Execute multiple dependent commands individually w

2019-02-21 07:22发布

I am writing a program in Python which must communicate through SSH with a physical target, and send to this targets some commands automatically (it is for testing).

I start by doing this with Paramiko and everything was perfect until I have to send several commands and when for example the second one must be execute in the context of the first (for example the first one makes cd /mytargetRep and the second one is ./executeWhatIWant). I can't use exec_command to do so, because each exec_command starts a new session.

I try to use a channel with invoke_shell(), but I have an other problem with this one: I don't know when command execution is ended by doing this. I can have some very short (in time) command execution, and some other are really more longer so I need to know when the command execution is over.

I know a workaround it to use exec_command with a shell logic operations such as && or using ;. For example exec_command("cd /mytargetRep && ./executeWhatIWant"). But I can't do that, because it must also be possible to execute some commands manually (I have a minimalist terminal where I can send commands), so for example, the user will make cd /mytargetRep then ./executeWhatIWant and not cd /mytargetRep && ./executeWhatIWant.

So my question is: is there a solution by using Paramiko to send several commands in a same SSH session and be able to know the end of the command execution?

Thanks

1条回答
冷血范
2楼-- · 2019-02-21 07:48

It seems that you want to implement an interactive shell, yet you need to control individual commands execution. That's not really possible with just SSH interface. "shell" channel in SSH is black box with an input and output. So there's nothing in Paramiko that will help you implementing this.

If you need to find out when a specific command finishes or where an output of a specific command ends, you need to use features of a shell.

You can solve that by inserting a unique separator (string) in between and search for it in the channel output stream. With a common *nix shells something like this works:

channel = ssh.invoke_shell()
channel.send('cd /mytargetRep\n')
channel.send('echo unique-string-separating-output-of-the-commands\n')
channel.send('./executeWhatIWant\n')
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