Provided by: dish_1.19.1-1_all bug

NAME

       dish - tool for parallel sysadmin of multiple hosts

SYNOPSIS

       dish [option]... -e command {-g hosts_file | host_1 host_2 ...}
       dicp {-g hosts_file | -g "user@host_1 ..."} local_file :remote_file
       dicp {-g hosts_file | -g "user@host_1 ..."} :remote_file local_file

DESCRIPTION

       dish - the diligence shell executes commands on several hosts via ssh/rsh/telnet, and also makes easy the
       distribution of files by scp/rcp, a remote password change, etc. It can process hosts in parallel mode.

OPTIONS

       -h     Print help message describing shortly all command-line options

       -H, --help
              Comprehensive help including examples

       --version
              Print program version and copyright message, then exit

       -V     Display the version number and exit

       -C <dir>
              Configuration directory -  $HOME/.dish  is  default;  In  this  directory  are  located  following
              configuration  files:  'hosts', 'rests', 'pass', and 'options'. When used, this option must be the
              first argument in the command line string, or be the second one if `-D' chosen! Alternatively, one
              can specify the configuration directory by defining the environment variable DISH_CONF.

       -CC <dir>
              Same  as  `-C'  with  fallback  to default if local config not found; This means that, in case the
              files 'pass', 'options' or 'rests' are absent in the given directory,  but  such  files  exist  in
              $HOME/.dish,  the  latter will be considered. The only exception is '$HOME/.dish/hosts' which will
              be ignored. Using this option is equivalent to changing  directory  to  the  opted  one  and  then
              executing `dish'.

       -c <name>
              Program  (alias  "connector")  and  its  options  used  for connecting to the remote host(s) - for
              example `rsh', whereas the spawned process will be "rsh $host <cmd>". Your  default  connector  is
              `ssh'.  Furthermore,  by  using  a relevant text-based client as connector, one can access various
              kinds of hosts - switches, databases, and so on.

       -e <cmd>
              Remote command to execute; It can be also set by the environment variable DISH_CMD.

       -E <cmd>
              Execute command where also the connection part is specified e.g. "-E 'ssh $host  date'"  which  is
              equal  to  "-e  date".   This option is incompatible with `-c' and `-e'. It can be also set by the
              environment variable DISH_FUEXE.

       -t     Force pseudo-tty allocation in ssh; This happens automatically in case of password change.

       -T <time>
              Timeout for command execution - default 30s (per host)

       -TT <time>
              Total timeout for command execution - default 300s (all hosts); This option is  useful  only  when
              hosts  are  processed  in  sequence  and the total processing time should not exceed the specified
              upper bound.

       -x <regex>
              Regular expression for the shell prompt; This value specifies which prompt is to  be  expected  in
              the program's shell after login into a system by `telnet', `mysql', `sqlplus' or other interactive
              command-line clients (see `-c').  The default value is `(%|\$|#|\>) ?$'.

       -X <regex>
              Regular expression for the password prompt; It is case-insensitive with default  value  `Password:
              *$'.

       -AD <regex>
              Regular expression for the ssh-prompt to add a new host key - `connecting (yes/no)?.*' is default

       -AC <str>
              String with the answer to the ssh-prompt to add a new host key - `yes' is default

       -g <file>
              File  with  list  of hosts/ip's/accounts to target; The command will be executed on these targets.
              The default host file is  '$HOME/.dish/hosts'  -  normally  per  line  one  account  of  the  form
              "user@host"  (if  ssh  is  your  choice  for  connector).  In  order  to join lists use the option
              repeatedly.  Alternatively, the environment variable DISH_HOSTS could be used to define the target
              hosts  whereas  in  the  specified  string  they have to be separated by blanks. By combining this
              option with `-r' or `-i' you can define various subsets of targeted hosts/accounts.

       -r <file>
              File with list of resting hosts/accounts to exclude; The default  one  is  '$HOME/.dish/rests'.  A
              "resting host" means one which will be excluded from the targets. The list of resting hosts or the
              file name could be specified also by the environment variable DISH_RESTS.

