Unix command not running as expected using JSch [duplicate] - java

I have a piece of code which connects to a Unix server and executes commands.
I have been trying with simple commands and they work fine.
I am able to login and get the output of the commands.
I need to run an Ab-initio graph through Java.
I am using the air sandbox run graph command for this.
It runs fine, when I login using SSH client and run the command. I am able to run the graph. However, when I try to run the command through Java it gives me a "air not found" error.
Is there any kind of limit on what kind of Unix commands JSch supports?
Any idea why I'm not able to run the command through my Java code?
Here's the code:
public static void connect(){
try{
JSch jsch=new JSch();
String host="*****";
String user="*****";
String config =
"Host foo\n"+
" User "+user+"\n"+
" Hostname "+host+"\n";
ConfigRepository configRepository =
com.jcraft.jsch.OpenSSHConfig.parse(config);
jsch.setConfigRepository(configRepository);
Session session=jsch.getSession("foo");
String passwd ="*****";
session.setPassword(passwd);
UserInfo ui = new MyUserInfo(){
public boolean promptYesNo(String message){
int foo = 0;
return foo==0;
}
};
session.setUserInfo(ui);
session.connect();
String command="air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Channel channel=session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setCommand(command);
channel.setInputStream(null);
((ChannelExec)channel).setErrStream(System.err);
InputStream in=channel.getInputStream();
channel.connect();
byte[] tmp=new byte[1024];
while(true){
while(in.available()>0){
int i=in.read(tmp, 0, 1024);
if(i<0)break;
page_message=new String(tmp, 0, i);
System.out.print(page_message);
}
if(channel.isClosed()){
if(in.available()>0) continue;
System.out.println("exit-status: "+channel.getExitStatus());
break;
}
try{Thread.sleep(1000);}catch(Exception ee){}
}
channel.disconnect();
session.disconnect();
}
catch(Exception e){
System.out.println(e);
}
}
public static void main(String arg[]){
connect();
}
public String return_message(){
String ret_message=page_message;
return ret_message;
}
public static abstract class MyUserInfo
implements UserInfo, UIKeyboardInteractive{
public String getPassword(){ return null; }
public boolean promptYesNo(String str){ return false; }
public String getPassphrase(){ return null; }
public boolean promptPassphrase(String message){ return false; }
public boolean promptPassword(String message){ return false; }
public void showMessage(String message){ }
public String[] promptKeyboardInteractive(String destination,
String name,
String instruction,
String[] prompt,
boolean[] echo){
return null;
}
}

The "exec" channel in the JSch (rightfully) does not allocate a pseudo terminal (PTY) for the session. As a consequence a different set of startup scripts is (might be) sourced (particularly for non-interactive sessions, .bash_profile is not sourced). And/or different branches in the scripts are taken, based on absence/presence of the TERM environment variable. So the environment might differ from the interactive session, you use with your SSH client.
So, in your case, the PATH is probably set differently; and consequently the air executable cannot be found.
To verify that this is the root cause, disable the pseudo terminal allocation in your SSH client. For example in PuTTY, it's Connection > SSH > TTY > Don't allocate a pseudo terminal. Then, go to Connection > SSH > Remote command and enter your air ... command. Check Session > Close window on exit > Never and open the session. You should get the same "air not found" error.
Ways to fix this, in preference order:
Fix the command not to rely on a specific environment. Use a full path to air in the command. E.g.:
/bin/air sandbox run <graph-path>
If you do not know the full path, on common *nix systems, you can use which air command in your interactive SSH session.
Fix your startup scripts to set the PATH the same for both interactive and non-interactive sessions.
Try running the script explicitly via login shell (use --login switch with common *nix shells):
bash --login -c "air sandbox run sandbox run <graph-path>"
If the command itself relies on a specific environment setup and you cannot fix the startup scripts, you can change the environment in the command itself. Syntax for that depends on the remote system and/or the shell. In common *nix systems, this works:
String command="PATH=\"$PATH;/path/to/air\" && air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Another (not recommended) approach is to force the pseudo terminal allocation for the "exec" channel using the .setPty method:
Channel channel = session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setPty(true);
Using the pseudo terminal to automate a command execution can bring you nasty side effects. See for example Is there a simple way to get rid of junk values that come when you SSH using Python's Paramiko library and fetch output from CLI of a remote machine?
For a similar issues, see
Certain Unix commands fail with "... not found", when executed through Java using JSch even with setPty enabled
Commands executed using JSch behaves differently than in SSH terminal (bypasses confirm prompt message of "yes/"no")
JSch: Is there a way to expose user environment variables to "exec" channel?
Command (.4gl) executed with SSH.NET SshClient.RunCommand fails with "No such file or directory"

