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Re: [O] Executing org shell blocks on remote machine over ssh
From: |
Ista Zahn |
Subject: |
Re: [O] Executing org shell blocks on remote machine over ssh |
Date: |
Tue, 18 Nov 2014 13:31:48 -0500 |
On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 1:23 PM, David Bjergaard <address@hidden> wrote:
> Ista Zahn <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 10:43 AM, Brett Viren <address@hidden> wrote:
>>> David Bjergaard <address@hidden> writes:
>>>
>>>> I use org mode as a lab notebook. I write org-src blocks to keep track
>>>> of tasks I do at the command line, and then I copy paste them into the
>>>> terminal. I would really like to hit "C-c C-c" on the source block and
>>>> have it executed on the remote machine. I know that you can specify
>>>> the remote machine according to [1], however the software I use requires
>>>> a fairly complicated setup to get going.
>>>
>>> Is it just complicated, or is it also prohibitively long-running?
>>>
>>> If just the former, you could maybe bundle the setup into some shell
>>> script and source it in each of your sh source blocks. Eg:
>>>
>>> #+BEGIN_SRC sh :results output :dir /ssh:lycastus:/home/bviren
>>> /bin/pwd
>>> echo $HOSTNAME
>>> ls -l foo.sh
>>> echo "---"
>>> cat foo.sh
>>> echo "---"
>>> source ./foo.sh
>>> echo $FOO
>>> #+END_SRC
>>>
>>> #+RESULTS:
>>> : /home/bviren
>>> : lycastus
>>> : -rw-rw-r-- 1 bviren bviren 16 Nov 18 10:27 foo.sh
>>> : ---
>>> : export FOO=bar
>>> :
>>> : ---
>>> : bar
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If the setup is purely environmental, and it takes a long time to
>>> perform, maybe you could do the set up once and then cache the resulting
>>> environment using the output of "env".
>>
>> I guess I'm missing something (like why the OP want's to run a shell
>> in a separate window), but why not just
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC sh :results output :dir /ssh:lycastus:/home/bviren :session
>> *shell*
>> /bin/pwd
>> echo $HOSTNAME
>> ls -l foo.sh
>> echo "---"
>> cat foo.sh
>> echo "---"
>> source ./foo.sh
>> echo $FOO
>> #+END_SRC
>>
>> ?
>>
>> Best,
>> Ista
>>>
>>>
>>> -Brett.
> Hi Ista, Brett,
>
> Thanks for the hints, I'll try these.
> Some clarification:
>>> If the setup is purely environmental, and it takes a long time to
>>> perform, maybe you could do the set up once and then cache the resulting
>>> environment using the output of "env".
> Unfortunately it takes a long time to set up, and its complicated (I
> have to initialize different versions of the software depending on
> which project I'm working on.) It can take up to 10 seconds to restore a
> saved environment, and it takes some setting up bootstrap the
> restoration command.
>> I guess I'm missing something (like why the OP want's to run a shell
>> in a separate window), but why not just
> I want the separate window because once the environment is set up, I
> also jump around a lot.
Emacs is great for jumping around a lot, another reason to run the
shell inside emacs instead of in a separate window.
I record the pieces of shell script that are
> important for reproducing results in the notebook. The snippets are
> then recycled across many sessions, and different pieces are used at
> different times (some are even used with different pieces of software).
>
> What I would like is to log into the remote machine, set up the
> software, and then have a way to tell emacs to send the org-src block to
> the set up environment so that I can build up the parts I need at that
> moment.
>
> I know this is working "against the grain" of the literate programming
> paradigm where the document and the source code are coupled, and
> tangling the document produces a program that can be executed. I'm just
> wondering if its possible.
It really does sound to me like you're just looking for the :session argument.
Best,
Ista
If not that's fine. Really I'm just trying
> to save myself a copy-paste (and the associated issues with it getting
> recorded in my .bash_history).
>
> Cheers,
>
> Dave