245

Say I have a file at the URL http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt that contains a script:

#!/bin/bash
echo "Hello, world!"
read -p "What is your name? " name
echo "Hello, ${name}!"

And I'd like to run this script without first saving it to a file. How do I do this?

Now, I've seen the syntax:

bash < <(curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)

But this doesn't seem to work like it would if I saved to a file and then executed. For example readline doesn't work, and the output is just:

$ bash < <(curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)
Hello, world!

Similarly, I've tried:

curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt | bash -s --

With the same results.

Originally I had a solution like:

timestamp=`date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S`
curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt -o /tmp/.myscript.${timestamp}.tmp
bash /tmp/.myscript.${timestamp}.tmp
rm -f /tmp/.myscript.${timestamp}.tmp

But this seems sloppy, and I'd like a more elegant solution.

I'm aware of the security issues regarding running a shell script from a URL, but let's ignore all of that for right now.

2
  • 3
    If you do end up creating a temporary file, you should probably be using mktemp instead of rolling your own solution
    – Hasturkun
    Apr 20, 2011 at 19:44
  • cmd <<foo is heredoc syntax in most shells and probably not what you want.
    – snakehiss
    Apr 20, 2011 at 20:52

16 Answers 16

296
source <(curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)

ought to do it. Alternately, leave off the initial redirection on yours, which is redirecting standard input; bash takes a filename to execute just fine without redirection, and <(command) syntax provides a path.

bash <(curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)

It may be clearer if you look at the output of echo <(cat /dev/null)

11
  • Thanks, this made it clear what was going on. Just curious, what is the advantage of using that initial redirection? I ask because for RVM installation, they use the command: bash < <(curl -s https://rvm.beginrescueend.com/install/rvm) Why not just: bash <(curl -s https://rvm.beginrescueend.com/install/rvm)
    – Tristan
    Apr 20, 2011 at 20:49
  • 4
    Small note: if wget is available but curl is not (e.g. on a stock Ubuntu desktop system), you can substitute wget -q http://mywebsite.com/myscript.txt -O - for curl -s http://mywebsite.com/myscript.txt). Aug 21, 2012 at 22:47
  • 7
    Be aware that you can't pass command line arguments to your script. bash will_not_work foobar <(curl -s http://example.com/myscript.sh) If you own the script you can use environment variables instead like so: MYFLAG1=will_work bash MYFLAG2=foobar <(curl -s http://example.com/myscript.sh) and it also works with pipes like so: curl -s http://example.com/myscript.sh | MYFLAG1=will_work MYFLAG2=foobar bash This of course requires that you use MYFLAG1 and MYFLAG2 instead of $1 and $2 Mar 18, 2013 at 18:07
  • 5
    $ sudo bash <(curl -s xxx) got error: bash: /dev/fd/63: Bad file descriptor
    – Yin
    Nov 9, 2015 at 6:49
  • 3
    The first solution (the one using source) did not work at all. The second worked somewhat but has its limitations. It is executing the script from the URL in a subshell. I have some functions defined in the script that I would like to use in the parent. Is there anyway to achieve that? Or am I out of luck and the only solution is to copy that script in a temporary file and then source it? Sep 16, 2017 at 0:19
116

This is the way to execute remote script with passing to it some arguments (arg1 arg2):

curl -s http://server/path/script.sh | bash /dev/stdin arg1 arg2
1
  • 6
    this breaks stty :\ use bash <(curl ... ) if you use stdin Jan 15, 2016 at 10:04
75

For bash, Bourne shell and fish:

curl -s http://server/path/script.sh | bash -s arg1 arg2

Flag "-s" makes shell read from stdin.

