-pw in Plink doesn't work in Telnet. Mention this.
[sgt/putty] / doc / plink.but
1 \versionid $Id: plink.but,v 1.14 2002/02/04 13:29:04 simon Exp $
2
3 \C{plink} Using the command-line connection tool Plink
4
5 \i{Plink} (PuTTY Link) is a command-line connection tool similar to
6 UNIX \c{ssh}. It is mostly used for automated operations, such as
7 making CVS access a repository on a remote server.
8
9 Plink is probably not what you want if you want to run an
10 interactive session in a console window.
11
12 \H{plink-starting} Starting Plink
13
14 Plink is a command line application. This means that you cannot just
15 double-click on its icon to run it and instead you have to bring up
16 a \i{console window}. In Windows 95, 98, and ME, this is called an
17 \q{MS-DOS Prompt}, and in Windows NT and 2000 it is called a
18 \q{Command Prompt}. It should be available from the Programs section
19 of your Start Menu.
20
21 In order to use Plink, the file \c{plink.exe} will need either to be
22 on your \i{\c{PATH}} or in your current directory. To add the
23 directory containing Plink to your \c{PATH} environment variable,
24 type into the console window:
25
26 \c set PATH=C:\path\to\putty\directory;%PATH%
27
28 This will only work for the lifetime of that particular console
29 window. To set your \c{PATH} more permanently on Windows NT, use the
30 Environment tab of the System Control Panel. On Windows 95, 98, and
31 ME, you will need to edit your \c{AUTOEXEC.BAT} to include a \c{set}
32 command like the one above.
33
34 \H{plink-usage} Using Plink
35
36 This section describes the basics of how to use Plink for
37 interactive logins and for automated processes.
38
39 Once you've got a console window to type into, you can just type
40 \c{plink} on its own to bring up a usage message. This tells you the
41 version of Plink you're using, and gives you a brief summary of how to
42 use Plink:
43
44 \c Z:\sysosd>plink
45 \c PuTTY Link: command-line connection utility
46 \c Release 0.50
47 \c Usage: plink [options] [user@]host [command]
48 \c Options:
49 \c -v show verbose messages
50 \c -ssh force use of ssh protocol
51 \c -P port connect to specified port
52 \c -pw passw login with specified password
53
54 Once this works, you are ready to use Plink.
55
56 \S{plink-usage-interactive} Using Plink for interactive logins
57
58 To make a simple interactive connection to a remote server, just
59 type \c{plink} and then the host name:
60
61 \c Z:\sysosd>plink login.example.com
62 \c
63 \c Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 flunky.example.com
64 \c flunky login:
65
66 You should then be able to log in as normal and run a session. The
67 output sent by the server will be written straight to your command
68 prompt window, which will most likely not interpret terminal control
69 codes in the way the server expects it to. So if you run any
70 full-screen applications, for example, you can expect to see strange
71 characters appearing in your window. Interactive connections like
72 this are not the main point of Plink.
73
74 In order to connect with a different protocol, you can give the
75 command line options \c{-ssh}, \c{-telnet}, \c{-rlogin} or \c{-raw}.
76 To make an SSH connection, for example:
77
78 \c Z:\sysosd>plink -ssh login.example.com
79 \c login as:
80
81 If you have already set up a PuTTY saved session, then instead of
82 supplying a host name, you can give the saved session name. This
83 allows you to use public-key authentication, specify a user name,
84 and use most of the other features of PuTTY:
85
86 \c Z:\sysosd>plink my-ssh-session
87 \c Sent username "fred"
88 \c Authenticating with public key "fred@winbox"
89 \c Last login: Thu Dec 6 19:25:33 2001 from :0.0
90 \c fred@flunky:~$
91
92 \S{plink-usage-batch} Using Plink for automated connections
93
94 More typically Plink is used with the SSH protocol, to enable you to
95 talk directly to a program running on the server. To do this you
96 have to ensure Plink is \e{using} the SSH protocol. You can do this
97 in several ways:
98
99 \b Use the \c{-ssh} option as described in
100 \k{plink-usage-interactive}.
101
102 \b Set up a PuTTY saved session that describes the server you are
103 connecting to, and that also specifies the protocol as SSH.
104
105 \b Set the Windows environment variable \c{PLINK_PROTOCOL} to the
106 word \c{ssh}.
