Scp Command The "scp" command is a secure version of the Unix copy command "cp." Once you establish an SSH session with the remote machine, locate the file you wish to copy. The "scp" command is a better option if you have only a few files to transfer. The "-p" flag preserved the file modification and access times.
In your terminal, type:
scp [email protected]:foobar.txt /local/dir
replacing the username, host, remote filename, and local directory as appropriate.
If you want to access EC2 (or other service that requires authenticating with a private key), use the -i
option:
scp -i key_file.pem [email protected]:/remote/dir/foobar.txt /local/dir
From: http://www.hypexr.org/linux_scp_help.php
You can do this with the scp
command. scp
uses the SSH protocol to copy files across system by extending the syntax of cp
.
Copy something from another system to this system:
scp username@hostname:/path/to/remote/file /path/to/local/file
Copy something from this system to some other system:
scp /path/to/local/file username@hostname:/path/to/remote/file
Copy something from some system to some other system:
scp username1@hostname1:/path/to/file username2@hostname2:/path/to/other/file
scp is certainly the way to go, but for completeness you can also do:
$ ssh host 'cat /path/on/remote' > /path/on/local
or
$ cat /path/on/local | ssh host 'cat > /path/on/remote'
Note, this is UUOC, but < /path/on/local ssh host 'cat > /path'
could cause unnecessary confusion.
And to proxy between two hosts:
$ ssh host1 'cat /path/on/host1' | ssh host2 'cat > /path/on/host2'
If the SSH server support SFTP subsystem (this is part of SSH, and unrelated to FTP), use sftp. If it don't, try scp.
CyberDuck support all of them.
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