NAME sshexec - run a command through ssh(1) with normal command syntax SYNOPSIS sshexec [{ [ssh=ssh-command] [dir=directory] }] [ssh-option] ... destination command [argument] ... DESCRIPTION The sshexec utility is a wrapper for SSH that makes it easy to run commands directly in the SSH command. sshexec passes any argument after } to ssh-command (ssh if not specified), and only modifies command [argument] ... and inserts extra arguments after destination (it may also add a -- argument immediately before destination) to cause the remote shell it change working directory to directory, if specified, and execute the provided command and arguments as a regular command rather than as shell code joined by together by spaces. OPTIONS sshexec options may be placed at the very beginning enclosed with the arguments { and }. sshexec options, if any, shall be placed in the same { }-group. Any other option will be passed as is to the ssh(1) utility or ssh-command. The sshexec utility has a build it list of options recognised by the ssh(1) utility and will not allow anything matching this list. The sshexec utility does not allow mixing options and operands: no option may be placed after destination, such options will be treated as the command or an argument. The following sshexec options are supported: ssh=ssh-command Instead of looking for ssh in PATH, the sshexec utility shall use ssh-command, which it will look for in PATH if it is only a file name (does not contain a slash (/)). dir=directory In the remote, change working directory to directory before executing command. OPERANDS The following operands are supported: destination This operand is passed as is (without validation) to the ssh(1) utility. The ssh(1) utility will expect it the be either in the form [user@]hostname or in the form ssh://[user@]hostname[:port]. command [argument] ... Whereas the ssh(1) utility would simply join the command and argument arguments with a space between each of them as pass it to the remote shell for execution, the sshexec utility forces the remote shell to treat each of the as separate arguments and cause the shell to executing them as a non-builtin command. SEE ALSO ssh(1)