107
108 Usually Plink is not invoked directly by a user, but run
109 automatically by another process. Therefore you typically do not
110 want Plink to prompt you for a user name or a password.
111
112 To avoid being prompted for a user name, you can:
113
114 \b Use the \c{-l} option to specify a user name on the command line.
115 For example, \c{plink login.example.com -l fred}.
116
117 \b Set up a PuTTY saved session that describes the server you are
118 connecting to, and that also specifies the username to log in as
119 (see \k{config-username}).
120
121 To avoid being prompted for a password, you should almost certainly
122 set up public-key authentication. (See \k{pubkey} for a general
123 introduction to public-key authentication.) Again, you can do this
124 in two ways:
125
126 \b Set up a PuTTY saved session that describes the server you are
127 connecting to, and that also specifies a private key file (see
128 \k{config-ssh-privkey}). For this to work without prompting, your
129 private key will need to have no passphrase.
130
131 \b Store the private key in Pageant. See \k{pageant} for further
132 information.
133
134 Once you have done all this, you should be able to run a remote
135 command on the SSH server machine and have it execute automatically
136 with no prompting:
137
138 \c Z:\sysosd>plink login.example.com -l fred echo hello, world
139 \c hello, world
140 \c
141 \c Z:\sysosd>
142
143 Or, if you have set up a saved session with all the connection
144 details:
145
146 \c Z:\sysosd>plink mysession echo hello, world
147 \c hello, world
148 \c
149 \c Z:\sysosd>
150
151 Then you can set up other programs to run this Plink command and
152 talk to it as if it were a process on the server machine.
153
154 You may also find it useful to use the \c{-batch} command-line
155 option; see \k{plink-usage-options-batch}.
156
157 \S{plink-usage-options} Options
158
159 This section describes the command line options that Plink accepts.
160
161 \S2{plink-usage-options-v}\c{-v} show verbose messages
162
163 By default, Plink only displays any password prompts and the output of
164 the remote command. The \c{-v} option makes it print extra
165 information about the connection being made, for example:
166
167 \c Server version: SSH-1.5-OpenSSH-1.2.3
168 \c We claim version: SSH-1.5-PuTTY
169 \c Using SSH protocol version 1
170 \c Received public keys
171 \c Host key fingerprint is:
172 \c 1023 e3:65:44:44:bd:b1:04:59:bc:e2:3d:a1:4d:09:ce:99
173 \c Encrypted session key
174 \c Using 3DES encryption
175 \c Trying to enable encryption...
176 \c Successfully started encryption
177 \c Sent username "fred".
178 \c Sent username "fred"
179 \c fred@example.com's password:
180
181 This information can be useful for diagnosing problems.
182
183 \S2{plink-usage-options-ssh} Protocol selection options
184
185 Plink is most useful when using the SSH protocol. However, it allows
186 you to interface to all the protocols supported by PuTTY. You can
187 specify the option \c{-ssh} on the command line to select the SSH
188 protocol; you can also specify \c{-telnet}, \c{-rlogin} or \c{-raw}
189 to select other protocols.
190
191 \S2{plink-usage-options-P}\c{-P port} connect to specified port
192
193 If your server machine is running its SSH service on a port other
194 than the standard one, you can specify an alternative port number to
195 connect to using the \c{-P} option, like this:
196
197 \c plink -ssh login.example.com -P 5022
198
199 \S2{plink-usage-options-pw}\c{-pw passw} login with specified password
200
201 A simple way to automate a remote login is to supply your password
202 on the Plink command line. This is \e{not recommended} for reasons
203 of security. If you possibly can, we recommend you set up public-key
204 authentication instead. See \k{pubkey} for details.
205
206 Note that the \c{-pw} option only works when you are using the SSH
207 protocol. Due to fundamental limitations of Telnet and Rlogin, these
208 protocols do not support automated password authentication.
209
210 \S2{plink-usage-options-user}\c{-l username} login with specified
211 username
212
213 As described in \k{plink-usage-batch}, you can specify the user name
214 to log in as on the remote server using the \c{-l} option. For
215 example, \c{plink login.example.com -l fred}.
