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I need to ssh to a remote Ubuntu server to do some routine job, in following steps:

  1. ssh in as userA
  2. sudo su - userB
  3. run daliy_python.py script with use psycopg2 to read some info from the database (via local connection (non-TCP/IP))
  4. scp readings to my local machine

The question is: How to do that automatically? I've try to use Fabric, but I run into a problem with psycopg2, after I run the Fabric script below, I received error from my daliy_python.py

psycopg2.OperationalError: could not connect to server: No such file or directory
Is the server running locally and accepting
connections on Unix domain socket "/var/run/xxx/.s.xxxx"?

My fabfile.py code is as below:

from fabric.api import *

import os
import socket
import pwd

# Target machine setting
srv = 'server.hostname.com'
env.hosts = [srv]
env.user = 'userA'
env.key_filename = '/location/to/my/key'

env.timeout = 2
# Force fabric abort at timeout
env.skip_bad_hosts = False

def run_remote():
    user = 'userB'    
    with settings(warn_only=True):
        run('whoami')
        with cd('/home/%s/script/script_folder' % user):
            sudo('whoami')
            sudo('pwd', user=user)
            sudo('ls', user=user)
            sudo('python daliy_python.py', user=user)

Any suggestions? My database can only be access via userB locally, but only userA can ssh to the server. That might be a limitation. Both local and remote machine is running Ubuntu 14.04.

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  • That's a database connection error which is really a separate concern from running remote processes with fabric. See some of these possible solutions: stackoverflow.com/questions/5500332/… stackoverflow.com/questions/26034092/…
    – chishaku
    Jun 9, 2016 at 17:08
  • @chishaku Thanks, I don't know where this error comes from, If I am ssh to the server and perform the job, it works fine. It just happened when I use fabric script, that makes me wonder if I did something wrong with the fabric setting/or I should use other tool?
    – cityzz
    Jun 9, 2016 at 17:31

2 Answers 2

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This is what I do to read my root accessible logfiles without extra login

ssh [email protected] "echo hunter2 | sudo -S tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log"

That is: ssh [email protected] "..run this code on the remote.."

Then on the remote, you pipe the sudo password into sudo -S echo hunter2 | sudo -S

Add a -u userb to sudo to switch to a particular user, I am using root in my case. So then as the sudo'ed user, run your script. In my case tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log.

But, reading your post, I would probably simply set up a cronjob on the remote, so it runs automatically. I actually do that for all my databases. A cronjob dumps them once a day to a certain directory, with the date as filename. Then I download them to my local PC with rsync an hour later.

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  • Thanks, possibly it is the better option. To do it in to two steps, one, cron job running on server, dump new info to a file, second, ssh to the server and download the file.
    – cityzz
    Jun 9, 2016 at 17:36
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I finally find out where my problem is. Thanks @chishake and @C14L, I look at the problem in another way. After inspired by this posts link1 link2, I start to think this problem is related to environmental variables. Thus I add a with statement to alter $HOME and it worked.

fabfile.py is as below:

from fabric.api import *

import os
import socket
import pwd

# Target machine setting
srv = 'server.hostname.com'
env.hosts = [srv]
env.user = 'userA'
env.key_filename = '/location/to/my/key'

env.timeout = 2
# Force fabric abort at timeout
env.skip_bad_hosts = False

def run_remote():
    user = 'userB'    
    with settings(warn_only=True):
        run('whoami')
        with shell_env(HOME='/home/%s' % user):
            sudo('echo $HOME', user=user)
            with cd('/home/%s/script/script_folder' % user):
                sudo('whoami')
                sudo('pwd', user=user)
                sudo('ls', user=user)
                sudo('python daliy_python.py', user=user)

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