DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
pssh(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual pssh(1)
NAME
pssh -- parallel ssh program
SYNOPSIS
pssh [-vAiIP] [-h hosts_file] [-H [user@]host[:port]] [-l user] [-p
par] [-o outdir] [-e errdir] [-t timeout] [-O options] [-x args] [-X
arg] command ...
pssh -I [-vAiIP] [-h hosts_file] [-H [user@]host[:port]] [-l user] [-p
par] [-o outdir] [-e errdir] [-t timeout] [-O options] [-x args] [-X
arg] [command ...]
DESCRIPTION
pssh is a program for executing ssh in parallel on a number of hosts.
It provides features such as sending input to all of the processes,
passing a password to ssh, saving output to files, and timing out.
The PSSH_NODENUM and PSSH_HOST environment variables are sent to the
remote host. The PSSH_NODENUM variable is assigned a unique number for
each ssh connection, starting with 0 and counting up. The PSSH_HOST
variable is assigned the name of the host as specified in the hosts
list. Note that sshd drops environment variables by default, so
sshd_config on the remote host must include the line:
AcceptEnv PSSH_NODENUM PSSH_HOST
OPTIONS
-h host_file
--hosts host_file
Read hosts from the given host_file. Lines in the host file are
of the form [user@]host[:port] and can include blank lines and
comments (lines beginning with "#"). If multiple host files are
given (the -h option is used more than once), then pssh behaves
as though these files were concatenated together. If a host is
specified multiple times, then pssh will connect the given
number of times.
-H [user@]host[:port]
--host [user@]host[:port]
-H "[user@]host[:port] [ [user@]host[:port ] ... ]"
--host "[user@]host[:port] [ [user@]host[:port ] ... ]"
Add the given host strings to the list of hosts. This option
may be given multiple times, and may be used in conjunction with
the -h option.
-l user
--user user
Use the given username as the default for any host entries that
don't specifically specify a user.
-p parallelism
--par parallelism
Use the given number as the maximum number of concurrent
connections.
-t timeout
--timeout timeout
Make connections time out after the given number of seconds.
With a value of 0, pssh will not timeout any connections.
-o outdir
--outdir outdir
Save standard output to files in the given directory. Filenames
are of the form [user@]host[:port][.num] where the user and port
are only included for hosts that explicitly specify them. The
number is a counter that is incremented each time for hosts that
are specified more than once.
-e errdir
--errdir errdir
Save standard error to files in the given directory. Filenames
are of the same form as with the -o option.
-x args
--extra-args args
Passes extra SSH command-line arguments (see the ssh(1) man page
for more information about SSH arguments). This option may be
specified multiple times. The arguments are processed to split
on whitespace, protect text within quotes, and escape with
backslashes. To pass arguments without such processing, use the
-X option instead.
-X arg
--extra-arg arg
Passes a single SSH command-line argument (see the ssh(1) man
page for more information about SSH arguments). Unlike the -x
option, no processing is performed on the argument, including
word splitting. To pass multiple command-line arguments, use
the option once for each argument.
-O options
--options options
SSH options in the format used in the SSH configuration file
(see the ssh_config(5) man page for more information). This
option may be specified multiple times.
-A
--askpass
Prompt for a password and pass it to ssh. The password may be
used for either to unlock a key or for password authentication.
The password is transferred in a fairly secure manner (e.g., it
will not show up in argument lists). However, be aware that a
root user on your system could potentially intercept the
password.
-i
--inline
Display standard output and standard error as each host
completes.
--inline-stdout
Display standard output (but not standard error) as each host
completes.
-v
--verbose
Include error messages from ssh with the -i and \ options.
-I
--send-input
Read input and send to each ssh process. Since ssh allows a
command script to be sent on standard input, the -I option may
be used in lieu of the command argument.
-P
--print
Display output as it arrives. This option is of limited
usefulness because output from different hosts are interleaved.
EXAMPLES
Connect to host1 and host2, and print "hello, world" from each:
pssh -i -H "host1 host2" echo "hello, world"
Print "hello, world" from each host specified in the file hosts.txt:
pssh -i -h hosts.txt echo "hello, world"
Run a command as root with a prompt for the root password:
pssh -i -h hosts.txt -A -l root echo hi
Run a long command without timing out:
pssh -i -h hosts.txt -t 0 sleep 10000
If the file hosts.txt has a large number of entries, say 100, then the
parallelism option may also be set to 100 to ensure that the commands
are run concurrently:
pssh -i -h hosts.txt -p 100 -t 0 sleep 10000
Run a command without checking or saving host keys:
pssh -i -H host1 -H host2 -x "-O StrictHostKeyChecking=no -O
UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -O GlobalKnownHostsFile=/dev/null"
echo hi
Print the node number for each connection (this will print 0, 1, and
2):
pssh -i -H host1 -H host1 -H host2 'echo $PSSH_NODENUM'
TIPS
If you have a set of hosts that you connect to frequently with specific
options, it may be helpful to create an alias such as:
alias pssh_servers="pssh -h /path/to/server_list.txt -l root -A"
The ssh_config file can include an arbitrary number of Host sections.
Each host entry specifies ssh options which apply only to the given
host. Host definitions can even behave like aliases if the HostName
option is included. This ssh feature, in combination with pssh host
files, provides a tremendous amount of flexibility.
EXIT STATUS
The exit status codes from pssh are as follows:
0 Success
1 Miscellaneous error
2 Syntax or usage error
3 At least one process was killed by a signal or timed out.
4 All processes completed, but at least one ssh process reported
an error (exit status 255).
5 There were no ssh errors, but at least one remote command had a
non-zero exit status.
AUTHORS
Written by Brent N. Chun <bnc@theether.org> and Andrew McNabb
<amcnabb@mcnabbs.org>.
http://code.google.com/p/parallel-ssh/
SEE ALSO
ssh(1), ssh_config(5), pscp(1), prsync(1), pslurp(1), pnuke(1),
January 24, 2012 pssh(1)