Provides SSH access to multiple hosts at once.
gpssh { -f <hostfile_gpssh> | - h <hostname> [-h <hostname> ...] } \[-s\] [-e]
[-d <seconds>] [-t <multiplier>] [-v]
[<bash_command>]
gpssh -?
gpssh --version
The gpssh
utility allows you to run bash shell commands on multiple hosts at once using SSH (secure shell). You can run a single command by specifying it on the command-line, or omit the command to enter into an interactive command-line session.
To specify the hosts involved in the SSH session, use the -f
option to specify a file containing a list of host names, or use the -h
option to name single host names on the command-line. At least one host name (-h
) or a host file (-f
) is required. Note that the current host is not included in the session by default — to include the local host, you must explicitly declare it in the list of hosts involved in the session.
Before using gpssh
, you must have a trusted host setup between the hosts involved in the SSH session. You can use the utility gpssh-exkeys
to update the known host files and exchange public keys between hosts if you have not done so already.
If you do not specify a command on the command-line, gpssh
will go into interactive mode. At the gpssh
command prompt (=>
), you can enter a command as you would in a regular bash terminal command-line, and the command will be run on all hosts involved in the session. To end an interactive session, press CTRL
+D
on the keyboard or type exit
or quit
.
If a user name is not specified in the host file, gpssh
will run commands as the currently logged in user. To determine the currently logged in user, do a whoami
command. By default, gpssh
goes to $HOME
of the session user on the remote hosts after login. To ensure commands are run correctly on all remote hosts, you should always enter absolute paths.
If you encounter network timeout problems when using gpssh
, you can use -d
and -t
options or set parameters in the gpssh.conf
file to control the timing that gpssh
uses when validating the initial ssh
connection. For information about the configuration file, see gpssh Configuration File.
gpssh
starts an interactive session.
Optional. Specifies the time, in seconds, to wait at the start of a gpssh
interaction with ssh
. Default is 0.05
. This option overrides the delaybeforesend
value that is specified in the gpssh.conf
configuration file.
gpssh
startup.
-h
option multiple times to specify multiple host names.
Optional. If specified, before running any commands on the target host, gpssh
sources the file greenplum_path.sh
in the directory specified by the $GPHOME
environment variable.
Optional. A decimal number greater than 0 (zero) that is the multiplier for the timeout that gpssh
uses when validating the ssh
prompt. Default is 1
. This option overrides the prompt_validation_timeout
value that is specified in the gpssh.conf
configuration file.
gpssh
startup.
The gpssh.conf
file contains parameters that let you adjust the timing that gpssh
uses when validating the initial ssh
connection. These parameters affect the network connection before the gpssh
session runs commands with ssh
. The location of the file is specified by the environment variable MASTER_DATA_DIRECTORY
. If the environment variable is not defined or the gpssh.conf
file does not exist, gpssh
uses the default values or the values set with the -d
and -t
options. For information about the environment variable, see the Greenplum Database Reference Guide.
The gpssh.conf
file is a text file that consists of a [gpssh]
section and parameters. On a line, the #
(pound sign) indicates the start of a comment. This is an example gpssh.conf
file.
[gpssh]
delaybeforesend = 0.05
prompt_validation_timeout = 1.0
sync_retries = 5
These are the gpssh.conf
parameters.
gpssh
interaction with
ssh
. Default is 0.05. Increasing this value can cause a long wait time during
gpssh
startup. The
-d
option overrides this parameter.
gpssh
uses when validating the
ssh
prompt. Increasing this value has a small impact during
gpssh
startup. Default is
1
. The
-t
option overrides this parameter.
A non-negative integer that specifies the maximum number of times that gpssh
attempts to connect to a remote Greenplum Database host. The default is 3. If the value is 0, gpssh
returns an error if the initial connection attempt fails. Increasing the number of attempts also increases the time between retry attempts. This parameter cannot be configured with a command-line option.
The -t
option also affects the time between retry attempts.
Start an interactive group SSH session with all hosts listed in the file hostfile_gpssh
:
$ gpssh -f hostfile_gpssh
At the gpssh
interactive command prompt, run a shell command on all the hosts involved in this session.
=> ls -a /data/primary/*
Exit an interactive session:
=> exit
=> quit
Start a non-interactive group SSH session with the hosts named sdw1
and sdw2
and pass a file containing several commands named command_file
to gpssh
:
$ gpssh -h sdw1 -h sdw2 -v -e < command_file
Run single commands in non-interactive mode on hosts sdw2
and localhost
:
$ gpssh -h sdw2 -h localhost -v -e 'ls -a /data/primary/*'
$ gpssh -h sdw2 -h localhost -v -e 'echo $GPHOME'
$ gpssh -h sdw2 -h localhost -v -e 'ls -1 | wc -l'