Reputation: 16175
I have a CentOS server that I want to script from BASH running it on my laptop.
I want to run a script locally that:
The file copying is easy. I can do that.
But how can one connect to a MySQL server over the SSH port and execute statements? I think I am just stuck on the connect part. executing the statements I can build up on a variable and batch execute.
I have an SSH pub/priv keypair from my laptop to this server as well.
Upvotes: 8
Views: 19017
Reputation: 10674
You can specify commands to run on the remote machine, as the last argument to ssh:
ssh user@remote 'mysql -u user ...'
The problem with this is that it will be a hassle to deal with the various '" escaping in the mysql command(s).
A better way, in my opinion, is to open an SSH tunnel to the remote machine when you connect:
ssh -L 12341:127.0.0.1:3306 user@server &
This would connect your local 12341 port, to the remote machine's 3306 (mysqld) port. After the connection is done, you can connect to it from your local machine like:
mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 12341
So you can place your SQL statements into a file, and cat it into mysql:
cat commands | mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 12341
Don't forget to kill the SSH connection after you are done.
Note that tunneling requires the remote server to have PermitTunnel "yes" in its sshd_config.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 2062
You can do what @WishCow said or you can put all MySQL statements in a .sql
file, copy this file to server and then call mysql to execute these statements, something like this:
echo "show databases;" > test.sql
echo "use some_database;" >> test.sql
echo "show tables;" >> test.sql
scp test.sql remote-user@remote-server:
ssh remote-user@remote-server 'mysql -u mysql-user -pmysql-pass < test.sql'
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 445
just use ssh to run mysql
on the remote server. For example
ssh user@server 'mysql -uimauser -p imadb -e "select * from table"'
.
Everything in quotes will be run remotely by ssh.
Upvotes: 7