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- scp - How to copy a file from a remote server to a local machine . . .
In my terminal shell, I ssh'ed into a remote server, and I cd to the directory I want Now in this directory, there is a file called table that I want to copy to my local machine home me Desktop
- How do I copy a folder from remote to local using scp? [closed]
How do I copy a folder from remote to local host using scp? I use ssh to log in to my server Then, I would like to copy the remote folder foo to local home user Desktop How do I achieve this?
- scp with port number specified - Stack Overflow
user88595 Over a year ago Only solution which allows the use of scp -3 from and to servers with ssh listeners on different ports scp -3 -P 123 server1: file -P 456 server2: file or similar alternatives wouldn't work, scp assumed the same port across both servers Sadat Over a year ago Best solution ever, where the source file is from Remote machine
- Copying a local file from Windows to a remote server using scp
Using the stock 'scp' from a recent Windows Server 2022 version I was able to use the command from this answer above, but with using a colon in the drive specifier, as the first path segment on the target Windows machine: scp some_file user@host: C: TEMP
- scp files from local to remote machine error: no such file or directory . . .
I want to be able to transfer a directory and all its files from my local machine to my remote one I dont use SCP much so I am a bit confused I am connected to my remote machine via ssh and I ty
- scp - Copying files from server to local computer using SSH - Stack . . .
I am having trouble copying files from a remote server using SSH Using PuTTY I log in to the server using SSH Once I find the file I would like to copy over to my computer, I use the command: scp
- How to copy all files from a directory to a remote directory using scp . . .
Note that scp follows symbolic links encountered in the tree traversal So if you have sub-directories inside local_dir, the last example will only transfer files, but if you set the -r option, it will transfer files and directories
- scp from Linux to Windows - Stack Overflow
19 You could use something like the following scp -r linux_username@linux_address:path to file path to local directory This will copy file to the specified local directory on the system you are currently working on The -r flag tells scp to recursively copy if the remote file is a directory
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