I have the following shell script. The purpose is to loop thru each line of the target file (whose path is the input parameter to the script) and do work against each line. Now, it seems only work with the very first line in the target file and stops after that line got processed. Is there anything wrong with my script?
#!/bin/bash
# SCRIPT: do.sh
# PURPOSE: loop thru the targets
FILENAME=$1
count=0
echo "proceed with $FILENAME"
while read LINE; do
let count++
echo "$count $LINE"
sh ./do_work.sh $LINE
done < $FILENAME
echo "\ntotal $count targets"
In do_work.sh
, I run a couple of ssh
commands.
The problem is that do_work.sh
runs ssh
commands and by default ssh
reads from stdin which is your input file. As a result, you only see the first line processed, because ssh
consumes the rest of the file and your while loop terminates.
To prevent this, pass the -n
option to your ssh
command to make it read from /dev/null
instead of stdin.
ssh -n option prevents checking the exit status of ssh when using HEREdoc while piping output to another program.
So use of /dev/null as stdin is preferred.
#!/bin/bash
while read ONELINE ; do
ssh ubuntu@host_xyz </dev/null <<EOF 2>&1 | filter_pgm
echo "Hi, $ONELINE. You come here often?"
process_response_pgm
EOF
if [ ${PIPESTATUS[0]} -ne 0 ] ; then
echo "aborting loop"
exit ${PIPESTATUS[0]}
fi
done << input_list.txt
Use ssh -n ...
for running your remote commands via ssh.
#! /bin/bash
cat /root/host.txt | while read LINE
..
..
use ssh -n -o StrictHostKeychecking=no
in do_work.sh
script
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