openssh - execute cross-compiled binary on remote PC











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I'm cross-compiling a C++ application and have written a one-liner that copies the file to the target PC after compilation. Now I would like to execute the binary using the remote PC resources. The problem is that the binary executes using local PC resources. No output is required to be sent back to compilation PC. I imagine the solution could be very simple but I can't see how to do it without using a complex tool such as vnc. Please can you suggest how I might go about accomplishing this as a one-liner?



sshpass -p "myPassword" scp /path/to/compiled/binary/on/host user@remotePC:/path/to/compiled/binary/on/target && 
sshpass -p "myPassword" ssh user@remotePC "path/to/compiled/binary/on/target"









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  • How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
    – vidarlo
    Dec 1 at 9:50










  • Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
    – Harry Roache-Wilson
    Dec 1 at 11:40

















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I'm cross-compiling a C++ application and have written a one-liner that copies the file to the target PC after compilation. Now I would like to execute the binary using the remote PC resources. The problem is that the binary executes using local PC resources. No output is required to be sent back to compilation PC. I imagine the solution could be very simple but I can't see how to do it without using a complex tool such as vnc. Please can you suggest how I might go about accomplishing this as a one-liner?



sshpass -p "myPassword" scp /path/to/compiled/binary/on/host user@remotePC:/path/to/compiled/binary/on/target && 
sshpass -p "myPassword" ssh user@remotePC "path/to/compiled/binary/on/target"









share|improve this question









New contributor




Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
    – vidarlo
    Dec 1 at 9:50










  • Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
    – Harry Roache-Wilson
    Dec 1 at 11:40















up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I'm cross-compiling a C++ application and have written a one-liner that copies the file to the target PC after compilation. Now I would like to execute the binary using the remote PC resources. The problem is that the binary executes using local PC resources. No output is required to be sent back to compilation PC. I imagine the solution could be very simple but I can't see how to do it without using a complex tool such as vnc. Please can you suggest how I might go about accomplishing this as a one-liner?



sshpass -p "myPassword" scp /path/to/compiled/binary/on/host user@remotePC:/path/to/compiled/binary/on/target && 
sshpass -p "myPassword" ssh user@remotePC "path/to/compiled/binary/on/target"









share|improve this question









New contributor




Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I'm cross-compiling a C++ application and have written a one-liner that copies the file to the target PC after compilation. Now I would like to execute the binary using the remote PC resources. The problem is that the binary executes using local PC resources. No output is required to be sent back to compilation PC. I imagine the solution could be very simple but I can't see how to do it without using a complex tool such as vnc. Please can you suggest how I might go about accomplishing this as a one-liner?



sshpass -p "myPassword" scp /path/to/compiled/binary/on/host user@remotePC:/path/to/compiled/binary/on/target && 
sshpass -p "myPassword" ssh user@remotePC "path/to/compiled/binary/on/target"






remote-access openssh cross-compilation






share|improve this question









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Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









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edited Dec 1 at 6:59





















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asked Dec 1 at 0:57









Harry Roache-Wilson

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New contributor




Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Harry Roache-Wilson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
    – vidarlo
    Dec 1 at 9:50










  • Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
    – Harry Roache-Wilson
    Dec 1 at 11:40




















  • How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
    – vidarlo
    Dec 1 at 9:50










  • Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
    – Harry Roache-Wilson
    Dec 1 at 11:40


















How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
– vidarlo
Dec 1 at 9:50




How do you know that it executes on your local cumpoter? ssh user@host 'command' will run the command on the remote system, redirecting output trough ssh.
– vidarlo
Dec 1 at 9:50












Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
– Harry Roache-Wilson
Dec 1 at 11:40






Interesting. The binaries in question are Nvidia DriveWorks applications that put a heavy load on the GPU. On the host machine I'm running a GTX 2080, and the target is a Tegra SOC. The latter is about three times slower. The difference in speed is evident when comparing local vs remote execution on the target system. It is impossible that the difference in execution speed is not due to the sample being run on the host hardware when executed remotely. I will run some more tests tomorrow and update the post.
– Harry Roache-Wilson
Dec 1 at 11:40

















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