'tmux new -d sleep 600'
This will launch new session on elsewhere host and ssh command on local machine will return to shell almost instantly. You can then ssh to the remote host and tmux attach to that session. Note that there's nothing about local tmux running, only remote!
Also, if you want your session to persist after the job is done, simply add a shell launcher after your command, but don't forget to enclose in quotes:
ssh someone#elsewhere 'tmux new -d "~/myscript.sh; bash"'
Actually, whenever I need to run a command on a remote machine that's complicated, I like to put the command in a script on the destination machine, and just run that script using ssh.
For example:
# simple_script.sh (located on remote server)
#!/bin/bash
cat /var/log/messages | grep <some value> | awk -F " " '{print $8}'
And then I just run this command on the source machine:
ssh user#ip "/path/to/simple_script.sh"
If you run remote command without allocating tty, redirect stdout/stderr works, nohup is not necessary.
ssh user#host 'background command &>/dev/null &'
If you use -t to allocate tty to run interactive command along with background command, and background command is the last command, like this:
ssh -t user#host 'bash -c "interactive command; nohup backgroud command &>/dev/null &"'
It's possible that background command doesn't actually start. There's race here:
bash exits after nohup starts. As a session leader, bash exit results in HUP signal sent to nohup process.
nohup ignores HUP signal.
If 1 completes before 2, the nohup process will exit and won't start the background command at all. We need to wait nohup start the background command. A simple workaroung is to just add a sleep:
ssh -t user#host 'bash -c "interactive command; nohup backgroud command &>/dev/null & sleep 1"'
The question was asked and answered years ago, I don't know if openssh behavior changed since then. I was testing on:
OpenSSH_8.6p1, OpenSSL 1.1.1g FIPS 21 Apr 2020
I was trying to do the same thing, but with the added complexity that I was trying to do it from Java. So on one machine running java, I was trying to run a script on another machine, in the background (with nohup).
From the command line, here is what worked: (you may not need the "-i keyFile" if you don't need it to ssh to the host)
ssh -i keyFile user#host bash -c "\"nohup ./script arg1 arg2 > output.txt 2>&1 &\""
Note that to my command line, there is one argument after the "-c", which is all in quotes. But for it to work on the other end, it still needs the quotes, so I had to put escaped quotes within it.
From java, here is what worked:
ProcessBuilder b = new ProcessBuilder("ssh", "-i", "keyFile", "bash", "-c",
"\"nohup ./script arg1 arg2 > output.txt 2>&1 &\"");
Process process = b.start();
// then read from process.getInputStream() and close it.
It took a bit of trial & error to get this working, but it seems to work well now.
YOUR-COMMAND &> YOUR-LOG.log &
This should run the command and assign a process id you can simply tail -f YOUR-LOG.log to see results written to it as they happen. you can log out anytime and the process will carry on
If you are using zsh then use program-to-execute &! is a zsh-specific shortcut to both background and disown the process, such that exiting the shell will leave it running.
A follow-on to #cmcginty's concise working example which also shows how to alternatively wrap the outer command in double quotes. This is how the template would look if invoked from within a PowerShell script (which can only interpolate variables from within double-quotes and ignores any variable expansion when wrapped in single quotes):
ssh user#server "sh -c `"($cmd) &>/dev/null </dev/null &`""
Inner double-quotes are escaped with back-tick instead of backslash. This allows $cmd to be composed by the PowerShell script, e.g. for deployment scripts and automation and the like. $cmd can even contain a multi-line heredoc if composed with unix LF.
First follow this procedure:
Log in on A as user a and generate a pair of authentication keys. Do not enter a passphrase:
a#A:~> ssh-keygen -t rsa
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/a/.ssh/id_rsa):
Created directory '/home/a/.ssh'.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in /home/a/.ssh/id_rsa.
Your public key has been saved in /home/a/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
3e:4f:05:79:3a:9f:96:7c:3b:ad:e9:58:37:bc:37:e4 a#A
Now use ssh to create a directory ~/.ssh as user b on B. (The directory may already exist, which is fine):
a#A:~> ssh b#B mkdir -p .ssh
b#B's password:
Finally append a's new public key to b#B:.ssh/authorized_keys and enter b's password one last time:
a#A:~> cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh b#B 'cat >> .ssh/authorized_keys'
b#B's password:
From now on you can log into B as b from A as a without password:
a#A:~> ssh b#B
then this will work without entering a password
ssh b#B "cd /some/directory; program-to-execute &"
I think this is what you need:
At first you need to install sshpass on your machine.
then you can write your own script:
while read pass port user ip; do
sshpass -p$pass ssh -p $port $user#$ip <<ENDSSH1
COMMAND 1
.
.
.
COMMAND n
ENDSSH1
done <<____HERE
PASS PORT USER IP
. . . .
. . . .
. . . .
PASS PORT USER IP
____HERE