I am trying to open an SSH pipe from one Linux box to another, run a few shell commands, and then close the SSH.
I don't have control over the packages on either box, so something like fabric or paramiko is out of the question.
I have had luck using the following code to run one bash command, in this case "uptime", but am not sure how to issue one command after another. I'm expecting something like:
sshProcess = subprocess.call('ssh ' + <remote client>, <subprocess stuff>)
lsProcess = subprocess.call('ls', <subprocess stuff>)
lsProcess.close()
uptimeProcess = subprocess.call('uptime', <subprocess stuff>)
uptimeProcess.close()
sshProcess.close()
What part of the subprocess module am I missing?
Thanks
pingtest = subprocess.call("ping -c 1 %s" % <remote client>,shell=True,stdout=open('/dev/null', 'w'),stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
if pingtest == 0:
print '%s: is alive' % <remote client>
# Uptime + CPU Load averages
print 'Attempting to get uptime...'
sshProcess = subprocess.Popen('ssh '+<remote client>, shell=True,stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
sshProcess,stderr = sshProcess.communicate()
print sshProcess
uptime = subprocess.Popen('uptime', shell=True,stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
uptimeProcess,stderr = uptimeProcess.communicate()
uptimeProcess.close( )
print 'Uptime : ' + uptimeProcess.split('up ')[1].split(',')[0]
else:
print "%s: did not respond" % <remote client>
basically if you call subprocess it creates a local subprocess not a remote one so you should interact with the ssh process. so something along this lines: but be aware that if you dynamically construct my directory it is suceptible of shell injection then END line should be a unique identifier To avoid the uniqueness of END line problem, an easiest way would be to use different ssh command