Sponsored Content
Special Forums Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions scp Command from Linux to Windows Post 302398772 by pludi on Thursday 25th of February 2010 01:49:24 PM
Old 02-25-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by twhitmarsh
That's strange, would it still be giving me a usage?
Huh?
Quote:
Originally Posted by twhitmarsh
I'm trying to do this with no built-ins. I'm running a x86_64-redhat box. Any thoughts?
SSH isn't a built-in, on no OS. It just ships with most UNIX-like systems (like Linux), which means that it's included in the distribution the same way as Apache, OpenOffice, or gcc. You can check this by using
Code:
rpm -qa | grep openssh

Windows, OTOH, ships (in it's current desktop variant) on a DVD, but without such nice perks as multiple desktop environments, office suit, useful email program, web server, ... Or an SSH server. It doesn't matter what your UNIX-like system is, without an installed SSH server on the Windows side of the communication channel it won't have a clue what your trying to do.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

scp from windows

does anyone know of an app that is scriptable or automated to x-fer a file from win to unix using ssh? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: BG_JrAdmin
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

I need an scp command from a unix box to a windows box.

scp file="myfile.txt" todir="user@somehost:(M:drive:/somepath/)"/ Not sure I need it to go to a specific drive on the windows box (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xgringo
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

scp from aix to windows (cygwin) fails

Hi... my problem is that I want to copy one html-file to my windows-box webserver using scp. so far no problem but the destination is in /cygdrive/c/program files/dest and as we all know unix doesnt like spaces in paths. scp html.file user@windowsbox:/cygdrive/c/program... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cypher82
5 Replies

4. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Passwordless SCP for windows

Hi, I installed OpenSSH for Windows v3.8.1 on a Windows Server 2003 R2. From my pc (which is running windows XP), I can run commands like scp to the server. But its prompting me for a password. I googled some more and found out about the public/private keys which i set up. But... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wala_lang
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

shell script to copy files frm a linux machine to a windows machine using SCP

I need a shell script to copy files frm a linux machine to a windows machine using SCP. The files keeps changing day-to-day. I have to copy the latest file to the windows machine frm the linux machine. for example :In Linux, On July 20, the file name will be 20.txt and it should be copied to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nithin6034
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

scp command solaris to windows

Can I use scp command to throw a file from my Solaris box to Windows under this path "C:\work\SSL" ? If so, Please help me with a syntax. Also help me with any alternatives I can try. Solaris ----> Windows . (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shifahim
2 Replies

7. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

scp to windows and delete files from windows

Hi Team, I Have list file in Unix server, I need to copy files from Windows to Unix for the list of files given in Unix list file. after coping files to unix, I need to delete the files from Windows. i used SCP and moved files from windows to unix based on list file is done and working.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: spradeep86
1 Replies

8. AIX

How to copy file from Windows to AIX using SCP?

Hi I'd like to copy file ( or directory ) from a window server to an unix server using scp command, something like this scp -rp admin@10.0.99.99:C:\Documents and Settings\abc.txt /home/oracle/abc.txtI tried testing something like command above but nothing worked. Somebody help !! Thank you (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bobochacha29
7 Replies

9. AIX

ASK | How to scp command AIX to windows

Hii Master, im will copy file/directory aix to windows with scp commandline, but some error below: Note: If ping to 172.16.0.250 reply and was connected, and was open/allow port 22 at windows server inbound In aix finish installing ssh in windows finish installing winscp my... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: williamen
3 Replies

10. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Run Linux command from windows

hi i downloaded nic demo application from nic.comuf.com. working fine ,but when i run batch script ,always display splash screen maybe 10 sec. how can i remove splash screen when run batch script.? thanks z (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zoldkovacs
2 Replies
SVN::Notify::Mirror::SSH(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			     SVN::Notify::Mirror::SSH(3pm)

