- Does the directory structure of the source dirs need to be preserved? i.e. when you want to "pick the zipped files from each sub-directory which are placed in SFTP server and move to different directory" as you said, will the files
##From SFTP location, we just need to pick up the zipped files from each sub-directory and move it to on different location as /other_place/zipped1.zip and other_place/zipped2.zip which is on unix environment.
If the latter, what should be done about identical filenames?
##This scenario is not applicable here as the zipped files will be differently named by the source system. I would get more info regarding this situation.
- What should be done about different versions? i.e. suppose there is a file
##If the same file is available in target location, then use the file in the source directorY AND leave the file in the target directory. The files which we are moving to is intermediate layer so the zipped will be completely moved from the target location to another server.
So once we have moved the zipped files to target location, then we need to check if each file within zipped file is not 0 kb and if we find a 0kb file then raise an email with some content.
Hi All,
Please suggest me how to make script for file transfer from server X to another server Y.
I have some directory path in server X as below:
/home/directory_1/
.
.
/home/directory_n/
where some text files are available in each directory where some files records zero and some files... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I want to delete a file on the local server, while connected to remote server through FTP.
I am using the below code for this
$FTP_CMD -v -n $HOST <<*! >> $LOGFILE 2>&1
user $USER $PASSWORD
cd $DIR
... (11 Replies)
I need to create a script which needs to transfer the "<filename>+yyyymmdd".dat file from a unix machine to a linux machine.. daily. we can use an active batch to schedule the script. however, the script needs to detect if the new file is present, if present, then transfer.
any help ?? (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need a shell script to transfer a file from one server(unix box) to another server(windows box).
I have the details of the source and destination Ip's.
source path : /home/UNIX/server
filename:abc.txt
Destination folder: D:/UNIX/test
I am using AIX server.
Type of shell :... (1 Reply)
I have a file having n number of records .i want first 1000 records from the file and store in temporary file to process on sunday.
I want script should should automatically take the next 1000 records for processing on next sunday.
can we do it using head and tail
head -1000 | tail... (2 Replies)
I have made a script which transfers some files of the entire week , but the script fails when the next month is started.
For e.g; if i run the script on 5th may , but i need to transfer files of its previous week which is from 24th April to 30th april ,the script fails, i have this loop in the... (2 Replies)
I use expect to spawn an sftp file transfer. On occasion the transfer fails or doesn't complete correctly, resulting in:
"sftp> cd /returns
sftp> rename /returns/TESTFILE.TXT /returns/archive/TESTFILE.TXT
Couldn't rename file "/returns/TESTFILE.TXT" to "/returns/archive/TESTFILE.TXT":
Failure... (0 Replies)
Hi
My requirement is i want to copy files from remote server to the local server and also i need to preserve the timestamp of the remote file.
By using scp -p , it is working fine in the interactive call but it is not preserving he file timestamp when i use it in the non interactive scp call... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Firstly, I have no experience (at all) with shell scripting. So please, go easy on me :)
I did a search for what I was looking for although there were a few things available here and on the net I couldn't find anything tailored to what I am looking for.
Simply put, I have two servers.... (2 Replies)
I want to automate the file transfer from a remote site to my pc over a WAN. Can anyone please suggest an industry standard secure file transfer tool for a windows environment?
I am looking for an industry accepted, more secure than traditional FTP.
Thanks! (1 Reply)