I have a unix shell script that creates and transfers files from one path to another ( either from same server or from another)
Then there is transfer of files to this folder from either same or different server.
I'm unable to identify a method through which I could verify my file transfer md5 or checksum through a script.usually I take the checksum of the source and destination folders and match them manually.
Please advise
In your script you can insert line like this:
sha1sum <list of files> >files.sha1
to generate file with sha1 sums. Then you transfer all the files (including file with hashes) to the target place, for example:
scp /path/* user#host:localion
and then exec (via ssh for example) this to check the sha1 hash of files on target:
ssh user#host "cd location; sha1sum -c files.sha1"
This all is just example you should tune it for your environment
In Solaris you can use command:
digest -a sha1 location/* >/directory/hash1
scp /path/* user#host:localion
ssh user#host "cd location; digest -a sha1 *" >/directory/hash2
diff /directory/hash1 /directory/hash2
(the last command will compare hashes from local and remote sites)
I can transfer files from Unix system to my windows system using pscp.exe as below:
(I am doing this in VBScript).
Function vbsMsgBox ()
set sh = CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
sh.Run "C:\Users\msiddiq1\New\PSCP.EXE -pw password username#host:/b_st/batchrepo/BS31GZI C:\Users\msiddiq1\New"
End Function
But I want to transfer all the files returned from the below find command to my windows system:
find /b_st/batchrepo/BS31GZI -name "*900000007*" # It returns 6 filenames.
How can i merge this command to my above pscp command?.
I cannot create a new directory. Will i have to use a loop.
Please suggest.
thanks.
I just figured it out.
I tried this way:
Function vbsMsgBox ()
set sh = CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
sh.Run "C:\Users\msiddiq1\New\PSCP.EXE -pw password username#host:/b_st/batchrepo/BS31GZI/*900000007* C:\Users\msiddiq1\New"
End Function
It worked just fine.
Source : http://the.earth.li/~sgtatham/putty/0.60/htmldoc/Chapter5.html
thanks.
I am trying to automate my SFTP command using a UNIX shell script but for some reason it doesn't work. Here is my code as below. Please share your thoughts/insights.
#This ftp script will copy all the files from source directory into the local directory.
#!/bin/sh
HOST='sftp.xyz.com'
USER='ABC'
PASSWORD='123'
SRC_DIR='From_Src'
TRGT_DIR='/work/'
FILE='abc.txt'
sftp -u ${USER},${PASSWORD} sftp://${HOST} <<EOF
cd $SRC_DIR
lcd $TRGT_DIR
get $FILE
bye
EOF
echo "DONE"
When I try executing the above code I get the below error.
sftp: illegal option -- u
usage: sftp [-1246Cpqrv] [-B buffer_size] [-b batchfile] [-c cipher]
[-D sftp_server_path] [-F ssh_config] [-i identity_file] [-l limit]
[-o ssh_option] [-P port] [-R num_requests] [-S program]
[-s subsystem | sftp_server] host
sftp [user#]host[:file ...]
sftp [user#]host[:dir[/]]
sftp -b batchfile [user#]host
There is no -u option for sftp, see the manual for available options. You can pass the username in this format:
sftp username#hostname
So in your case:
sftp sftp://${USER}#${HOST} <<EOF
This will prompt you the password though. If you don't want a password prompt, take a look at this topic: How to run the sftp command with a password from Bash script?
First, learn how to set up keys so that you can ssh, scp, and sftp to a server without a password. Look at ssh-keygen. It is fairly easy. I bet there are how tos on this site. In brief, generate your keys with ssh-keygen. They are created in ~/.ssh. Then add your public key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the destination host where ~ is the home directory of the user you want to log in as. i.e. "ABC" in your example.
Now, you can just do "sftp ABC#sftp.xyz.com" and you will be at the sftp prompt on sftp.xyz.com. From there, getting your script to work should be easy.
My real suggestion is blow off sftp and use scp. e.g.
scp /path/to/the/source_file user#host:/remote/path/file
Its that simple. No "cd" and other gunk to deal with. You are making this way harder than it really is.
Good luck
I have to transfer a folder structure from Windows to AIX server but I can not install anything more then Putty as this is client machine.
I have tried few alternative.
Tried to ftp Directory structure which is not possible as FTP support only simple file transfer
Tried to execute remote UNIX command execution with putty.exe -ssh -l username -pw password cmd_file.sh. cmd_file.sh is in local windows system contains shell commands but unzip not supported here. I also tried putty.exe -ssh -l username -pw password unix_command and got error "invalid port number"
I tried to execute a shell script file in unix server from windows, it didn't work either.
Make a tar file (using cygwin perhaps on Windows -- you do use cygwin, right?). Then ftp the tarball over. Untar, profit!
I'd like to copy files from/to remote server in different directories.
For example, I want to run these 4 commands at once.
scp remote:A/1.txt local:A/1.txt
scp remote:A/2.txt local:A/2.txt
scp remote:B/1.txt local:B/1.txt
scp remote:C/1.txt local:C/1.txt
What is the easiest way to do that?