       -i <file>
              File with list of hosts/accounts to overlap with targeted hosts; There is no  default  file.  Only
              overlapping  hosts,  such  included  in this list and at the same time defined as targets, will be
              processed.

       -u <name>
              User name - default is your local user name; It can be defined also by  the  environment  variable
              DISH_USER.   Internally  the value is accessible by the variable $user (see examples). Further, it
              is irrelevant in case that accounts of the form  "user@host"  are  processed  since  they  include
              already the user name.

       -p <passwd>
              Login  password  (-p  ""  = -pp = -a0) - alias "login authentic" or "a0"; If no authentication for
              login is required (no user- and no password-prompt appear), then use `/dev/null' as  password.  If
              the user name is requested, yet the password is an empty string, then `/dev/empty' has to be given
              as password. The value of this option could be also a password file (see  `-P').  Eventually,  one
              can define the password by the environment variable DISH_PASS.

       -a <passwd>
              Additional  password  for  authentication  (-a  "" = -aa = -a1) - alias "first authentic" or "a1";
              Inside the spawn process, if a program like `smbmount', `su', `ssh', etc. asks for authentication,
              the  a1-password  is  passed  to  it.  This  password  can be also set by the environment variable
              DISH_PASS1.

       -A <passwd>
              One more password for authentication (-A "" = -AA = -a2) - alias "second authentic" or "a2";  When
              a spawned process, after one authentication by the a1-password, asks again for a password, then a2
              is sent. This password can be also set by the environment variable DISH_PASS2.

       -n <passwd>
              New password in case of password change (-n "" = -nn = -ne)

       -p0    Login without authentication - the same as `-p /dev/null'

       -p1    Set the a1-password to be the same as the login password; This option should not be used  together
              with `-p0' and `-a1'.  See example d) bellow.

       -P <file>
              File  with password(s); The default password file is '$HOME/.dish/pass'.  It must be readable only
              for the user (file mode 600 or 700), otherwise the program exits with error,  but  see  also  next
              option.    Every    line    in   the   file   can   hold   a   password   entry   of   the   form:
              "password:username:hostname",       alternatively       "password:::username:::hostname",       or
              "password;;;username;;;hostname".   One  can  specify  a list of hosts separated by the `,' or `;'
              characters. Regular expressions for hostnames are also  allowed  (see  the  example  configuration
              files in the distribution).

       -m     Ignore the access permissions of the password file

       -s [<time>]
              Sequential  processing  of hosts (default mode); If a time interval (measured in floating seconds)
              is specified, then the program is waiting this amount of time before starting to process the  next
              host in the sequence.

       -F     Spawn  processes in background - fork and disconnect; This way all hosts are processed essentially
              in parallel!  It's a very powerful option - depending on you RAM size and memory  utilization,  it
              shouldn't be a problem to process a few hundreds of hosts in parallel. Anyway, be careful - if you
              have too many hosts on the list, your could put your  system  under  load.  The  stdout's  of  the
              background  processes are redirected to '/dev/null', however you can use `-l' or `-L' to write the
              output to files. See also 'bugs and known problems' in the manual page.

       -f     Spawn processes in background without disconnecting from tty; It's the same as  `-F'  whereas  the
              stdout's  of the spawned processes are sent to the terminal. Also the parent process waits for his
              children to finish. See also 'bugs and known problems' in the manual page.

       -q     Be quiet - skip output from spawn and login; When working  with  the  secure  shell,  it  is  also
              convenient to use `ssh' with the `-q' option.

       -Q     Be QUIET - skip any output

       -v     Be verbose (default) - overrides `-q' and `-Q'

       -l <file>
              Log command output to file; The output of the spawned processes is appended to the file.

       -L <name>
              Write  a  separate log for every host where <name> denotes the base name of the log file. The full
              name of a log file is defined as "<name>_<user@host>.log".

       -j     Record the invoked command into a journal file with the name '$HOME/.dish/journal'; It  keeps  the
              history  of  the executed commands and their time of execution. An unique identifier is associated
              with every command.

