Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: SSH script
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users SSH script Post 302088045 by mercy on Friday 8th of September 2006 06:29:22 AM
Old 09-08-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by blowtorch
Er.. the ; would cause the chmod command to be executed locally and not on the custserver system. Escape the ; with \ to prevent the shell from interpreting the ;.
sorry
Code:
ssh user@custserver chmod 644 /custdirectory/file_name_*

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ssh in a script

Hi, I am trying to ssh/rlogin onto another box through a script. What is the syntax so I do not get prompted for a password. Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrbnetbar
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ssh in script

Hi ssh has now been set up to not prompt for a password. My problem is I have the script below that I wish. Firstly ssh onto another box and then run the rest of the script problem I am not sure of the syntax. #!/bin/ksh . ${ENV}/oracle_env.ksh ****I WANT TO SSH AT THIS POINT AND... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrbnetbar
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

SSH through a script

I want to use ssh through a script without setting key pair in those two machines. I ll take the password as input from user and then run some commands on remote machine. Can someone help me on how to do it (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vickylife
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

SSH Script

So, right now I'm trying to make an SSH script for my place of employment. This script, I want to go out to the server hostnames we have specified (in another file) and change a users account password. We use Kerberized telnet, so if telnet root hostname fails, I want it to use ssh usernamehostname... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nkitmitto
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help on an ssh bash script...

Hey Guys, I want to have a bash script on my computer (Mac OS X 10.6.8) that can ssh into my iPod and respring. I know how do this by typing in "ssh root@10.0.1.10" and then typing in the password "alpine". From there i simply type "respring". I want to possibly put this into a shell script so it... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jetstream131
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

SSH using shell script terminates the script execution

Hello, I am writing a shell script in which i do ssh to remote server and count the number of files there and then exit. After the exit the shell script terminates which i believe is expected behavior. Can some one suggest me a way where even after the exit the script execution resumes. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: manaankit
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

ssh script

I am connecting to a remote server using this ssh command: ssh -p 2222 username@***.***.***.*** I then get a password prompt where I enter the password. I need to make an ssh connection using a script instead of doing it manually. How can I automate the connection process and make the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: locoroco
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

script for ssh

The below command executing manually from server01. It will ask the password and retrieves the result(total number of characters in a filename.txt file available in server02) (username@server01)$ ssh username@server02 wc -c /log/filename.txt username@server02's password: 25500... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: subi.ut
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

SFTP or scp with password in a batch script without using SSH keys and expect script

Dear All, I have a requirement where I have to SFTP or SCP a file in a batch script. Unfortunately, the destination server setup is such that it doesn't allow for shell command line login. So, I am not able to set up SSH keys. My source server is having issues with Expect. So, unable to use... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ss112233
5 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Ssh script to validate ssh connection to multiple serves with status

Hi, I want to validate ssh connection one after one for multiple servers..... password less keys already setup but now i want to validate if ssh is working fine or not... I have .sh script like below and i have servers.txt contains all the list of servers #/bin/bash for host in $(cat... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreeram4
3 Replies
puttygen(1)							 PuTTY tool suite						       puttygen(1)

