I want to create an SSH session to a remote machine using Perl, and execute commands automatically from a Windows machine. Is there a way I can do that?
1 Answer
The Net::SSH
module relies on a command-line ssh
tool, which Windows doesn't have straight from the box.
I suggest you use Putty's plink
command instead of putty
itself, as plink
is much closer to an ssh
command-line utility and is intended for this sort of thing. Together with IPC::Open3
(or IPC::Open2
if you're not interested in seeing the output to STDERR) it will let you print
commands and and readline
the responses interactively. I am sure you can create your own log files.
Alternatively you could consider Net::SSH::W32Perl
, which is a compatibility layer around Net::SSH::Perl
. It is rather old but should be better than relying on Putty.
Putty
instead of theNet::SSH
module?putty
is not a programming question. This belongs on Super User. //putty
does not accept a command from the command line. A command to execute on connect can be placed in a profile, though. That will only be useful to you always want to execute the same command.ssh
utility, which is howNet::SSH
does its thing.