I'd like to execute several commands in sequence on a remote machine, and some of the later commands depend on earlier ones. In the simplest possible example I get this:
ssh my_server "echo this is my_server; abc=2;"
this is my_server
abc=2: Command not found.
ssh my_server "echo this is my_server; abc=2; echo abc is $abc"
abc: undefined variable
For a bit of background info, what I actually want to do is piece together a path and launch a java application:
ssh my_server 'nohup sh -c "( ( echo this is my_server; jabref_exe=`which jabref`; jabref_dir=`dirname $jabref_exe`; java -jar $jabref_dir/../jabref.jar` $1 &/dev/null ) & )"' &
jabref_dir: Undefined variable.
That way, whenever jabref gets updated to a new version on the server, I won't have to manually update the path to the jar file. The jabref executable doesn't take arguments, but launching it with java -jar
does, which is why I have to juggle the path a bit.
At the moment I have the list of commands in a separate script file and call
ssh my_server 'nohup sh -c "( ( my_script.sh &/dev/null ) & )"' &
which works, but since the ssh call is already inside one script file it would be nice to have everything together.
In this example
ssh my_server "echo this is my_server; abc=2;"
abc
is set on the remote side, so it should be clear why it is not set on your local machine.
In the next example,
ssh my_server "echo this is my_server; abc=2; echo abc is $abc"
your local shell tries to expand $abc
in the argument before it is ever sent to the remote host. A slight modification would work as you expected:
ssh my_server 'echo this is my_server; abc=2; echo abc is $abc'
The single quotes prevent your local shell from trying to expand $abc
, and so the literal text makes it to the remote host.
To finally address your real question, try this:
jabref_dir=$( ssh my_server 'jabref_exe=$(which jabref); jabref_dir=$(dirname $jabref_exe);
java -jar $jabref_dir/../jabref.jar > /dev/null; echo $jabref_dir' )
This will run the quoted string as a command on your remote server, and output exactly one string: $jabref_dir
. That string is captured and stored in a variable on your local host.
With some inspiration from chepner, I now have a solution that works, but only when called from a bash shell or bash script. It doesn't work from tcsh.
ssh my_server "bash -c 'echo this is \$HOSTNAME; abc=2; echo abc is \$abc;'"
Based on this, the code below is a local script which runs jabref on a remote server (although with X-forwarding by default and passwordless authentication the user can't tell it's remote):
#!/bin/bash
if [ -f "$1" ]
then
fname_start=$(echo ${1:0:4})
if [ "$fname_start" = "/tmp" ]
then
scp $1 my_server:$1
ssh my_server "bash -c 'source load_module jdk; source load_module jabref; java_exe=\$(which java); jabref_exe=\$(which jabref); jabref_dir=\$(echo \${jabref_exe%/bin/jabref});eval \$(java -jar \$jabref_dir/jabref.jar $1)'" &
else
echo input argument must be a file in /tmp.
else
echo this function requires 1 argument
fi
and this is the 1-line script load_module, since modulecmd sets environment variables and I couldn't figure out how to do that without sourcing a script.
eval `/path/to/modulecmd bash load $1`;
I also looked at heredocs, inspired by How to use SSH to run a shell script on a remote machine? and http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/here-docs.html. The nice part is that it works even from tcsh. I got this working from the command line, but not inside a script. That's probably easy enough to fix, but I've got a solution now so I'm happy :-)
ssh my_server 'bash -s' << EOF
echo this is \$HOSTNAME; abc=2; echo abc is \$abc;
EOF