I'm lazy, and I prefer that computers do my work for me. I ssh into several machines on a daily basis, so I created a simple script that launches some xterm windows and places them in positions I want (as you can see, I'm using bash):
#!/bin/bash
xterm -geometry 80x27+1930+0 &
xterm -geometry 80x27+2753+0 &
xterm -geometry 80x27+1930+626 &
xterm -geometry 80x27+2753+626 &
However, the next thing I do is go to the first window and type in
ssh server_a
then in the second
ssh server_b
and so on. What I'd like to do is have my script do the ssh commands in each xterm window, and then leave the windows open for me to do my work. I've seen the -e option for xterm, but the window closes after I execute my command. Is there a way to do this?
I apologize if this is a duplicate question. I've searched around and haven't had any luck with this. Many thanks!
I'd love to see a more elegant answer, but what I came up with does work:
Replace
echo foo
with the command of your choice, and you're good to go.This answer gives one of the best answers I've seen so far to do this. Use the bash
--init-file
flag either in the shebang or when executing the terminal:... and execute it as:
My only real complaint with the
exec
option is if the command executed prior toexec bash
is long running and the user interrupts it (^C
), it doesn't run the shell. With the --init-file option the shell continues running.Another option is
cmdtool
from the OpenWin project:... where
cmdtool
injects the commands passed with-I
to the slave process as though it was typed by the user. This has the effect of leaving the executed commands in the shell history.Another option is to use gnome terminator. This creates and positions terminals interactively, and you can set up each terminal to run commands within terminator preferences.
Also does lots of extra tricks using keybindings for things like move, rotate, maximise/minimise of terminals within the containing terminator window
See: https://superuser.com/a/610048