You misunderstand how the -m
switch works.
It is just a way to make plink
load the commands to send to the server from a local file.
The file is NOT uploaded and executed on the remote server (with arguments).
It's contents is read locally and sent to the server and executed there as if you typed it on a (remote) command line. You cannot give it arguments.
A workaround is to generate the file on the fly locally before running plink
from a batch file (say run.bat
):
echo echo %1 > script.tmp
plink.exe -ssh username@host -pw gbG32s4D/ -m script.tmp
Then run the batch file with the argument:
run.bat 5
The above will make the script execute echo 5
on the server.
If the script is complex, instead of assembling it locally, have it ready on the server (as @MarcelKuiper suggested) and execute just the script via Plink.
plink.exe -ssh username@host -pw gbG32s4D/ "./myscript.sh %1"
In this case, as we execute just one command, you can pass it on Plink command line, including the arguments. You do not have to use the -m
switch with a (temporary) file.
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