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bring your .bashrc, .vimrc, etc. with you when you ssh

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Usage

sshrc works just like ssh, but it also sources the ~/.sshrc on your local computer after logging in remotely.

$ echo "echo welcome" > ~/.sshrc
$ sshrc me@myserver
welcome

$ echo "alias ..='cd ..'" > ~/.sshrc
$ sshrc me@myserver
$ type ..
.. is aliased to `cd ..'

You can use this to set environment variables, define functions, and run post-login commands. It's that simple, and it won't impact other users on the server - even if they use sshrc too. This makes sshrc very useful if you share a server with multiple users and can't edit the server's ~/.bashrc without affecting them, or if you have several servers that you don't want to configure independently.

Installation

Ubuntu (12.04 and 14.04 only)

$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:russell-s-stewart/ppa
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install sshrc

Archlinux

Install the sshrc-git AUR package.

Everything else

$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Russell91/sshrc/master/sshrc && 
chmod +x sshrc && 
sudo mv sshrc /usr/local/bin #or anywhere else on your PATH

Bash completion

You can have the same nice Bash completion features as in ssh (host completion based on ssh's config, known hosts, etc.) with:

$ sudo cp bash_completion /etc/bash_completion.d/sshrc

Advanced configuration

Your most import configuration files (e.g. vim, inputrc) may not be bash scripts. Put them in ~/.sshrc.d and sshrc will copy them to a (guaranteed) unique folder in the server's /tmp directory after login. You can find them at $SSHHOME/.sshrc.d. You can usually tell programs to load their configuration from the $SSHHOME/.sshrc.d directory by setting the right environment variables. Putting too much data in ~/.sshrc.d will slow down your login times. If the folder contents are > 64kB, the server may block your sshrc attempts.

Vim

$ mkdir -p ~/.sshrc.d
$ echo ':imap <special> jk <Esc>' > ~/.sshrc.d/.vimrc
$ cat << 'EOF' > ~/.sshrc
export VIMINIT="let \$MYVIMRC='$SSHHOME/.sshrc.d/.vimrc' | source \$MYVIMRC"
EOF
$ sshrc me@myserver
$ vim # jk -> normal mode will work

Tmux

If you use tmux frequently, you can make sshrc work there as well. The following seems complicated, but hopefully it should just work.

$ cat << 'EOF' > ~/.sshrc
alias foo='echo I work with tmux, too'

tmuxrc() {
    local TMUXDIR=/tmp/russelltmuxserver
    if ! [ -d $TMUXDIR ]; then
        rm -rf $TMUXDIR
        mkdir -p $TMUXDIR
    fi
    rm -rf $TMUXDIR/.sshrc.d
    cp -r $SSHHOME/.sshrc $SSHHOME/bashsshrc $SSHHOME/sshrc $SSHHOME/.sshrc.d $TMUXDIR
    SSHHOME=$TMUXDIR SHELL=$TMUXDIR/bashsshrc /usr/bin/tmux -S $TMUXDIR/tmuxserver $@
}
export SHELL=`which bash`
EOF
$ sshrc me@myserver
$ tmuxrc
$ foo
I work with tmux, too

The -S option will start a separate tmux server. You can still safely access the vanilla tmux server with tmux. Tmux servers can persist for longer than your ssh session, so the above tmuxrc function copies your configs to the more permenant /tmp/russelltmuxserver, which won't be deleted when you close your ssh session. Starting tmux with the SHELL environment variable set to bashsshrc will take care of loading your configs with each new terminal. Setting SHELL back to /bin/bash when you're done is important to prevent quirks due to tmux sessions having a non-default SHELL variable.

Specializing .sshrc to individual servers

You may have different configurations for different servers. I recommend the following structure for your ~/.sshrc control flow:

if [ $(hostname | grep server1 | wc -l) == 1 ]; then
    echo 'server1'
fi
if [ $(hostname | grep server2 | wc -l) == 1 ]; then
    echo 'server2'
fi

Tips

  • I don't recommend trying to throw your entire .vim folder into ~/.sshrc.d. It will more than likely be too big.

  • For larger configurations, consider copying files to an obscure folder on the server and using ~/.sshrc to automatically source those configurations on login..

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