you could try to find out where "air" resides with
whereis air
and then use this outcome.
something like
/usr/bin/air sandbox run graph

You can use an ~/.ssh/environment file to set your AB_HOME and PATH variables.

Related

Why sqlplus command execution from Java doesnt return the output same as direct command in shell?

I am building dynamic sqlplus command and executing the same from Java, It doesnt work as expected. Whereas same command is executed fine when run in command prompt.
The output when executed direct command (Expected):
BEGIN
*
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-20004: Data is not ready, please check control-M v8 jobs
ORA-06512: at "GLOBAL_OWNER.PKG_COMMON_UTILS", line 282
ORA-06512: at line 2
The output when executed Java class :
SQL*Plus: Release 12.1.0.2.0 Production
Copyright (c) 1982, 2014, Oracle. All rights reserved.
Use SQL*Plus to execute SQL, PL/SQL and SQL*Plus statements.
Usage 1: sqlplus -H | -V
-H Displays the SQL*Plus version and the
usage help.
-V Displays the SQL*Plus version.
Usage 2: sqlplus [ [<option>] [{logon | /nolog}] [<start>] ]
<option> is: [-C <version>] [-L] [-M "<options>"] [-NOLOGINTIME] [-R <level>]
[-S]
-C <version> Sets the compatibility of affected commands to the
version specified by <version>. The version has
the form "x.y[.z]". For example, -C 10.2.0
-L Attempts to log on just once, instead of
reprompting on error.
-M "<options>" Sets automatic HTML markup of output. The options
have the form:
HTML [ON|OFF] [HEAD text] [BODY text] [TABLE text]
[ENTMAP {ON|OFF}] [SPOOL {ON|OFF}] [PRE[FORMAT] {ON|OFF}]
-NOLOGINTIME Don't display Last Successful Login Time.
-R <level> Sets restricted mode to disable SQL*Plus commands
that interact with the file system. The level can
be 1, 2 or 3. The most restrictive is -R 3 which
disables all user commands interacting with the
file system.
-S Sets silent mode which suppresses the display of
the SQL*Plus banner, prompts, and echoing of
commands.
<logon> is: {<username>[/<password>][#<connect_identifier>] | / }
[AS {SYSDBA | SYSOPER | SYSASM | SYSBACKUP | SYSDG | SYSKM}] [EDITION=value]
Specifies the database account username, password and connect
identifier for the database connection. Without a connect
identifier, SQL*Plus connects to the default database.
The AS SYSDBA, AS SYSOPER, AS SYSASM, AS SYSBACKUP, AS SYSDG,
and AS SYSKM options are database administration privileges.
<connect_identifier> can be in the form of Net Service Name
or Easy Connect.
#[<net_service_name> | [//]Host[:Port]/<service_name>]
<net_service_name> is a simple name for a service that resolves
to a connect descriptor.
Example: Connect to database using Net Service Name and the
database net service name is ORCL.
sqlplus myusername/mypassword#ORCL
Host specifies the host name or IP address of the database
server computer.
Port specifies the listening port on the database server.
<service_name> specifies the service name of the database you
want to access.
Example: Connect to database using Easy Connect and the
Service name is ORCL.
sqlplus myusername/mypassword#Host/ORCL
The /NOLOG option starts SQL*Plus without connecting to a
database.
The EDITION specifies the value for Session Edition.
<start> is: #<URL>|<filename>[.<ext>] [<parameter> ...]
Runs the specified SQL*Plus script from a web server (URL) or the
local file system (filename.ext) with specified parameters that
will be assigned to substitution variables in the script.
When SQL*Plus starts, and after CONNECT commands, the site profile
(e.g. $ORACLE_HOME/sqlplus/admin/glogin.sql) and the user profile
(e.g. login.sql in the working directory) are run. The files may
contain SQL*Plus commands.
Java Class used to run sqlplus command.
public class RunSqlPlus {
public static void main(String[] args){
try {
String cmd = " sqlplus -s -LOGON <user_name>/<password>#\"(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host= host1.com)(Port=1725))(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host= host2.com)(Port=1725))(LOAD_BALANCE = ON)(FAILOVER = ON) (CONNECT_DATA = (SERVER = DEDICATED)(SERVICE_NAME=service.com)))\" #Load.sql";
Process process;
process = Runtime.getRuntime()
.exec(cmd);
StreamGobbler streamGobbler =
new StreamGobbler(process.getInputStream(), System.out::println);
Future<?> future = Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor().submit(streamGobbler);
int exitCode = process.waitFor();
assert exitCode == 0;
future.get();
}
catch(IOException |InterruptedException | ExecutionException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
private static class StreamGobbler implements Runnable {
private InputStream inputStream;
private Consumer<String> consumer;
public StreamGobbler(InputStream inputStream, Consumer<String> consumer) {
this.inputStream = inputStream;
this.consumer = consumer;
}
#Override
public void run() {
new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream)).lines()
.forEach(consumer);
}
}
}
Runtime.exec(String) is deprecated in JDK18 as it isn't always good at splitting the commands with spaces / quotes. Break up the command line arguments properly so that there is no ambiguity:
String[] cmd = new String[] {
"sqlplus","-s", "-LOGON",
"<user_name>/<password>#\"(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host= host1.com)(Port=1725))(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host= host2.com)(Port=1725))(LOAD_BALANCE = ON)(FAILOVER = ON) (CONNECT_DATA = (SERVER = DEDICATED)(SERVICE_NAME=service.com)))\""
"#Load.sql"
};
You have better control over the sub-process if you replace Runtime.exec(cmd) by ProcessBuilder as you can capture the stdout/stderr to files or redirect stderr to stdout to avoid need to read both streams.

