I want to run a script remotely. But the system doesn't recognize the path. It complains that "no such file or directory "Am i using it right?
ssh kev@server1 `./test/foo.sh`
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Backticks will run the command on the local shell and put the results on the command line. What you're doing is saying 'execute ./test/foo.sh and then pass the output as if I'd typed it on the commandline here'. Try ssh kev@server1 './test/foo.sh', and make sure that thats the path from your home directory on the remote computer to your script. Edited for clarity. Edit: Also, the script has to be on the remote computer. What this does is essentially log you into the remote computer with the listed command as your shell. You can't run a local script on a remote computer like this (unless theres some fun trick I don't know). |
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Another link about running remote commands over SSH: how to use ssh to run shell script on a remote machine? |
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I don't know if it's possible to run it just like that. I usually first copy it with scp and then log in to run it.
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Make the script executable by the user "Kev" and then remove the try it running through the command
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