>>>>> "Yaroslav" == Yaroslav Halchenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Yaroslav> rsh node19 '/bin/echo 1111; /bin/echo 123' Yaroslav> rsh node19 /bin/sh -c '/bin/echo 1111; /bin/echo 123' I think the problem has already been explained. The solutions appear to be: * rsh node19 '/bin/echo 1111; /bin/echo 123' (as running the shell inside the shell seems to be a dumb thing anyway) * rsh node19 /bin/sh -c '"/bin/echo 1111; /bin/echo 123"' (also works, but gets increasingly complex) Also if you are curious try: * rsh node19 '/bin/echo *; /bin/echo 123' (the * will be expanded by the implicit shell at the remote end) * rsh node19 '/bin/echo 111 > /tmp/out; /bin/echo 123' (the > will be take effect in the implicit shell at the remote end) Is there anyway you can disable this implicit shell, either with ssh or rsh? I really don't like it. I would rather each parameter be passed straight to the remote executable via exec without being parsed by sh first. Then, if I want to use the shell, I can say so. I don't like this business of the command line being parsed by two shells as the default. -- Brian May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]