On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 01:02:10AM +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote: > On 22 March 2010 00:57, Selçuk Mıynat <selcukmiy...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 00:52, Dotan Cohen <dotanco...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To > >> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror > >> and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over SSH, so is there a way > >> to send files in Konsole as well? I am familiar with the FTP commands > >> such as cd, lcd, put, and get. Are there equivalent commands for SSH > >> terminal connections? > > > > Are you looking for scp? > > > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_copy > > http://www.helpdesk.umd.edu/documents/4/4801/ > > > > No, scp is for sending files to a remote machine that the user has yet > to connect to: > localhost$ scp /path/to/file.txt u...@remotemachine /remote/path/
(wrong syntax: scp /path/to/file.txt u...@remotemachine:/remote/path/ ) While this is not what you asked for, I still prefer scp. scp can be made much more convinient to use, once you allow tab completion of remote file names. scp file.txt u...@remotemachine:/rem<tab> This works if you cna login without a password to u...@remotemachine . There are several ways to do that: 1. Passphrase-less key 2. key + ssh-agent I suppose people in this list are familiar with the above two. The down-sides with those two are: 1. They still require estabilishng an extra SSH connection per pressing of <tab>. 2. They may require extra setup on remoteMachine. Luckily openssh provides a better alternative. In my .ssh/config I have: Host * ControlMaster = auto ControlPath = ~/.ssh/socket/control_%h__%p__%r__%l This means that whenever I connect to a new host, ssh creates a socket that allows multiplexing new ssh connections on the already-established SSH connection. After-all the SSH protocol was designed to support multiple streams (for e.g. port forwarding). With this set, scp works nice and fast to a remote host. BTW: it seems that in squeeze rsync now has the same sort of completion. As usual, I rely on the shell's history to provide me some sort of context. I usually also copy pathes from a remote shell window on the target system. -- Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is http://tzafrir.org.il | | a Mutt's tzaf...@cohens.org.il | | best ICQ# 16849754 | | friend -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20100401131417.gs16...@pear.tzafrir.org.il