How to set Java home in JSch to execute a command?

I'm using Jcraft JSch to ssh into a remote machine and execute a command. As it's a non-interactive shell it's not finding Java home. How do I set Java home while using jsch? looking like
((ChannelExec) channel).setEnv("LANG", "UTF-8");
((ChannelExec) channel).setEnv("JAVA_HOME", "/blah/java/J8.0_64/");
is deprecated?
public String sendCommand(String command) {
StringBuilder outputBuffer = new StringBuilder();
try {
Channel channel = sesConnection.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec) channel).setEnv("LANG", "UTF-8");
((ChannelExec) channel).setEnv("JAVA_HOME", "/blah/java/J8.0_64/");
((ChannelExec) channel).setCommand(command);
InputStream commandOutput = channel.getInputStream();
channel.connect();
int readByte = commandOutput.read();
while (readByte != 0xffffffff) {
outputBuffer.append((char) readByte);
readByte = commandOutput.read();
}
channel.disconnect();
} catch (IOException ioX) {
logWarning(ioX.getMessage());
return null;
} catch (JSchException jschX) {
logWarning(jschX.getMessage());
return null;
}
return outputBuffer.toString();
}
Error I'm getting while executing a command
JAVA_HOME not set and cannot find javac to deduce location, please set JAVA_HOME.
ChannelExec.setEnv on JSch side probably works. But assuming you are connecting to an OpenSSH server, the server must be explicitly configured to allow you to set the LANG and JAVA_HOME environment variables using the AcceptEnv directive. What it probably is not.
You can try the same using PuTTY (Connection > Data > Environment variables). You will probably get "Server refused to set environment variables" message back.
See also How can I set environment variables when I ssh login to my Unix box by passing custom arguments?
Anyway, the correct solution is to fix your server configuration to set the environment correctly even for non-interactive sessions.
Or as a dirty workaround you can set the variables directly in your command:
JAVA_HOME=/blah/java/J8.0_64/; java ...
See also Certain Unix commands fail with "... not found", when executed through Java using JSch.
This got me when I was trying to run maven using jsch exec.
Easy work-around is to use bash to run your command.
String command = "bash --login -c 'mvn --version'";
((ChannelExec) channel).setCommand(command);
or
((ChannelExec) channel).setCommand("bash --login -c '"+command+"'");

