I’ve got this command in a bash script:
TEST=$(curl -o /dev/null -s -k -w "%{http_code}" -u "${USERNAME}:${PASSWORD}" "${URL}/dashboard/")
echo "${TEST}" #debug
When the script runs, the output is “000”.
When I run the same curl command from the shell, the output is “200” (which is correct, since the URL is valid).
I verified that the USERNAME, PASSWORD, and URL vars are being passed to the subshell.
I’d appreciate it if you could point out what I’m doing wrong here. :)
UPDATE: This has been solved.
Exit code 7 means curl couldn’t connect to the host, so I would try just curling a URL you know is valid directly, not setting it as an env var, to see what happens then.
Here is the result of the script curling a known good URL (it still results in exit code 7 and thus a result of “000”), followed by a copy-paste of the curl command run in the shell (exited with “200”):
$ ./test.sh curl -o /dev/null -s -k -w "%{http_code}" "https://i0.wp.com/www.notquitezen.co/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Is-Happiness-an-Emotion.png" previous exit code: 7 000 $ $ curl -o /dev/null -s -k -w "%{http_code}" "https://i0.wp.com/www.notquitezen.co/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Is-Happiness-an-Emotion.png" 200
So I guess the question is why is curl failing from within the subshell?
I stumbled on a possible cause, but more background is necessary to explain.
The script actually creates an ssh tunnel (to the Traefik host) and then does the curl. So the code is like:
SSH_CMD="ssh -N -L ${LOCAL_PORT}:127.0.0.1:${REMOTE_PORT} ${REMOTE_USER}@${REMOTE_HOST}" $SSH_CMD & SSH_PID=$! SSH_RESULT=$? TEST=$(curl -o /dev/null -s -k -w "%{http_code}" -u "${USERNAME}:${PASSWORD}" "${URL}/dashboard/") echo "${TEST}" #debug
What I learned is that when i run the script, the tunnel is successfully created but the curl fails; but then if I run the script again a second tunnel is created and the curl works fine.
Try to add -f to ssh command
That seems to have done it!
Running the
ssh -f...
instead ofssh.... &
seems to work first time and every time.It makes it so
SSH_PID=$!
doesn’t work, but I usedpgrep -f <ssh command>
instead.Thanks!
You are very welcome! That was the hypothesis, that ssh doesn’t go into background as you want it to, since it works for the second run, but tunnel is there after the first.
Ah, I see.
I guess they get different contexts or something?(Edit: I re-read your post and this does not make any sense :)) What if you chain the ssh command and the curl using &&?I’m not sure how to chain these 2 commands with
&&
, because the SSH command is being put in the background with&
.This doesn’t work:
SSH_CMD="ssh -N -L ${LOCAL_PORT}:127.0.0.1:${REMOTE_PORT} ${REMOTE_USER}@${REMOTE_HOST}" $SSH_CMD & && TEST=$(curl -o /dev/null -s -k -w "%{http_code}" -u "${USERNAME}:${PASSWORD}" "${URL}/dashboard/") SSH_PID=$! SSH_RESULT=$? echo $TEST
Perhaps I don’t need it in the background - the goal was to establish the tunnel and then continue with the script without it hanging until the ssh command is canceled.
Are you trying to reach a URL on the same host you’re ssh-ing to? That would create some interesting effects.
Especially since it works the second time it could mean that the second time you’re actually on the host and ssh-ing to the host itself and then curling localhost.
Someone else suggested the env vars arent being expanded correctly inside the $(curl …), which could be the culprit … If a straight up URL works that would indicate that something like that is happening.
That said, I just tried setting an env var called URL=“” and curling it, and curl said exit code 2, no URL specified, so something else is going on here.
changing how I called
ssh
in the background made the difference (https://lemmy.thewooskeys.com/comment/521006).Thanks for your time and assistance