Commands using ssh (347)

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Run a bash script in debug mode, show output and save it on a file

Find files and calculate size of result in shell
Using find's internal stat to get the file size is about 50 times faster than using -exec stat.

Ping all hosts on 192.168.1.0/24
Will report back IP address's of all hosts that are UP.

cp the file
Copy the file with the given .extension at the source file's location. Eliminates the typing of long paths again and again.

Summarise the size of all files matching a simple regex
Use the find command to match certain files and summarise their total size in KBytes.

List all active access_logs for currently running Apache or Lighttpd process
Ever logged into a *nix box and needed to know which webserver is running and where all the current access_log files are? Run this one liner to find out. Works for Apache or Lighttpd as long as CustomLog name is somewhat standard. HINT: works great as input into for loop, like this: $ for i in `lsof -p $(netstat -ltpn|awk '$4 ~ /:80$/ {print substr($7,1,index($7,"/")-1)}')| awk '$9 ~ /access.log$/ {print $9| "sort -u"}'` ; do echo $i; done Very useful for triage on unfamiliar servers!

Numeric zero padding file rename
rename file name with fixed length nomeric format pattern

Simulate typing

Advanced python tracing
Trace python statement execution and syscalls invoked during that simultaneously

Easy Persistent SSH Connections Using Screen
Use as: $ s host1 Will ssh to remote host upon first invocation. Then use C-a d to detatch. Running "s host1" again will resume the shell session on the remote host. Only useful in LAN environment. You'd want to start the screen on the remote host over a WAN. Adapted from Hack 34 in Linux Server Hacks 2nd Addition.


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