Remote execute command via SSH-tunnel triggered by a button [duplicate]

I have a piece of code which connects to a Unix server and executes commands.
I have been trying with simple commands and they work fine.
I am able to login and get the output of the commands.
I need to run an Ab-initio graph through Java.
I am using the air sandbox run graph command for this.
It runs fine, when I login using SSH client and run the command. I am able to run the graph. However, when I try to run the command through Java it gives me a "air not found" error.
Is there any kind of limit on what kind of Unix commands JSch supports?
Any idea why I'm not able to run the command through my Java code?
Here's the code:
public static void connect(){
try{
JSch jsch=new JSch();
String host="*****";
String user="*****";
String config =
"Host foo\n"+
" User "+user+"\n"+
" Hostname "+host+"\n";
ConfigRepository configRepository =
com.jcraft.jsch.OpenSSHConfig.parse(config);
jsch.setConfigRepository(configRepository);
Session session=jsch.getSession("foo");
String passwd ="*****";
session.setPassword(passwd);
UserInfo ui = new MyUserInfo(){
public boolean promptYesNo(String message){
int foo = 0;
return foo==0;
}
};
session.setUserInfo(ui);
session.connect();
String command="air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Channel channel=session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setCommand(command);
channel.setInputStream(null);
((ChannelExec)channel).setErrStream(System.err);
InputStream in=channel.getInputStream();
channel.connect();
byte[] tmp=new byte[1024];
while(true){
while(in.available()>0){
int i=in.read(tmp, 0, 1024);
if(i<0)break;
page_message=new String(tmp, 0, i);
System.out.print(page_message);
}
if(channel.isClosed()){
if(in.available()>0) continue;
System.out.println("exit-status: "+channel.getExitStatus());
break;
}
try{Thread.sleep(1000);}catch(Exception ee){}
}
channel.disconnect();
session.disconnect();
}
catch(Exception e){
System.out.println(e);
}
}
public static void main(String arg[]){
connect();
}
public String return_message(){
String ret_message=page_message;
return ret_message;
}
public static abstract class MyUserInfo
implements UserInfo, UIKeyboardInteractive{
public String getPassword(){ return null; }
public boolean promptYesNo(String str){ return false; }
public String getPassphrase(){ return null; }
public boolean promptPassphrase(String message){ return false; }
public boolean promptPassword(String message){ return false; }
public void showMessage(String message){ }
public String[] promptKeyboardInteractive(String destination,
String name,
String instruction,
String[] prompt,
boolean[] echo){
return null;
}
}
The "exec" channel in the JSch (rightfully) does not allocate a pseudo terminal (PTY) for the session. As a consequence a different set of startup scripts is (might be) sourced (particularly for non-interactive sessions, .bash_profile is not sourced). And/or different branches in the scripts are taken, based on absence/presence of the TERM environment variable. So the environment might differ from the interactive session, you use with your SSH client.
So, in your case, the PATH is probably set differently; and consequently the air executable cannot be found.
To verify that this is the root cause, disable the pseudo terminal allocation in your SSH client. For example in PuTTY, it's Connection > SSH > TTY > Don't allocate a pseudo terminal. Then, go to Connection > SSH > Remote command and enter your air ... command. Check Session > Close window on exit > Never and open the session. You should get the same "air not found" error.
Ways to fix this, in preference order:
Fix the command not to rely on a specific environment. Use a full path to air in the command. E.g.:
/bin/air sandbox run <graph-path>
If you do not know the full path, on common *nix systems, you can use which air command in your interactive SSH session.
Fix your startup scripts to set the PATH the same for both interactive and non-interactive sessions.
Try running the script explicitly via login shell (use --login switch with common *nix shells):
bash --login -c "air sandbox run sandbox run <graph-path>"
If the command itself relies on a specific environment setup and you cannot fix the startup scripts, you can change the environment in the command itself. Syntax for that depends on the remote system and/or the shell. In common *nix systems, this works:
String command="PATH=\"$PATH;/path/to/air\" && air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Another (not recommended) approach is to force the pseudo terminal allocation for the "exec" channel using the .setPty method:
Channel channel = session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setPty(true);
Using the pseudo terminal to automate a command execution can bring you nasty side effects. See for example Is there a simple way to get rid of junk values that come when you SSH using Python's Paramiko library and fetch output from CLI of a remote machine?
For a similar issues, see
Certain Unix commands fail with "... not found", when executed through Java using JSch even with setPty enabled
Commands executed using JSch behaves differently than in SSH terminal (bypasses confirm prompt message of "yes/"no")
JSch: Is there a way to expose user environment variables to "exec" channel?
Command (.4gl) executed with SSH.NET SshClient.RunCommand fails with "No such file or directory"
you could try to find out where "air" resides with
whereis air
and then use this outcome.
something like
/usr/bin/air sandbox run graph
You can use an ~/.ssh/environment file to set your AB_HOME and PATH variables.

