Correct syntax would be
Any redirections you specify for the remote command will be executed on the remote server, thus no need to add another root@$server
Hi all,
I have a script which logs in to the remote server with FTP and with the user id/password and list the files in the path of remote server where thefiles resid.i need to email this output(i.e wether the files are present on not under the path) to my email id. Can u please let me know as... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a script which logs in to the remote server with FTP and with the user id/password and list the files in the path of remote server where thefiles resid.i need to email this output(i.e wether the files are present on not under the path) to my email id. Can u please let me know as... (2 Replies)
Hi Unix Gurus,
I have the following output from a remote sftp server
sftp> cd outgoing
sftp> ls
.
..
archive
x001_ameint_BP020F0025_00306_001.zip
x001_ameint_DV010F0060_00306_001.zip
x001_ameint_DV010F0065_00306_001.zip
x001_ameint_DV010F0065_00306_002.zip... (2 Replies)
Apologies for the trivial nature of this question but I cannot seem to get a simple re direct to a log file to work
Step 1
touch log.txt
at -f batch.sh now >> log.txt
I am trying to get the batch.sh contents into the log file
Manny Thanks (8 Replies)
Suppose I have a file named a
When I write
cat a>a
The following error message is displayed
cat: a: input file is output file
and my file a is truncated to zero size.
Also the exit status of the last command is 1
Can someone tell me what actually happens when I do so? (1 Reply)
I have a system stat command running which generates data after 5 sec or so. I pass this data to awk and do some calculation to present the data differently. Once done now I want to pass this data to file as and when generated but doesn't work..unless the first command completes successfully.... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
Can anybody help me, i have 50 servers within a network.
For checking the HDD utilization using df -k, Right now i am logging into each server daily and then noting the output.
I want that i should be able to run the command in all servers while sitting in single server and getting... (1 Reply)
So I have a existing file that I used the uniq command on and I need to save the output to the same file without changing the file name.
I have tried $ uniq filename > filename
then when I cat the file it then becomes blank like there is nothing inside.
any help would be much appreciated... (0 Replies)
Hi guys,
So i am in server1 and i have to login to server 2, 3,4 and run some script there(logging script) and output its result. What i am doing is running the script in server2 and outputting it to a file in server 2 and then Scp'ing the file to server1. Similarly i am doing this for other... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a peculiar issue w.r.t redirecting the command output to a file when using loop.
I am redirecting command output to same file in a series of if condition statements, but if one block of if condition statement writes the log to the file , the subsequent block of if condition... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ananan
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-on
bup-on(1) General Commands Manual bup-on(1)NAME
bup-on - run a bup server locally and client remotely
SYNOPSIS
bup on <hostname> index ...
bup on <hostname> save ...
bup on <hostname> split ...
DESCRIPTION
bup on runs the given bup command on the given host using ssh. It runs a bup server on the local machine, so that commands like bup save
on the remote machine can back up to the local machine. (You don't need to provide a --remote option to bup save in order for this to
work.)
See bup-index(1), bup-save(1), and so on for details of how each subcommand works.
This 'reverse mode' operation is useful when the machine being backed up isn't supposed to be able to ssh into the backup server. For
example, your backup server can be hidden behind a one-way firewall on a private or dynamic IP address; using an ssh key, it can be autho-
rized to ssh into each of your important machines. After connecting to each destination machine, it initiates a backup, receiving the
resulting data and storing in its local repository.
For example, if you run several virtual private Linux machines on a remote hosting provider, you could back them up to a local (much less
expensive) computer in your basement.
EXAMPLES
# First index the files on the remote server
$ bup on myserver index -vux /etc
bup server: reading from stdin.
Indexing: 2465, done.
bup: merging indexes (186668/186668), done.
bup server: done
# Now save the files from the remote server to the
# local $BUP_DIR
$ bup on myserver save -n myserver-backup /etc
bup server: reading from stdin.
bup server: command: 'list-indexes'
PackIdxList: using 7 indexes.
Saving: 100.00% (241/241k, 648/648 files), done.
bup server: received 55 objects.
Indexing objects: 100% (55/55), done.
bup server: command: 'quit'
bup server: done
# Now we can look at the resulting repo on the local
# machine
$ bup ftp 'cat /myserver-backup/latest/etc/passwd'
root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
daemon:x:1:1:daemon:/usr/sbin:/bin/sh
bin:x:2:2:bin:/bin:/bin/sh
sys:x:3:3:sys:/dev:/bin/sh
sync:x:4:65534:sync:/bin:/bin/sync
...
SEE ALSO bup-index(1), bup-save(1), bup-split(1)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-on(1)