When working remotely, I have a series of tabs that I open in gnome-terminal, and commands that I execute in them. I would like to automate all this setup as a single command.
If these commands could run independently and in parallel, I'd just adapt the answer to this question. In fact, I tried, using the following shell script:
gnome-terminal --working-directory="/home/superelectric" --tab -t "gate" -e 'bash -c "export BASH_POST_RC=\"ssh gate_tunnel\"; exec bash"' --tab -t "mydesktop" -e 'bash -c "export BASH_POST_RC=\"ssh tunneled_mydesktop\"; exec bash"'
Spread out over multiple lines, for readability:
gnome-terminal \
--working-directory="/home/superelectric" \
--tab \
-t "gate" \
-e \
'bash -c "export BASH_POST_RC=\"ssh gate_tunnel\"; exec bash"' \
--tab \
-t "mydesktop" \
-e \
'bash -c "export BASH_POST_RC=\"ssh tunneled_mydesktop\"; exec bash"'
The first part opens a tab, names it 'gate', and executes 'ssh gate_tunnel' within it. This is an ssh alias that opens a tunnel to 'mydesktop' at school, through the school's outward-facing server, 'gate'.
The second part opens another tab, names it 'mydesktop', and executes 'ssh tunneled_mydesktop' within it. This is another ssh alias, which connects to mydesktop through the tunnel.
~/.ssh/config:
Host gate_tunnel
LocalForward 8023 <my_desktop_at_school>:22
HostName <my_school_server>
That's the theory. In practice, the two commands execute in parallel, whereas I need to ensure that the first tab's command (open tunnel) completes before executing the second tab's command (connect through tunnel).
Is there maybe some command I can execute in the second tab, that 'waits' until the ssh tunnel is opened?
sleep 10;before the second command, but of course this would only work if you could be sure your tunnel would open within 10 seconds (or whatever number you put). Can you tell me what the exact tunnel command is (or as close as you can get)?