216
217 \S2{plink-usage-options-batch}\c{-batch} avoid interactive prompts
218
219 If you use the \c{-batch} option, Plink will never give an
220 interactive prompt while establishing the connection. If the
221 server's host key is invalid, for example (see \k{gs-hostkey}), then
222 the connection will simply be abandoned instead of asking you what
223 to do next.
224
225 This may help Plink's behaviour when it is used in automated
226 scripts: using \c{-batch}, if something goes wrong at connection
227 time, the batch job will fail rather than hang.
228
229 \S2{plink-usage-options-cmdfile} \c{-m filename} read command from a
230 file
231
232 If the command you want to run on the remote server is particularly
233 large, you can read it from a file using the \c{-m} option, instead
234 of putting it directly on Plink's command line. On most Unix
235 systems, you can even put multiple lines in this file and execute
236 more than one command in sequence, or a whole shell script.
237
238 \S2{plink-usage-options-portfwd} \c{-L} and \c{-R} set up port
239 forwarding
240
241 Plink allows you to use port forwarding just as PuTTY does; if you
242 have set up a PuTTY saved session that specifies port forwardings,
243 and you connect to that session using Plink, then the same port
244 forwardings will be set up.
245
246 For convenience, Plink also offers the option to set up port
247 forwarding on the command line. The command-line options work just
248 like the ones in Unix \c{ssh} programs.
249
250 To forward a local port (say 5110) to a remote destination (say
251 \cw{popserver.example.com} port 110), you can write:
252
253 \c plink mysession -L 5110:popserver.example.com:110
254
255 And to forward a remote port to a local destination, just use the
256 \c{-R} option instead of \c{-L}:
257
258 \c plink mysession -R 5023:mytelnetserver.myhouse.org:23
259
260 For general information on port forwarding, see
261 \k{using-port-forwarding}.
262
263 \H{plink-batch} Using Plink in \i{batch files} and \i{scripts}
264
265 Once you have set up Plink to be able to log in to a remote server
266 without any interactive prompting (see \k{plink-usage-batch}), you
267 can use it for lots of scripting and batch purposes. For example, to
268 start a backup on a remote machine, you might use a command like:
269
270 \c plink root@myserver /etc/backups/do-backup.sh
271
272 Or perhaps you want to fetch all system log lines relating to a
273 particular web area:
274
275 \c plink mysession grep /~fjbloggs/ /var/log/httpd/access.log > fredlogs
276
277 Any non-interactive command you could usefully run on the server
278 command line, you can run in a batch file using Plink in this way.
279
280 \H{plink-cvs} Using Plink with \i{CVS}
281
282 To use Plink with CVS, you need to set the environment variable
283 \c{CVS_RSH} to point to Plink:
284
285 \c set CVS_RSH=\path\to\plink.exe
286
287 You also need to arrange to be able to connect to a remote host
288 without any interactive prompts, as described in
289 \k{plink-usage-batch}.
290
291 You should then be able to run CVS as follows:
292
293 \c cvs -d :ext:user@sessionname:/path/to/repository co module
294
295 If you specified a username in your saved session, you don't even
296 need to specify the \q{user} part of this, and you can just say:
297
298 \c cvs -d :ext:sessionname:/path/to/repository co module
299
300 \H{plink-wincvs} Using Plink with \i{WinCVS}
301
302 Plink can also be used with WinCVS. Firstly, arrange for Plink to be
303 able to connect to a remote host non-interactively, as described in
304 \k{plink-usage-batch}.
305
306 Then, in WinCVS, bring up the \q{Preferences} dialogue box from the
307 \e{Admin} menu, and switch to the \q{Ports} tab. Tick the box there
308 labelled \q{Check for an alternate \cw{rsh} name} and in the text
309 entry field to the right enter the full path to \c{plink.exe}.
310 Select \q{OK} on the \q{Preferences} dialogue box.
311
312 Next, select \q{Command Line} from the WinCVS \q{Admin} menu, and type
313 a CVS command as in \k{plink-cvs}, for example:
314
315 \c cvs -d :ext:user@hostname:/path/to/repository co module
316
317 Select the folder you want to check out to with the \q{Change Folder}
318 button, and click \q{OK} to check out your module. Once you've got
319 modules checked out, WinCVS will happily invoke plink from the GUI for
320 CVS operations.
321
322 \# \H{plink-whatelse} Using Plink with... ?