       -J     Record the invoked command and the spawned processes as well; Write  into  the  journal  file  the
              executed command as well as the single processes spawned and their time of execution.

       -o <file>
              File  with  command  line  options  passed  to the program - default is '$HOME/.dish/options'; The
              options must be written in the file separated - one per line. By  means  of  this  file,  one  can
              modify  the  standard configuration: set up fork mode to be default, change the default connector,
              and  so  forth.  When  working  in  "copy  mode",  i.e.  by  invoking  the  program   as   'dicp',
              '$HOME/.dish/options.dicp' is considered to be the default options file.

       -d     enable expect's diagnostic output (look at `man expect')

       -D     Debug mode (dry-run); Print out environment variables, config file names, and commands to execute,
              then exit. This option should be used as first in the command line.

EXAMPLES

       You should consider that the variables $host and $user are evaluated. Thus $host changes dynamically  its
       value to the actual host/account name before a new process is spawned. The same is true for $user.

       a) Check the date and uptime on hosts 192.168.0.1 and 192.168.0.2

              dish -e 'date \; uptime' root@192.168.0.1 root@192.168.0.2

       b) Distribute '.profile' and '.bashrc' to guest accounts on 'host1' and 'host2'

              dish -E "scp $HOME/.profile $HOME/.bashrc guest@\$host:" host1 host2

              or

              dicp -e "$HOME/.profile $HOME/.bashrc guest@:" host1 host2

              or

              dicp -g "host1 host2" $HOME/.profile $HOME/.bashrc guest@:

              or

              dicp -g "guest@host1 guest@host2" $HOME/.profile $HOME/.bashrc :

       c) Copy remote '.profile' files into the local directory on localhost

              dicp -g "guest@host1 guest@host2 admin@host2" :.profile .profile.\$host

              Here,  the name of the target file (local file) will include the remote account name in order that
              the local files have unique names.

       d) Use `ssh' to login on 'host1' and copy from there '.profile' to 'host2'

              Since the list of hosts can not be empty, a dummy host is used to initiate the process.  The  `-t'
              option  is necessary to force pseudo-tty allocation in `ssh', otherwise `ssh' will fail with error
              on login. A second password (a1-password) is required for scp-authentication on 'host2':

              dish -a '' -E 'ssh -t user1@host1 scp .profile user2@host2:' dummy_host

              In case the password of 'user1' and 'user2' is the same, you will be asked only once for  a  login
              password for user1@host1 if you use `-p1':

              dish -p1 -E 'ssh -t user1@host1 scp .profile user2@host2:' dummy_host

              Or equivalently, and more simple:

              dish -p1 -t -e 'scp .profile user2@host2:' user1@host1

       e) Substitute lines with `START_XNTPD=' by `START_XNTPD="yes"' in /etc/rc.config

              This command is executed as root user on every host listed in 'Hosts.root':

              dish  -u  root -E 'ssh $user@$host "perl -pi -e \"s/^START_XNTPD=.*\$/START_XNTPD=\\\"yes\\\"/g;\"
              /etc/rc.config"' -g Hosts.root

       f) Freeze accounts of users on a termination list

              By using a script called `FreezeUser.sh', all accounts of users found on 'Terminate.User.lst' will
              be  frozen  today  at  24:00  o'clock  on  both  server  groups  as defined in files 'Hosts.1' and
              'Hosts.2':

              dish -E 'ssh root@$host "cat Terminate.User.lst  |  while  read  UN;  do  echo  \"su  -  admin  -c
              \\\$HOME/bin/FreezeUser.sh \$UN\" | at 24:00 ; done"' -g Hosts.1 -g Hosts.2

       g) Print out remote configuration file of an automounter

              Login as 'admin' user on host 192.168.0.1, switch to 'root', then cat the file '/etc/auto.net' and
              print out the date. The `-a' option causes the program to ask you for the root-password on  remote
              host:

              dish -u admin -a '' -E 'rsh -l $user $host su - root -c \"cat /etc/auto.net\; date\"' 192.168.0.1

