With the unix tools installed on all machines, you could have a single script on a single machine that does something like this:
That assumes that you have the appropriate authentication keys for using ssh without a password to connect to each host. Other methods are possible for the connections, of course.my $find = "find /path -type f -print0 | xargs -0 md5" for my $host ( @hostlist ) { open O ">$host.md5list" or die "$host.md5list: $!"; print O `ssh $host '$find'`; close O; } # compare lists here, if you like, or use a separate script/tool to do + that
(updated the script to include "xargs -0", and to run the md5 part on the remote host, where it belongs -- note the single quotes around $find in the ssh command line.)
(another update: I should confess that I have no clue how you would actually execute a shell script on a remote windows machine... good luck with that.)
In reply to Re^3: Generic compare script.
by graff
in thread Generic compare script.
by TeraMarv
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