Ok, using openssh-SNAP-20010126.tar.gz, two versions of the server both compiled with the configure commands as below, one with USE_PIPES defined and one without. This is on SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 (using SCO dev environment, SCO make, etc.) The client is always linux, openssh 2.3.0p1. export CCFLAGS='-L/usr/local/lib -I/usr/local/include' ./configure --sysconfdir=/etc/ssh --with-rsh=/usr/bin/rcmd \ --exec-prefix=/usr --without-egd-pool Host: i686-pc-sco3.2v5.0.5 I used two versions of a simple shell script to invoke ssh and scp repeatedly, the first does not specify the -n option to ssh, and second version uses -n on all the ssh invocations. The commands: ls -ld . ssh -V 'cat /etc/hosts|grep localhost' scp /etc/hosts root@$host:/tmp/hosts.foo /usr/bin/X11/xterm -sb -sl 1000 -T $host -e '/tmp/test-scr.sh' (The /tmp/test-scr.sh script just runs find /etc and sleeps for 2 seconds.) Now, on the machine without USE_PIPES (that is the unmodified snap 20010126) the non -n script runs just fine repeatedly... except that although execution of the script continues past the invocation of scp, scp doesn't exit, they just pile up on the client side. The sshd for scp doesn't exit either until you kill ssh on the client side. When the non -n script is run against a server with USE_PIPES, everything seems to run just fine, scp exits and leaves no residue. Now, if I run the -n version of the script, On the server without USE_PIPES, every command invoked hangs and the script won't continue executing unless you kill the corresponding sshd or ssh process. Sometimes it hangs before I get my input back, sometimes not. Strangely, I seem to only get input back from ssh -V, and not ls or the cat|grep command. scp does copy the file as expected. (scp behaves as above to this server) The xterm does appear, and close, but the sshd still hangs around along with the ssh. If I try the -n version of the script on the USE_PIPES server, everything works absolutely fine. Essentially I've reported these same type of problems in August, but now the command hangs instead of dying with a Disconnecting: Command terminated on signal 13. error message. (USE_PIPES fixed it for me then, too.) The real question (for me) here is in what circumstances do I need to use -n? I would swear that in the past, I have needed -n to keep shell scripts from hanging on invocations of rsh/rcmd. Now, I can't duplicate that to save me. (Either with rsh/rcmd or ssh.) It appears that I don't even need -n to get X applications to work correctly. If it weren't for the problems with scp hanging around I would just drop the -n and forget about USE_PIPE entirely, but -n ought to work. However, since I can't seem to find a concrete use for the option, that point may be moot. I would really like to see if anyone can duplicate this. Alternately you could just take my word for it and put USE_PIPES back into the configure.in script for *-*-sco3.2v5* ;) Aran
mouring at etoh.eviladmin.org
2001-Feb-06 02:12 UTC
SCO 5.0.5 (i686-pc-sco3.2v5.0.5), scp and the -n option
On Mon, 5 Feb 2001, Aran Cox wrote: [..]> I would really like to see if anyone can duplicate this. Alternately you > could just take my word for it and put USE_PIPES back into the > configure.in script for *-*-sco3.2v5* ;) >USE_PIPES went back into sco3.2v5 on 1/28/2001. Please verify against the latest snapshot. - Ben
On Mon, Feb 05, 2001 at 06:13:21PM -0600, Aran Cox wrote:> > The real question (for me) here is in what circumstances do I need to > use -n? I would swear that in the past, I have needed -n to keep > shell scripts from hanging on invocations of rsh/rcmd. Now, I can't > duplicate that to save me. (Either with rsh/rcmd or ssh.) It appears > that I don't even need -n to get X applications to work correctly. If > it weren't for the problems with scp hanging around I would just drop > the -n and forget about USE_PIPE entirely, but -n ought to > work. However, since I can't seem to find a concrete use for the > option, that point may be moot. >Ok, I went out and answered my own question. If you write a script like this: while read host; do [rs]sh $host ls -ld . done And pass a list of hosts via stdin, only the first host gets [rs]sh run on it. Then the script just exits. [rs]sh sucks up the rest of stdin, unless you prevent it from doing so with the -n option. I don't quite understand why ssh or rsh would read stdin until it's empty without the executed program on the other end requesting anything of stdin. Would doing it otherwise have been needlessly complex? Or was that just the behaviour of rsh and hence the behaviour of ssh? Aran
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