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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?
How does `scp` differ from `rsync`? - Stack Overflow The major difference between these tools is how they copy files scp basically reads the source file and writes it to the destination It performs a plain linear copy, locally, or over a network rsync also copies files locally or over a network But it employs a special delta transfer algorithm and a few optimizations to make the operation a lot faster Consider the call rsync A host:B rsync
scp with port number specified - Stack Overflow Unlike ssh, scp uses the uppercase P switch to set the port instead of the lowercase p: scp -P 80 # Use port 80 to bypass the firewall, instead of the scp default The lowercase p switch is used with scp for the preservation of times and modes Here is an excerpt from scp's man page with all of the details concerning the two switches, as well as an explanation of why uppercase P was chosen
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
Copy file from Windows to Linux via scp (from Linux) What I would like to do is use the same scp command from my local Linux machine but copy a file from a Windows destination instead How can this be accomplished?
subsystem request failed on channel 0 scp: Connection closed From scp manpage -O Use the original SCP protocol for file transfers instead of the SFTP protocol Forcing the use of the SCP protocol may be necessary for servers that do not implement SFTP, for backwards-compatibility for particular filename wildcard patterns and for expanding paths with a ‘~’ prefix for older SFTP servers