Error executin binary with JSCH [duplicate]

I have a piece of code which connects to a Unix server and executes commands.
I have been trying with simple commands and they work fine.
I am able to login and get the output of the commands.
I need to run an Ab-initio graph through Java.
I am using the air sandbox run graph command for this.
It runs fine, when I login using SSH client and run the command. I am able to run the graph. However, when I try to run the command through Java it gives me a "air not found" error.
Is there any kind of limit on what kind of Unix commands JSch supports?
Any idea why I'm not able to run the command through my Java code?
Here's the code:
public static void connect(){
try{
JSch jsch=new JSch();
String host="*****";
String user="*****";
String config =
"Host foo\n"+
" User "+user+"\n"+
" Hostname "+host+"\n";
ConfigRepository configRepository =
com.jcraft.jsch.OpenSSHConfig.parse(config);
jsch.setConfigRepository(configRepository);
Session session=jsch.getSession("foo");
String passwd ="*****";
session.setPassword(passwd);
UserInfo ui = new MyUserInfo(){
public boolean promptYesNo(String message){
int foo = 0;
return foo==0;
}
};
session.setUserInfo(ui);
session.connect();
String command="air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Channel channel=session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setCommand(command);
channel.setInputStream(null);
((ChannelExec)channel).setErrStream(System.err);
InputStream in=channel.getInputStream();
channel.connect();
byte[] tmp=new byte[1024];
while(true){
while(in.available()>0){
int i=in.read(tmp, 0, 1024);
if(i<0)break;
page_message=new String(tmp, 0, i);
System.out.print(page_message);
}
if(channel.isClosed()){
if(in.available()>0) continue;
System.out.println("exit-status: "+channel.getExitStatus());
break;
}
try{Thread.sleep(1000);}catch(Exception ee){}
}
channel.disconnect();
session.disconnect();
}
catch(Exception e){
System.out.println(e);
}
}
public static void main(String arg[]){
connect();
}
public String return_message(){
String ret_message=page_message;
return ret_message;
}
public static abstract class MyUserInfo
implements UserInfo, UIKeyboardInteractive{
public String getPassword(){ return null; }
public boolean promptYesNo(String str){ return false; }
public String getPassphrase(){ return null; }
public boolean promptPassphrase(String message){ return false; }
public boolean promptPassword(String message){ return false; }
public void showMessage(String message){ }
public String[] promptKeyboardInteractive(String destination,
String name,
String instruction,
String[] prompt,
boolean[] echo){
return null;
}
}
The "exec" channel in the JSch (rightfully) does not allocate a pseudo terminal (PTY) for the session. As a consequence a different set of startup scripts is (might be) sourced (particularly for non-interactive sessions, .bash_profile is not sourced). And/or different branches in the scripts are taken, based on absence/presence of the TERM environment variable. So the environment might differ from the interactive session, you use with your SSH client.
So, in your case, the PATH is probably set differently; and consequently the air executable cannot be found.
To verify that this is the root cause, disable the pseudo terminal allocation in your SSH client. For example in PuTTY, it's Connection > SSH > TTY > Don't allocate a pseudo terminal. Then, go to Connection > SSH > Remote command and enter your air ... command. Check Session > Close window on exit > Never and open the session. You should get the same "air not found" error.
Ways to fix this, in preference order:
Fix the command not to rely on a specific environment. Use a full path to air in the command. E.g.:
/bin/air sandbox run <graph-path>
If you do not know the full path, on common *nix systems, you can use which air command in your interactive SSH session.
Fix your startup scripts to set the PATH the same for both interactive and non-interactive sessions.
Try running the script explicitly via login shell (use --login switch with common *nix shells):
bash --login -c "air sandbox run sandbox run <graph-path>"
If the command itself relies on a specific environment setup and you cannot fix the startup scripts, you can change the environment in the command itself. Syntax for that depends on the remote system and/or the shell. In common *nix systems, this works:
String command="PATH=\"$PATH;/path/to/air\" && air sandbox run <graph-path>";
Another (not recommended) approach is to force the pseudo terminal allocation for the "exec" channel using the .setPty method:
Channel channel = session.openChannel("exec");
((ChannelExec)channel).setPty(true);
Using the pseudo terminal to automate a command execution can bring you nasty side effects. See for example Is there a simple way to get rid of junk values that come when you SSH using Python's Paramiko library and fetch output from CLI of a remote machine?
For a similar issues, see
Certain Unix commands fail with "... not found", when executed through Java using JSch even with setPty enabled
Commands executed using JSch behaves differently than in SSH terminal (bypasses confirm prompt message of "yes/"no")
JSch: Is there a way to expose user environment variables to "exec" channel?
Command (.4gl) executed with SSH.NET SshClient.RunCommand fails with "No such file or directory"
you could try to find out where "air" resides with
whereis air
and then use this outcome.
something like
/usr/bin/air sandbox run graph
You can use an ~/.ssh/environment file to set your AB_HOME and PATH variables.

