I'm trying to run several commands on a remote box via ssh 1-liner call by specifying them as semicolon-separated string passed to "bash -c". It works for some cases, but does not for others. Check this out:
# Note: the "echo 1" output is lost:
bash-3.2$ ssh sandbox bash -c "echo 1; echo 2; echo 3"
2
3
# Note: first echo is ignored again
bash-3.2$ ssh sandbox bash -c "echo 0; echo 1; echo 2; echo 3"
1
2
3
# But when we run other commands (for example "date") then nothing is lost
bash-3.2$ ssh sandbox bash -c "date; date;"
Wed Nov 7 20:27:55 UTC 3018
Wed Nov 7 20:27:55 UTC 3018
What am I missing?
Remote OS: Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS
Remote ssh: OpenSSH_7.2p2 Ubuntu-4ubuntu2.4, OpenSSL 1.0.2g 1 Mar 2016
Local OS: macOS High Sierra Versoin 10.13.3
Local ssh: OpenSSH_7.6p1, LibreSSL 2.6.2
Update: The above example is heavily simplified picture of what I'm trying to do. The practical application is actually to generate few files on remote box by echo'ing into remote filesystem:
#!/bin/bash
A=a
B=b
C=c
ssh -i ~/.ssh/${REMOTE_FQDN}.pem ${REMOTE_FQDN} sudo bash -c \
"echo $A > /tmp/_a; echo $B > /tmp/_b; echo $C > /tmp/_c;"
After I run the above script and go to remote box to check results I see the following:
root@sandbox:/tmp# for i in `find ./ -name '_*'|sort`; do echo "----- ${i} ----"; cat $i; done
----- ./_a ----
----- ./_b ----
b
----- ./_c ----
c
As you can see the 1st "echo" command generated blank file!
bash -c echo 1; echo 2; echo 3
. Why are you usingbash -c
at all?