Remote shell
rsh [-dn] [-l username] host [command]
Neutrino
The rsh utility executes command on host. The standard input of rsh is copied to the remote command, and the standard output and standard error of the remote command are copied to rsh's standard output and standard error. Interrupt, quit, and terminate signals are propagated to the remote command; rsh normally terminates when the remote command does.
If you don't specify a command, you're logged in on the remote host via rlogin.
Shell metacharacters that aren't quoted are interpreted on the local machine; quoted metacharacters are interpreted on the remote machine. For example, the command:
rsh otherhost cat remotefile >> localfile
appends remotefile to localfile, while:
rsh otherhost cat remotefile ">>" other_remotefile
appends remotefile to other_remotefile.
This utility needs to have the setuid (“set user ID”) bit set in its permissions. If you use mkefs, mketfs, or mkifs on a Windows host to include this utility in an image, use the perms attribute to specify its permissions explicitly, and the uid and gid attributes to set the ownership correctly. |
The rsh utility requires the libsocket.so shared library.
You can't use rsh to run an interactive command such as vi; use rlogin instead.
esh, fesh, /etc/hosts.equiv, ksh, rcp, ~/.rhosts, rlogin, rlogind, rshd, sh, uesh