06-23-2008
Yep, you got an ssh process on your local machine left, which is not needed anymore, yep. On the remote machine it will run without problems and when sending the command you will be back on your prompt.
I got no better idea atm
If I come up with one, I will post it.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Programming
Hi,
I have to write a daemon process, which performs certain operations in the background.
Now since it performs operations in the background, it should not display anything to the standard output.
The problem is that it still displays, text on standard output.
Can anyone tell me (it is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: s_chordia
2 Replies
2. Programming
This is gonna seem really silly to almost evryone here - but I need to know :
what is a daemon process?
Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kanu77
6 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello all,
How do I start a background process and save the process id to a file on my system. For example %wait 5 & will execute and print the process id. I can't figure out how to get it to a file. I've tried: > filename 0>filename 1>filename.
Any assistance is most appreciated.
Thanks,
Jim... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: jleavitt
10 Replies
4. Linux
how i will write the daemon process,if any body have sample daemon process send me. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: suresh_rupineni
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I'm running a FreedBSD server with mysql 4.1. When I start mysqld via the command:
# /usr/local/bin/safe_mysqld --user=mysql
it starts the mysql db (I know because the websites are running off of it) but does not return to a prompt, it will let me type but will not respond unless I restart... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: unispace
15 Replies
6. SCO
Hi
We are running SCO ver 5. Recently the cron daemon stopped running on its own. How do I find out why? How do I restart/stop it?
I typed cron but it didn't work. Will rebooting it do the trick or can I manually start and stop the cron daemon?
Please help.
Thanks & Regards. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: othman
0 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to ssh into a remote server, run a script which may or may not start a nohup'd background process and then exit leaving the process running on the remote server. I'm looping through a number of servers to do this but the script hangs as soon as it comes to a server where the remote... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Steve_H
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hey all, I need to launch a script from within 2 other scripts that can run independently of the two parent scripts... Im having a hard time doing this, if anyone knows how please let me know.
More detail.
ScriptA (bash), ScriptB (ksh), ScriptC (bash)
ScriptA, launches ScriptB
ScirptB,... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: trey85stang
7 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a script that reads a file containing a list of server names. It's suppose to loop through the list of names and execute a command on the remote server using ssh. It processes the ssh command for the first server in the list and then exits. Here's the code:
#!/bin/bash
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: westmoreland
2 Replies
10. Programming
I wish to make a process run in the background, but only one instance of it, and not many,
so when the program is loaded, it has to check whether another instance of the same
program is running and if so to exit. How do I do this ? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sundaresh
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
debrsign
DEBRSIGN(1) General Commands Manual DEBRSIGN(1)
NAME
debrsign - remotely sign a Debian changes and dsc file pair using SSH
SYNOPSIS
debrsign [options] [user@]remotehost [changes-file|dsc-file]
DESCRIPTION
debrsign takes either an unsigned .dsc file or an unsigned .changes file and the associated unsigned .dsc file (found by replacing the
architecture name and .changes by .dsc) if it appears in the .changes file and signs them by copying them to the remote machine using
ssh(1) and remotely running debsign(1) on that machine. All options not listed below are passed to the debsign program on the remote
machine.
If a .changes or .dsc file is specified, it is signed, otherwise, debian/changelog is parsed to determine the name of the .changes file to
look for in the parent directory.
This utility is useful if a developer must build a package on one machine where it is unsafe to sign it; they need then only transfer the
small .dsc and .changes files to a safe machine and then use the debsign program to sign them before transferring them back. This program
automates this process.
To do it the other way round, that is to connect to an unsafe machine to download the .dsc and .changes files, to sign them locally and
then to transfer them back, see the debsign(1) program, which can do this task.
OPTIONS
-S Look for a source-only .changes file instead of a binary-build changes file.
-adebian-architecture, -tGNU-system-type
See dpkg-architecture(1) for a description of these options. They affect the search for the .changes file. They are provided to
mimic the behaviour of dpkg-buildpackage when determining the name of the .changes file.
--multi
Multiarch changes mode: This signifies that debrsign should use the most recent file with the name pattern package_ver-
sion_*+*.changes as the changes file, allowing for the changes files produced by dpkg-cross.
--path remote-path
Specify a path to the GPG binary on the remote host.
--help, --version
Show help message and version information respectively.
Other options
All other options are passed on to debsign on the remote machine.
CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
The two configuration files /etc/devscripts.conf and ~/.devscripts are sourced in that order to set configuration variables. Command line
options can be used to override configuration file settings. Environment variable settings are ignored for this purpose. The currently
recognised variables are:
DEBRSIGN_PGP_PATH
Equivalent to passing --path on the command line (see above.)
SEE ALSO
debsign(1), dpkg-architecture(1) and ssh(1).
AUTHOR
This program was written by Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org> and is copyright under the GPL, version 2 or later.
DEBIAN
Debian Utilities DEBRSIGN(1)