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What is the shell command to generate a SSH key, but provide the passphrase as part of the command instead of standard input for automating this?
For example (pseudo code):
ssh-keygen -f ./id_rsa -t rsa --passphrase=my-secret-here
Thanks.
From man ssh-keygen:
-N new_passphrase
Provides the new passphrase.
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Closed 2 years ago.
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I have remote red-hat 5.4 machine where I am able to execute
sudo lvdisplay
command locally using xyz user but while executing the same command remotely using xyz user through sshpass, I am getting the result as
sudo: lvdisplay: command not found.
The command I am executing is like
sshpass -p 'password' ssh -p 22 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no
xyz#hostname sudo lvdisplay
.
Please help me out to resolve the issue.
sshpass -p pass ssh -t user#192.168.XXX.XXX 'ls; bash -l'
Try the above command it worked for me. Remember to replace pass and user.
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I have a script.sh stored on remote server at some directory, which I want to run from a local computer.
How can I do that in unix using ssh?
You can use ssh command from the local server to execute commands on the remote server. You just have to do something like this:
ssh [user]#[server] '[command]'
In your case, you are trying to execute a shell-script. You can use the same method in the following way:
ssh [user]#[server] /location/of/your/script.sh
You can also run multiple commands in this way:
ssh [user]#[server] '[command 1]; [command 2]; [command 3]'
Or you can also do something like this:
ssh [user]#[server] << EOF
command 1
command 2
command 3
EOF
I assume you have ssh access to your remote server. Type this in a terminal at the local server:
ssh user#remote-server /path/to/script.sh
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I am using this command to attempt to transfer a DB
pg_dump -C -h localhost -U OLD_SERVER_USER_NAME site_db | psql -h NEW_SERVER_IP -U postgres site_db
It asks me for a password, which I give and then nothing happens, it just hangs.
What am I doing wrong?
First, to avoid the password prompt, you can set the environment variable PGPASSWORD.
In terms of it hanging, it's quite possible that the piping is "eating" an error that you would otherwise see.
Try breaking it up into separate commands, something like:
pg_dump -C -h localhost -U OLD_SERVER_USER_NAME site_db > db.dmp.sql && psql -h NEW_SERVER_IP -U postgres -f db.dmp.sql site_db
And see if you get any errors from either command.
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How to copy files into different directory in a remote machine?
For Example:
My server : 10.10.0.1
Remote Server : 10.10.0.2
I have to login to 10.10.0.1 (through Putty). From here, I have to copy a file in remote machine from /home/test/myFile.txt to /home/bkp/myFile.txt.
Both source and destination folders are in remote machine.
Assuming you can ssh to 10.10.22.12 as "username" and "username" has write permissions to /home/testBkp:
scp /home/test/sample.txt username#10.10.22.12:/home/testBkp/sample.txt
Use scp. For example:
scp file_to_copy user#server:/home/user/foldername/filename.ext
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I am trying to change user password with script but I'm having trouble using the -t option. Here's what I try:
echo -e "12345\n12345\n" | pdbedit -t -u username
So this is wrong somehow. Any ideas what I am missing or what should I try?
$ printf "%s\n%s\n" pwd pwd|pdbedit -t -r -u user
does not appear to work either
According to http://git.samba.org/?p=samba.git;a=blob;f=source3/utils/pdbedit.c
the --password-from-stdin parameter (pw_from_stdin) only affects account creation.
Thus, you'll rather prefer smbpasswd
$ printf "%s\n%s\n" pwd pwd|smbpasswd -s user
( Piping password to smbpasswd )