3
  • 2
    this should work in most shells, while the accepted answer does not work with fish, for example.
    – hoijui
    Jun 10, 2019 at 11:36
  • 1
    What is arg1 arg2?. Can I call just curl -s http://server/path/script.sh | bash -s?
    – user9608133
    Jan 8, 2021 at 17:42
  • @Nairum Yes, you can call without arg1 and arg2, which are parameters passed to script.sh. If script.sh requires parameters to be able to execute, you can add as many parameters as you like. Having 2 parameters is just an example.
    – user77115
    Mar 15, 2021 at 7:39
21

Use:

curl -s -L URL_TO_SCRIPT_HERE | bash

For example:

curl -s -L http://bitly/10hA8iC | bash
0
16

Using wget, which is usually part of default system installation:

bash <(wget -qO- http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)
1
  • RTFM: gnu.org/software/wget/manual/wget.html. ||| -q == --quiet == "Turn off Wget’s output." ||| -O- == --output-document=- == If ‘-’ is used as file, documents will be printed to standard output.
    – amra
    Nov 20, 2017 at 11:26
13

You can also do this:

wget -O - https://raw.github.com/luismartingil/commands/master/101_remote2local_wireshark.sh | bash
12

The best way to do it is

curl http://domain/path/to/script.sh | bash -s arg1 arg2

which is a slight change of answer by @user77115

12

You can use curl and send it to bash like this:

bash <(curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)
12

I often using the following is enough

curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt | sh

But in a old system( kernel2.4 ), it encounter problems, and do the following can solve it, I tried many others, only the following works

curl -s http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt -o a.sh && sh a.sh && rm -f a.sh

Examples

$ curl -s someurl | sh
Starting to insert crontab
sh: _name}.sh: command not found
sh: line 208: syntax error near unexpected token `then'
sh: line 208: ` -eq 0 ]]; then'
$

The problem may cause by network slow, or bash version too old that can't handle network slow gracefully

However, the following solves the problem

$ curl -s someurl -o a.sh && sh a.sh && rm -f a.sh
Starting to insert crontab
Insert crontab entry is ok.
Insert crontab is done.
okay
$
8

Also:

curl -sL https://.... | sudo bash -
2
  • 5
    What dose the last strip mean?
    – towry
    Feb 23, 2015 at 7:59
  • 2
    From the bash man page: A -- signals the end of options and disables further option processing. Any arguments after the -- are treated as filenames and arguments. An argument of - is equivalent to --. Jun 30, 2015 at 8:59
4

Just combining amra and user77115's answers:

wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lingtalfi/TheScientist/master/_bb_autoload/bbstart.sh | bash -s -- -v -v

It executes the bbstart.sh distant script passing it the -v -v options.

2

Is some unattended scripts I use the following command:

sh -c "$(curl -fsSL <URL>)"

I recommend to avoid executing scripts directly from URLs. You should be sure the URL is safe and check the content of the script before executing, you can use a SHA256 checksum to validate the file before executing.

2

instead of executing the script directly, first download it and then execute

SOURCE='https://gist.githubusercontent.com/cci-emciftci/123123/raw/123123/sample.sh'

curl $SOURCE -o ./my_sample.sh
chmod +x my_sample.sh
./my_sample.sh
1

This way is good and conventional:

17:04:59@itqx|~
qx>source <(curl -Ls http://192.168.80.154/cent74/just4Test) Lord Jesus Loves YOU
Remote script test...
Param size: 4

---------
17:19:31@node7|/var/www/html/cent74
arch>cat just4Test
echo Remote script test...
echo Param size: $#
1

If you want the script run using the current shell, regardless of what it is, use:

${SHELL:-sh} -c "$(wget -qO - http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)"

if you have wget, or:

${SHELL:-sh} -c "$(curl -Ls http://mywebsite.example/myscript.txt)"

if you have curl.

This command will still work if the script is interactive, i.e., it asks the user for input.

Note: OpenWRT has a wget clone but not curl, by default.

-4
bash | curl http://your.url.here/script.txt

actual example:

juan@juan-MS-7808:~$ bash | curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JPHACKER2k18/markwe/master/testapp.sh


Oh, wow im alive


juan@juan-MS-7808:~$ 
1
  • This is straight up wrong. Test your scripts before posting and don't fake output.
    – korkman
    Apr 18, 2020 at 19:49

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