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- 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?
- Why is scp so slow and how to make it faster? - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
The scp protocol is outdated, inflexible and not readily fixed Its authors recommend the use of more modern protocols like sftp and rsync for file transfer instead The same syntax applies to sftp so instead of scp text txt user@host it is now sftp text txt user@host (usage examples scp interchangable with sftp)
- Transfer files to from session Im logged in with PuTTY
I'm logged into a remote host using PuTTY What is the command to transfer files from my local machine to the machine I'm logged into on PuTTY?
- Transfer files using scp: permission denied - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
I try to transfer files from remote computer using ssh to my computer : scp My_file txt user_id@server: Home This should put My_file txt in the home folder on my own computer, right? I get sc
- 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
- scp - ssh to a specific machine within a network - Unix Linux Stack . . .
This setup means that if I am to transfer files from home, I must scp the files to my drive on the department network, ssh in to the department network, then scp the files again to my desktop Is there a way to use any or all of ssh, scp, and sshfs to connect to a 'network within a network'?
- 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
- Use scp to transfer a file from local directory X to remote directory Y . . .
6 If you're running this scp command on the remote machine, it is looking for file ext as a "local" file, i e on the remote machine To copy a file from the remote machine to the local one, use scp -P 2222 username@domain:dir file ext localdir (assuming that file ext is in ~ dir on the remote computer, as in your example)
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