Single-line command
Executing a single command:
ssh $HOST ls
Executing several commands, inlined, separated with ;
ssh $HOST ls; pwd; cat /path/to/remote/file
Executing a command with sudo
ssh $HOST sudo ls /root sudo: no tty present and no askpass program specified
sudo
requires interactive shell, it can be enabled with -t
parameter.
ssh -t $HOST sudo ls /root [sudo] password for zaiste:
Simple multi-line command
VAR1="Variable 1" ssh $HOST ' ls pwd if true; then echo "True" echo $VAR1 # <-- it won't work else echo "False" fi '
Shell variables won’t be expanded with this method.
Multi-line command with variables expansion
In order to make variables expansion work, use bash -c
.
VAR1="Variable 1" ssh $HOST bash -c "' ls pwd if true; then echo $VAR1 else echo "False" fi '"
Multi-line command from local script
A local script can be executed against remote machine with a simple stdin
redirection.
cat script.sh ls pwd hostname
ssh $HOST < script.sh
Multi-line command using Heredoc
Using heredoc
is probably the most convenient way to execute multi-line commands on a remote machine. Also, variables expansion works out-of-the-box.
VAR1="boo" ssh -T $HOST << EOSSH ls pwd if true; then echo $VAR1 else echo "False" fi EOSSH
If you need to assign variables within the heredoc
block, put the opening heredoc
in single quotes.
ssh -T $HOST <<'EOSSH' VAR1=`pwd` echo $VAR1 VAR2=$(uname -a) echo $VAR2 EOSSH
The following warning message
Pseudo-terminal will not be allocated because stdin is not a terminal.
can be disabled by adding -T
parameter to ssh
execution.