Jsch Shell won't accept input from Terminal

I have written a simple groovy program that uses the Jsch Library to establish an ssh tunnel and open a shell on the target server. The script connect fine and the shell opens. In IntelliJ I can enter input into the shell and get the subsequent output if I run the program. However if I attempt to do the same in the Terminal or in a cmd it connects fine but I cannot enter any input so can't run commands.
println "Opening connection to ${sshUser}#${sshHost}:${sshPort}"
Properties config = new Properties()
config.put("StrictHostKeyChecking", "no")
JSch jsch = new JSch()
Session sshSession = jsch.getSession(sshUser, sshHost, sshPort as int)
sshSession.setPassword(sshPass)
sshSession.setConfig(config)
sshSession.connect()
println "Connected"
println "Forwarding connection to ${targetHost}:${targetPort}"
def assignedPort = sshSession.setPortForwardingL(0, targetHost, targetPort as int)
println "Got port $assignedPort"
// Set the session to open as a Shell
Channel channel = targetSession.openChannel("shell")
// Set Input and Output streams
channel.setInputStream(System.in)
channel.setOutputStream(System.out);
// Connect
channel.connect()
UPDATE
After further reading it seems that to get this working there is a hack for the Windows prompt. However the code that JCraft provided has a number of issues that I'm struggling with:
channel.setInputStream(new FilterInputStream(System.in){
public int read(byte[] b, int off, int len)throws IOException{
return in.read(b, off, (len>1024?1024:len));
}
});
I get the very helpful error "Wrong Statement"
I've found a solution really simple in the end. The Windows Prompt hack does work but needs to be tweaked as follows:
return System.in.read(b, off, (len>1024?1024:len));
Thanks for your help anyway guys

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