since Apache Ant 1.6
Runs a command on a remote machine running SSH daemon.
Note: This task depends on external libraries not included in the Ant distribution. See Library Dependencies for more information. This task has been tested with jsch-0.1.29 and above and won't work with versions of jsch earlier than 0.1.28.
See also the scp task
Attribute | Description | Required |
host | The hostname or IP address of the remote host to which you wish to connect. | Yes |
username | The username on the remote host to which you are connecting. | Yes |
command | The command to run on the remote host. | Either this or commandResource must be set |
commandResource | The resource (file) that contains the commands to run on the remote host. Since Ant 1.7.1 | Either this or command must be set |
port | The port to connect to on the remote host. | No, defaults to 22. |
trust | This trusts all unknown hosts if set to yes/true. Note If you set this to false (the default), the host you connect to must be listed in your knownhosts file, this also implies that the file exists. |
No, defaults to No. |
knownhosts | This sets the known hosts file to use to validate the identity of the remote host. This must be a SSH2 format file. SSH1 format is not supported. | No, defaults to ${user.home}/.ssh/known_hosts. |
failonerror | Whether to halt the build if the command does not complete successfully. | No; defaults to true. |
password | The password. | Not if you are using key based authentication or the password has been given in the file or todir attribute. |
keyfile | Location of the file holding the private key. | Yes, if you are using key based authentication. |
passphrase | Passphrase for your private key. | No, defaults to an empty string. |
output | Name of a file to which to write the output. | No |
append | Whether output file should be appended to or overwritten. Defaults to false, meaning overwrite any existing file. | No |
outputproperty | The name of a property in which the output of the command should be stored. If you use the commandResource attribute, each command's output will be prefixed by the command itself. | No |
timeout | Stop the command if it doesn't finish within the specified time (given in milliseconds unlike telnet, which expects a timeout in seconds). Defaults to 0 which means "wait forever". | No |
input | A file from which the executed command's standard
input is taken. This attribute is mutually exclusive with the
inputstring attribute. When executing more than one command via commandResource, input will be read for each command. since Ant 1.8.0 |
No |
verbose | Determines whether sshexec outputs verbosely to the user. Similar output is generated as the ssh commandline tool wit the -v option. since Ant 1.8.0 |
No, defaults to false |
inputstring | A string which serves as the input stream for the
executed command. This attribute is mutually exclusive with the
input attribute. When executing more than one command via commandResource, input will be read for each command. since Ant 1.8.0 |
No |
Run a command on a remote machine using password authentication
<sshexec host="somehost" username="dude" password="yo" command="touch somefile"/>
Run a command on a remote machine using key authentication
<sshexec host="somehost" username="dude" keyfile="${user.home}/.ssh/id_dsa" passphrase="yo its a secret" command="touch somefile"/>
Run a command on a remote machine using key authentication with no passphrase
<sshexec host="somehost" username="dude" keyfile="${user.home}/.ssh/id_dsa" command="touch somefile"/>
Run a set of commands from a command resource (file) on a remote machine using key authentication with no passphrase
<sshexec host="somehost" username="dude" keyfile="${user.home}/.ssh/id_dsa" commandResource="to_run"/>
Security Note: Hard coding passwords and/or usernames
in sshexec task can be a serious security hole. Consider using variable
substitution and include the password on the command line. For example:
<sshexec host="somehost" username="${username}" password="${password}" command="touch somefile"/>Invoking ant with the following command line:
ant -Dusername=me -Dpassword=mypassword target1 target2Is slightly better, but the username/password is exposed to all users on an Unix system (via the ps command). The best approach is to use the
<input>
task and/or retrieve the password from a (secured)
.properties file.