       h) Install a package on Debian GNU/Linux hosts

              After  mounting  a  fileserver over samba, install from there a debian dish-package on all running
              servers, yet skip hosts on maintenance.  Three different passwords are needed for authentication -
              one for login, next for su-root, and the last for mounting the fileserver:

              dish   -a0   -a1   -a2   -g   Debian.up   -r   Debian.maint   -e   'su   -  -c  \"mount  -t  smbfs
              //FILESERVER/Packages.Dir /mnt/smb ; dpkg -i /mnt/smb/dish_1.19.1_all.deb\"'

       i) Check for system load >2 using default 'hosts' and 'pass' config files

              dish '(uptime |egrep \" (\[2-9\]|1\[0-9\])\\.\" && hostname) |paste - -'

       j) Query a MySQL database on remote host 10.0.0.1

              dish -pp -c 'mysql -p -u $user -h' -e 'use mysql; show tables; describe user;' -u root 10.0.0.1

       k) Change password concurrently on all hosts/accounts

              We assume that the list of user accounts is contained in file 'Accounts.lst', whereas an entry  in
              the  list is of the form "user@hostname". After command execution, you will be asked first for the
              login password (old password), and then for the new password  which  eventually  have  to  retyped
              correctly:

              dish -p '' -n '' -e passwd -g Accounts.lst

              Or alternatively, processing concurrently and quietly all hosts:

              dish -pp -nn -f -Q -e passwd -g Accounts.lst

              When  you  want  to change password and use `-nn', then the a1-password is implicitly set equal to
              the login password (a0-password).

       l) Change password from 'root' account (don't use the `-a0' option)

              If you are going to change the root-password on 'remotehost', then try:

              dish -nn -e passwd root@remotehost

              The same as previous,  but  login  as  user  'admin'  (login  password),  then  switch  to  'root'
              (a1-password), and finally update the root-password:

              dish -a1 -nn -e 'su -c passwd' admin@remotehost

              Changing the password for 'admin' on 'localhost', after login as 'root' via `telnet', is done by:

              dish -nn -c telnet -u root -e 'passwd admin' localhost

       Notice  that  for  password change, when `-p ""' (or equivalently `-a0' or `-pp') is not explicitly used,
       the assumption is made that `passwd' will not ask for the old password, as in case of a  password  change
       by  'root'.  The  same  is true also if you can login into an account without typing a password, but then
       `passwd' prompts you to type the old one - this situation occurs when one is using a  ssh-key  for  login
       without password-authentication. For such scenario the correct choice of options is `-p0 -aa -nn'.

       In  case  of  properly  prepared  configuration files in '$HOME/.dish', one can use dish as a distributed
       shell for a virtual cluster of hosts, and run it without specifying any  program  parameters  but  merely
       issuing a command, as for instance `dish df -k /' or `dicp .profile :'.

       As  a  very  last  note, one should be aware that in case of authentication by password, dish's automated
       login process is based on the expectation that the login prompt send to the  terminal  will  include  the
       case-insensitive  regex-string `Password: *$' (but see also `-X'). Otherwise the authentication procedure
       will fail.

BUGS AND KNOWN PROBLEMS

       If Tcl is compiled with thread support, the program hangs when executed in parallel mode (options `-f' or
       `-F')  -  it  seems  to be a Tcl problem.  Generally, at present Debian GNU/Linux (and other debian-based
       Linux distros as Ubuntu, Knoppix, etc.) pre-package Tcl with multi-thread support enabled.  Therefore, on
       such  systems  dish  fails  to process hosts in parallel. In this case you can download the debian source
       package of Tcl, remove  the  option  "--enable-threads"  in  ´debian/rules´,  rebuild  the  package  with
       `dpkg-buildpackage  -rfakeroot',  and  eventually  install it. It could be a good idea to put the freshly
       installed package on hold. Otherwise, you should recompile it on every tcl upgrade.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to <gnu@mirendom.net>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2003-2013 Dimitar Ivanov

       License: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
       This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.  There is NO WARRANTY, to  the  extent
       permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

       expect(1), tcl(3), ssh(1), rsh(1), telnet(1)