Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting [bash] running a function remotely using ssh Post 302991666 by RudiC on Wednesday 15th of February 2017 07:44:56 AM
Old 02-15-2017
Above seems to work between two systems running bash (or sh) each. What be the shell on the remote system? Do you know if the errors occur on the remote or local host?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

running commands with remotely with Telnet

i have a box here that can only be accessed with telnet. now, i was wondering if anyone know of a way of which i can run a command on that box remotely. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Terrible
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running function or command concurrently in a bash script

I currently run a script over a vpnc tunnel to back-up my data to a remote server. However for a number of reasons the tunnel often collapses. If I manually restore the tunnel then the whole thing can continue, but I want to add into my script a section whereby while the transfer is taking place,... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: dj_bridges
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Run function from script over ssh (BASH)

Hi, Is there any cleaver way to run function from the bash scrip over ssh? For example: #!/bin/bash #Function 1 FN1 () { ls -l } #Main run ssh user@host FN1 exit 0 Yeah, I know it will not work, but I'm asking how to make it to work :) I'm suspecting that it would be... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: columb
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

ssh running on function

i have a problem regarding running an ssh command while inside "function" script structure #!/usr/bin/bash func1(){ script=$1 ssh user@server "$script" } cat script.txt | while read line do func1 $line done exit 0 the problem is when ssh ran,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ryandegreat25
1 Replies

5. AIX

Mozilla running remotely

We have a server that has CDE and Mozilla installed on it. I have a develpoer who want to have an application start Mozilla locally on the AIX server (which has no video card) or wants Mozilla running on the server at all times. Can anybody tell me if this is at all possible? If so how and if... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: daveisme
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running a function on a remote server via SSH in a script

I'm working on a script (mostly for practice) to simplify a task I have to do every now and then. I have a cluster with 6 servers on it, each server has a directory with a set of files called *.pid and *.mpid. Each file contains the pid of a process that may or may not be running on that server.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DeCoTwc
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

howto run remotely call function from within script

Hi I have the following script : #!/bin/ksh #################### Function macAddressFinder ######################## macAddressFinder() { `ifconfig -a > ipInterfaces` `cat ipInterfaces` } ####################################################################### # # print... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: presul
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

remotely call function from local script

The following code doesn't work properly which means it doesn't displays remote output. #!/bin/ksh #################### Function macAddressFinder ######################## macAddressFinder() { `ifconfig -a > ipInterfaces` `cat ipInterfaces` }... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: presul
2 Replies

9. Solaris

SSH Remotely

Hello. I am trying to ssh and run a script from a remote computer. These computers will be both Windows and MACs. I am using Solaris 8 and what I have tried is: using putty ssh user@ip_address (remote command) /folder/folder/filename.sh The issue here is that the user profile has not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jkmtm
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Then error while running script remotely

facing issue with then error while running a local script aginst a remote server. i facing the same issue in multiple scripts. So what i am missing here or what is needed. #!/bin/ksh echo "enter the filename" read file if then echo "file exists" else echo "file does not exists" fi ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: NarayanaPrakash
0 Replies
RECON(1)							     LAM TOOLS								  RECON(1)

NAME
recon - Check if LAM can be started. SYNTAX
recon [-abdhv] [<bhost>] OPTIONS
-a Report all host errors. -b Assume local and remote shell are the same. This means that only one remote shell invocation is used to each node. If -b is not used, two remote shell invocations are used to each node. -d Turn on debugging. -h Print the command help menu. -v Be verbose. DESCRIPTION
In order for LAM to be started on a remote UNIX machine, several requirements have to be fulfilled: 1) The machine must be reachable via the network. 2) The user must be able to remotely execute on the machine with the default remote shell program that was chosen when LAM was config- ured. This is usually rsh(1), but any remote shell program is acceptable (such as ssh(1), etc.). Note that remote host permission must be configured such that the remote shell program will not ask for a password when a command is invoked on remote host. 3) The remote user's shell must have a search path that will locate LAM executables. 4) The remote shell's startup file must not print anything to standard error when invoked non-interactively. If any of these requirements is not met for any machine declared in <bhost>, LAM will not be able to start. By running recon first, the user will be able to quickly identify and correct problems in the setup that would inhibit LAM from starting. The local machine where recon is invoked must be one of the machines specified in <bhost>. The <bhost> file is a LAM boot schema written in the host file syntax. See bhost(5). Instead of the command line, a boot schema can be specified in the LAMBHOST environment variable. Otherwise a default file, bhost.def, is used. LAM seaches for <bhost> first in the local directory and then in the installation directory under etc/. recon tests each machine defined in <bhost> by attempting to execute on it the tkill(1) command using its "pretend" option (no action is taken). This test, if successful, indicates that all the requirements listed above are met, and thus LAM can be started on the machine. If the attempt is successful, the next machine is checked. In case the attempt fails, a descriptive error message is displayed and recon stops unless the -a option is used, in which case recon continues checking the remaining machines. If recon takes a long time to finish successfully, this will be a good indication to the user that the LAM system to be started has slow communication links or heavily loaded machines, and it might be preferable to exclude or replace some of the machines in the system. Remote shell invocation Note that the default remote shell command can be overriden at invocation time with the LAMRSH environment variable. The LAMRSH environ- ment variable can be set with a new command and optional command line arguments. For example, the 1.x series of ssh clients require the -x flag to be specified to suppress standard ssh information from being sent to the standard error (which would cause recon to fail). For example (for the C shell and its derrivates): setenv LAMRSH "ssh -x" Normally, recon uses two remote shell invocations to each node. The first remote shell invocation is used to determine the user's shell on the remote node. The second remote shell invocation is used to launch the desired LAM binary on the remote node. If the -b switch is used, recon will assume that the user's shell on all remote nodes is the same as it is on the local node, and therefore only one remote shell invocation is used, which is noticably faster. In either case, on remote nodes, if the user's shell is not csh, tcsh, or bash, .profile is invoked by LAM before invoking any LAM binary. This allows the user to setup paths and any necessary environment before LAM binaries are invoked (csh and tcsh users can put such setup in their $HOME/.cshrc or $HOME/.tcshrc files; bash users can put this setup in their $HOME/.bashrc file). FILES
$LAMHOME/etc/lam-bhost.def default boot schema file EXAMPLES
recon -v mynodes Check if LAM can be started on all the UNIX machines described in the boot schema mynodes. Report about important steps as they are done. recon -v -a Check if LAM can be started on all the UNIX machines described in the default boot schema. Report about important steps as they are done. Check all the machines; do not stop after the first error message. SEE ALSO
rsh(1), tkill(1), bhost(5), lamboot(1), wipe(1), lam-helpfile(5) LAM 6.5.8 November, 2002 RECON(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:15 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy