My favorite way is ssh [remote-machine] "cat log.txt" | xclip -selection c
. This is most useful when you don't want to (or can't) ssh from remote to local.
Edit: on Cygwin ssh [remote-machine] "cat log.txt" > /dev/clipboard
.
Edit: A helpful comment from nbren12:
It is almost always possible to setup a reverse ssh connection using SSH port forwarding. Just add
RemoteForward 127.0.0.1:2222 127.0.0.1:22
to the server's entry in your local.ssh/config
, and then executessh -p 2222 127.0.0.1
on the remote machine, which will then redirect the connection to the local machine. – nbren12
I'm resurrecting this thread because I've been looking for the same kind of solution, and I've found one that works for me. It's a minor modification to a suggestion from OSX Daily.
In my case, I use Terminal on my local OSX machine to connect to a linux server via SSH. Like the OP, I wanted to be able to transfer small bits of text from terminal to my local clipboard, using only the keyboard.
The essence of the solution:
commandThatMakesOutput | ssh desktop pbcopy
When run in an ssh session to a remote computer, this command takes the output of commandThatMakesOutput (e.g. ls, pwd) and pipes the output to the clipboard of the local computer (the name or IP of "desktop"). In other words, it uses nested ssh: you're connected to the remote computer via one ssh session, you execute the command there, and the remote computer connects to your desktop via a different ssh session and puts the text to your clipboard.
It requires your desktop to be configured as an ssh server (which I leave to you and google). It's much easier if you've set up ssh keys to facilitate fast ssh usage, preferably using a per-session passphrase, or whatever your security needs require.
Other examples:
ls | ssh desktopIpAddress pbcopy
pwd | ssh desktopIpAddress pbcopy
For convenience, I've created a bash file to shorten the text required after the pipe:
#!/bin/bash
ssh desktop pbcopy
In my case, i'm using a specially named key
I saved it with the file name cb (my mnemonic (ClipBoard). Put the script somewhere in your path, make it executable and voila:
ls | cb
Found a great solution that doesn't require a reverse ssh connection!
You can use xclip on the remote host, along with ssh X11 forwarding & XQuartz on the OSX system.
To set this up:
,
)ssh -X remote-host "echo 'hello from remote-host' | xclip -selection clipboard"
All the existing solutions either need:
xclip
on the server works great) or Here's another way to do it, though you'll need to modify how you ssh into your computer.
I've started using this and it's nowhere near as intimidating as it looks so give it a try.
ssh [email protected] -R 2000:localhost:2000
(hint: make this a keybinding so you don't have to type it)
nc -l 2000 | pbcopy
Note: if you don't have pbcopy
then just tee
it to a file.
cat some_useful_content.txt | nc localhost 2000
Actually even if you're in the middle of an ssh session there's a way to start a tunnel but i don’t want to scare people away from what really isn’t as bad as it looks. But I'll add the details later if I see any interest
There are various tools to access X11 selections, including xclip and XSel. Note that X11 traditionally has multiple selections, and most programs have some understanding of both the clipboard and primary selection (which are not the same). Emacs can work with the secondary selection too, but that's rare, and nobody really knows what to do with cut buffers...
$ xclip -help Usage: xclip [OPTION] [FILE]... Access an X server selection for reading or writing. -i, -in read text into X selection from standard input or files (default) -o, -out prints the selection to standard out (generally for piping to a file or program) -l, -loops number of selection requests to wait for before exiting -d, -display X display to connect to (eg localhost:0") -h, -help usage information -selection selection to access ("primary", "secondary", "clipboard" or "buffer-cut") -noutf8 don't treat text as utf-8, use old unicode -version version information -silent errors only, run in background (default) -quiet run in foreground, show what's happening -verbose running commentary Report bugs to <[email protected]>
$ xsel -help Usage: xsel [options] Manipulate the X selection. By default the current selection is output and not modified if both standard input and standard output are terminals (ttys). Otherwise, the current selection is output if standard output is not a terminal (tty), and the selection is set from standard input if standard input is not a terminal (tty). If any input or output options are given then the program behaves only in the requested mode. If both input and output is required then the previous selection is output before being replaced by the contents of standard input. Input options -a, --append Append standard input to the selection -f, --follow Append to selection as standard input grows -i, --input Read standard input into the selection Output options -o, --output Write the selection to standard output Action options -c, --clear Clear the selection -d, --delete Request that the selection be cleared and that the application owning it delete its contents Selection options -p, --primary Operate on the PRIMARY selection (default) -s, --secondary Operate on the SECONDARY selection -b, --clipboard Operate on the CLIPBOARD selection -k, --keep Do not modify the selections, but make the PRIMARY and SECONDARY selections persist even after the programs they were selected in exit. -x, --exchange Exchange the PRIMARY and SECONDARY selections X options --display displayname Specify the connection to the X server -t ms, --selectionTimeout ms Specify the timeout in milliseconds within which the selection must be retrieved. A value of 0 (zero) specifies no timeout (default) Miscellaneous options -l, --logfile Specify file to log errors to when detached. -n, --nodetach Do not detach from the controlling terminal. Without this option, xsel will fork to become a background process in input, exchange and keep modes. -h, --help Display this help and exit -v, --verbose Print informative messages --version Output version information and exit Please report bugs to <[email protected]>.
In short, you should try xclip -i
/xclip -o
or xclip -i -sel clip
/xclip -o -sel clip
or xsel -i
/xsel -o
or xsel -i -b
/xsel -o -b
, depending on what you want.
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