NAME
puttygen - public-key generator for the PuTTY tools SYNOPSIS
puttygen ( keyfile | -t keytype [ -b bits ] ) [ -C new-comment ] [ -P ] [ -q ] [ -O output-type | -l | -L | -p ] [ -o output-file ] DESCRIPTION
puttygen is a tool to generate and manipulate SSH public and private key pairs. It is part of the PuTTY suite, although it can also inter- operate with the private key formats used by some other SSH clients. When you run puttygen, it does three things. Firstly, it either loads an existing key file (if you specified keyfile), or generates a new key (if you specified keytype). Then, it optionally makes modifications to the key (changing the comment and/or the passphrase); finally, it outputs the key, or some information about the key, to a file. All three of these phases are controlled by the options described in the following section. OPTIONS
In the first phase, puttygen either loads or generates a key. Note that generating a key requires random data (from /dev/random), which can cause puttygen to pause, possibly for some time if your system does not have much randomness available. The options to control this phase are: keyfile Specify a private key file to be loaded. This private key file can be in the (de facto standard) SSH-1 key format, or in PuTTY's SSH-2 key format, or in either of the SSH-2 private key formats used by OpenSSH and ssh.com's implementation. -t keytype Specify a type of key to generate. The acceptable values here are rsa and dsa (to generate SSH-2 keys), and rsa1 (to generate SSH-1 keys). -b bits Specify the size of the key to generate, in bits. Default is 1024. -q Suppress the progress display when generating a new key. In the second phase, puttygen optionally alters properties of the key it has loaded or generated. The options to control this are: -C new-comment Specify a comment string to describe the key. This comment string will be used by PuTTY to identify the key to you (when asking you to enter the passphrase, for example, so that you know which passphrase to type). -P Indicate that you want to change the key's passphrase. This is automatic when you are generating a new key, but not when you are modifying an existing key. In the third phase, puttygen saves the key or information about it. The options to control this are: -O output-type Specify the type of output you want puttygen to produce. Acceptable options are: private Save the private key in a format usable by PuTTY. This will either be the standard SSH-1 key format, or PuTTY's own SSH-2 key format. public Save the public key only. For SSH-1 keys, the standard public key format will be used (`1024 37 5698745...'). For SSH-2 keys, the public key will be output in the format specified by RFC 4716, which is a multi-line text file beginning with the line `---- BEGIN SSH2 PUBLIC KEY ----'. public-openssh Save the public key only, in a format usable by OpenSSH. For SSH-1 keys, this output format behaves identically to public. For SSH-2 keys, the public key will be output in the OpenSSH format, which is a single line (`ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2...'). fingerprint Print the fingerprint of the public key. All fingerprinting algorithms are believed compatible with OpenSSH. private-openssh Save an SSH-2 private key in OpenSSH's format. This option is not permitted for SSH-1 keys. private-sshcom Save an SSH-2 private key in ssh.com's format. This option is not permitted for SSH-1 keys. If no output type is specified, the default is private. -o output-file Specify the file where puttygen should write its output. If this option is not specified, puttygen will assume you want to overwrite the original file if the input and output file types are the same (changing a comment or passphrase), and will assume you want to output to stdout if you are asking for a public key or fingerprint. Otherwise, the -o option is required. -l Synonym for `-O fingerprint'. -L Synonym for `-O public-openssh'. -p Synonym for `-O public'. The following options do not run PuTTYgen as normal, but print informational messages and then quit: -h, --help Display a message summarizing the available options. -V, --version Display the version of PuTTYgen. --pgpfp Display the fingerprints of the PuTTY PGP Master Keys, to aid in verifying new files released by the PuTTY team. EXAMPLES
To generate an SSH-2 RSA key pair and save it in PuTTY's own format (you will be prompted for the passphrase): puttygen -t rsa -C "my home key" -o mykey.ppk To generate a larger (2048-bit) key: puttygen -t rsa -b 2048 -C "my home key" -o mykey.ppk To change the passphrase on a key (you will be prompted for the old and new passphrases): puttygen -P mykey.ppk To change the comment on a key: puttygen -C "new comment" mykey.ppk To convert a key into OpenSSH's private key format: puttygen mykey.ppk -O private-openssh -o my-openssh-key To convert a key from another format (puttygen will automatically detect the input key type): puttygen my-ssh.com-key -o mykey.ppk To display the fingerprint of a key (some key types require a passphrase to extract even this much information): puttygen -l mykey.ppk To add the OpenSSH-format public half of a key to your authorised keys file: puttygen -L mykey.ppk >> $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys BUGS
There's currently no way to supply passphrases in batch mode, or even just to specify that you don't want a passphrase at all. PuTTY tool suite 2004-03-24 puttygen(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:29 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy