bashunixssh

What is the cleanest way to ssh and run multiple commands in Bash?


I already have an ssh agent set up, and I can run commands on an external server in Bash script doing stuff like:

ssh blah_server "ls; pwd;"

Now, what I'd really like to do is run a lot of long commands on an external server. Enclosing all of these in between quotation marks would be quite ugly, and I'd really rather avoid ssh'ing multiple times just to avoid this.

So, is there a way I can do this in one go enclosed in parentheses or something? I'm looking for something along the lines of:

ssh blah_server (
   ls some_folder;
   ./someaction.sh;
   pwd;
)

Basically, I'll be happy with any solution as long as it's clean.

Edit

To clarify, I'm talking about this being part of a larger bash script. Other people might need to deal with the script down the line, so I'd like to keep it clean. I don't want to have a bash script with one line that looks like:

ssh blah_server "ls some_folder; ./someaction.sh 'some params'; pwd; ./some_other_action 'other params';"

because it is extremely ugly and difficult to read.


Solution

  • How about a Bash Here Document:

    ssh otherhost << EOF
      ls some_folder; 
      ./someaction.sh 'some params'
      pwd
      ./some_other_action 'other params'
    EOF
    

    To avoid the problems mentioned by @Globalz in the comments, you may be able to (depending what you're doing on the remote site) get away with replacing the first line with

    ssh otherhost /bin/bash << EOF
    

    Note that you can do variable substitution in the Here document, but you may have to deal with quoting issues. For instance, if you quote the "limit string" (ie. EOF in the above), then you can't do variable substitutions. But without quoting the limit string, variables are substituted. For example, if you have defined $NAME above in your shell script, you could do

    ssh otherhost /bin/bash << EOF
    touch "/tmp/${NAME}"
    EOF
    

    and it would create a file on the destination otherhost with the name of whatever you'd assigned to $NAME. Other rules about shell script quoting also apply, but are too complicated to go into here.