NAME
SVN::Notify::Mirror::SSH - Mirror a repository path via SSH SYNOPSIS
Use svnnotify in post-commit: svnnotify --repos-path "$1" --revision "$2" --handler Mirror::SSH --to "/path/to/www/htdocs" [--svn-binary /full/path/to/svn] [[--ssh-host remote_host] [--ssh-user remote_user] [--ssh-tunnel 10.0.0.2] [--ssh-identity /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa]] or better yet, use SVN::Notify::Config for a more sophisticated setup: #!/usr/bin/perl -MSVN::Notify::Config=$0 --- #YAML:1.0 '': PATH: "/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin" 'path/in/repository': handler: Mirror to: "/path/to/www/htdocs" 'some/other/path/in/repository': handler: Mirror::SSH to: "/path/to/remote/www/htdocs" ssh-host: "remote_host" ssh-user: "remote_user" ssh-tunnel: "10.0.0.2" ssh-identity: "/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa" DESCRIPTION
Keep a directory in sync with a portion of a Subversion repository. Typically used to keep a development web server in sync with the changes made to the repository. This directory can either be on the same box as the repository itself, or it can be remote (via SSH connection). USAGE
Depending on whether the target is a "Local Mirror" or a Remote Mirror, there are different options available. All options are available either as a commandline option to svnnotify or as a hash key in SVN::Notify::Config (see their respective documentation for more details). Working Copy on Mirror Because 'svn export' is not able to be consistently updated, the sync'd directory must be a full working copy, and if you are running Apache, you should add lines like the following to your Apache configuration file: # Disallow browsing of Subversion working copy # administrative directories. <DirectoryMatch "^/.*/.svn/"> Order deny,allow Deny from all </DirectoryMatch> The files in the working copy must be writeable (preferrably owned) by the user identity executing the hook script (this is the user identity that is running Apache or svnserve respectively). Local Mirror Please see " SVN::Notify::Mirror " for details. Remote Mirror Used for directories not located on the same machine as the repository itself. Typically, this might be a production web server located in a DMZ, so special consideration must be paid to security concerns. In particular, the remote mirror server may not be able to directly access the repository box. NOTE: be sure and consult "Remote Mirror Pre-requisites" before configuring your post-commit hook. o ssh-host This value is required and must be the hostname or IP address of the remote host (where the mirror directories reside). o ssh-user This value is optional and specifies the remote username that owns the working copy mirror. o ssh-identity This value may be optional and should be the full path to the local identity file being used to authenticate with the remote host. If you are setting the ssh-user to be something other than the local user name, you will typically also have to set the ssh-identity. o ssh-tunnel If the remote server does not have direct access to the repository server, it is possible to use the tunneling capabilities of SSH to provide temporary access to the repository. This works even if repository is located internally, and the remote server is located outside of a firewall or on a DMZ. The value passed for ssh-tunnel should be the IP address to which the local repository service is bound (when using svnserve). This will tunnel port 3690 from the repository box to localhost:3690 on the remote box. This must also be the way that the original working copy was checked out (see below). To tunnel some other port, for example when using Apache/mod_dav, ssh-tunnel should be the entire mapping expression, as described in the OpenSSH documentation under the "-R" option (remote port forwarding). For most sites, passing "8080:10.0.0.2:80" will work (which will tunnel port 80 from the repository to port 8080 on the remote client). If you are using SSL with Apache, you can use e.g. "80443:10.0.0.2:443". For example, see "Remote Mirror Pre-requisites" and after step #6, perform the following additional steps (when using svnserve): # su - localuser $ ssh -i .ssh/id_rsa remote_user@remote_host -R3690:10.0.0.2:3690 $ cd /path/to/mirror/working/copy $ svn co svn://127.0.0.1/repos/path/to/files . where 10.0.0.2 is the IP address hosting the repository service. For the same configuration when using Apache/mod_dav, do this instead: # su - localuser $ ssh -i .ssh/id_rsa remote_user@remote_host -R8080:10.0.0.2:80 $ cd /path/to/mirror/working/copy $ svn co http://127.0.0.1:8080/repos/path/to/files . o ssh-options If you have any other options that you would like to pass to the ssh client (for example to change the default SSH port), you can pass extra options using this parameter. Be sure that you pass it a string that has ssh long option/value pairs separated by a space, or short options without any space at all. Internally, parameter is split on spaces and passed in the @Net::SSH::options array. Remote Mirror Pre-requisites Before you can configure a remote mirror, you need to produce an SSH identity file to use: 1. Log in as repository user Give the user identity being used to execute the hook scripts (the user running Apache or svnserve) a shell and log in as that user, e.g. "su - svn"; 2. Create SSH identity files on repository machine Run "ssh-keygen" and create an identity file (without a password). 3. Log in as remote user Perform the same steps as #1, but this time on the remote machine. This username doesn't have to be the same as in step #1, but it must be a user with full write access to the mirror working copy. 4. Create SSH identity files on remote machine It is usually more efficient to go ahead and use "ssh-keygen" to create the .ssh folder in the home directory of the remote user. 5. Copy the public key from local to remote Copy the .ssh/id_dsa.pub (or id_rsa.pub if you created an RSA key) to the remote server and add it to the .ssh/authorized_keys for the remote user. See the SSH documentation for instructions on how to configure 6. Confirm configuration As the repository user, confirm that you can sucessfully connect to the remote account, e.g.: # su - local_user $ ssh -i .ssh/id_rsa remote_user@remote_host This is actually a good time to either check out the working copy or to confirm that the remote account has rights to update the working copy mirror. If the remote server does not have direct network access to the repository server, you can use the tunnel facility of SSH (see ssh-tunnel above) to provide access (e.g. through a firewall). Once you have set up the various accounts, you are ready to set your options. AUTHOR
John Peacock <jpeacock@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2005-2008 John Peacock This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. SEE ALSO
SVN::Notify, SVN::Notify::Config, SVN::Notify::Mirror POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below: Around line 278: You forgot a '=back' before '=head1' perl v5.14.2 2012-07-04 SVN::Notify::Mirror::SSH(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:41 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy