On Friday 25 January 2008 08:37:24 am Ken Schneider wrote:
Carlos E. R. pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Hi,
I want to enter an ssh session without having to type the password (to be used by a script). The "remote" is a router with embedded, and it is not possible to create public key pairs because it is not a shell, but one with a limited command set.
I can give the user, like:
ssh 1234@router
but I haven't found a way in the man to give also the password, as there is for instance in ftp.
I think there is something like chat ? but I'v never used it and I'm unsure how.
If any one is worried about security, don't: for instance, if you use subversion with ssh access (to Novell, for instance) the password is stored in clear text in ~/.subversion/auth, and the file is world readable! (Was, rather, I changed it). So subversion must be giving the password somehow.
-- Cheers, Carlos Robinson
Try using expect to do what you want. I used expect when connecting to Cisco routers to do configuration changes with the password embedde3d in the expect script.
-- Ken Schneider SuSe since Version 5.2, June 1998
You should obviously read the man page, but if you want to start having fun right away, paste the below script into a file, change the name, host, and password to fit your environment and run it with: expect FileYouSaved Here is the script: #!/usr/bin/expect spawn ssh -l UserNameHere 192.168.1.111 expect Password: send "PassWord\n" interact Note: You need the \n at the end of your password. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org