Copy multiple files from remote to local:
$ scp your_username#remote.edu:/some/remote/directory/\{a,b,c\} ./
Copy multiple files from local to remote:
$ scp foo.txt bar.txt your_username#remotehost.edu:~
$ scp {foo,bar}.txt your_username#remotehost.edu:~
$ scp *.txt your_username#remotehost.edu:~
Copy multiple files from remote to remote:
$ scp your_username#remote1.edu:/some/remote/directory/foobar.txt \
your_username#remote2.edu:/some/remote/directory/
Source: http://www.hypexr.org/linux_scp_help.php
From local to server:
scp file1.txt file2.sh username#ip.of.server.copyto:~/pathtoupload
From server to local (up to OpenSSH v9.0):
scp -T username#ip.of.server.copyfrom:"file1.txt file2.txt" "~/yourpathtocopy"
From server to local (OpenSSH v9.0+):
scp -OT username#ip.of.server.copyfrom:"file1.txt file2.txt" "~/yourpathtocopy"
From man 1 scp:
-O Use the legacy 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.
HISTORY
Since OpenSSH 9.0, scp has used the SFTP protocol for transfers by default.
You can copy whole directories with using -r switch so if you can isolate your files into own directory, you can copy everything at once.
scp -r ./dir-with-files user#remote-server:upload-path
scp -r user#remote-server:path-to-dir-with-files download-path
so for instance
scp -r root#192.168.1.100:/var/log ~/backup-logs
Or if there is just few of them, you can use:
scp 1.txt 2.txt 3.log user#remote-server:upload-path
As Jiri mentioned, you can use scp -r user#host:/some/remote/path /some/local/path to copy files recursively. This assumes that there's a single directory containing all of the files you want to transfer (and nothing else).
However, SFTP provides an alternative if you want to transfer files from multiple different directories, and the destinations are not identical:
sftp user#host << EOF
get /some/remote/path1/file1 /some/local/path1/file1
get /some/remote/path2/file2 /some/local/path2/file2
get /some/remote/path3/file3 /some/local/path3/file3
EOF
This uses the "here doc" syntax to define a sequence of SFTP input commands. As an alternative, you could put the SFTP commands into a text file and execute sftp user#host -b batchFile.txt
The answers with {file1,file2,file3} works only with bash (on remote or locally)
The real way is :
scp user#remote:'/path1/file1 /path2/file2 /path3/file3' /localPath
After playing with scp for a while I have found the most robust solution:
(Beware of the single and double quotation marks)
Local to remote:
scp -r "FILE1" "FILE2" HOST:'"DIR"'
Remote to local:
scp -r HOST:'"FILE1" "FILE2"' "DIR"
Notice that whatever after "HOST:" will be sent to the remote and parsed there. So we must make sure they are not processed by the local shell. That is why single quotation marks come in. The double quotation marks are used to handle spaces in the file names.
If files are all in the same directory, we can use * to match them all, such as
scp -r "DIR_IN"/*.txt HOST:'"DIR"'
scp -r HOST:'"DIR_IN"/*.txt' "DIR"
Compared to using the "{}" syntax which is supported only by some shells, this one is universal
The simplest way is
local$ scp remote:{A/1,A/2,B/3,C/4}.txt ./
So {.. } list can include directories (A,B and C here are directories; "1.txt" and "2.txt" are file names in those directories).
Although it would copy all these four files into one local directory - not sure if that's what you wanted.
In the above case you will end up remote files A/1.txt, A/2.txt, B/3.txt and C/4.txt copied over to a single local directory, with file names ./1.txt, ./2.txt, ./3.txt and ./4.txt
Problem: Copying multiple directories from remote server to local machine using a single SCP command and retaining each directory as it is in the remote server.
Solution: SCP can do this easily. This solves the annoying problem of entering password multiple times when using SCP with multiple folders. Consequently, this also saves a lot of time!
e.g.
# copies folders t1, t2, t3 from `test` to your local working directory
# note that there shouldn't be any space in between the folder names;
# we also escape the braces.
# please note the dot at the end of the SCP command
~$ cd ~/working/directory
~$ scp -r username#contact.server.de:/work/datasets/images/test/\{t1,t2,t3\} .
PS: Motivated by this great answer: scp or sftp copy multiple files with single command
Based on the comments, this also works fine in Git Bash on Windows
You can do this way:
scp hostname#serverNameOrServerIp:/path/to/files/\\{file1,file2,file3\\}.fileExtension ./
This will download all the listed filenames to whatever local directory you're on.
Make sure not to put spaces between each filename only use a comma ,.
Copy multiple directories:
scp -r dir1 dir2 dir3 admin#127.0.0.1:~/
Is more simple without using scp:
tar cf - file1 ... file_n | ssh user#server 'tar xf -'
This also let you do some things like compress the stream (-C) or (since OpenSSH v7.3) -J to jump any times through one (or more) proxy servers.
Avoid using passwords by coping your public key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys (on server) with ssh-copy-id (on client).
Posted also here (with more details) and here.
scp remote:"[A-C]/[12].txt" local:
NOTE: I apologize in advance for answering only a portion of the above question. However, I found these commands to be useful for my current unix needs.
Uploading specific files from a local machine to a remote machine:
~/Desktop/dump_files$ scp file1.txt file2.txt lab1.cpp etc.ext your-user-id#remotemachine.edu:Folder1/DestinationFolderForFiles/
Uploading an entire directory from a local machine to a remote machine:
~$ scp -r Desktop/dump_files your-user-id#remotemachine.edu:Folder1/DestinationFolderForFiles/
Downloading an entire directory from a remote machine to a local machine:
~/Desktop$ scp -r your-user-id#remote.host.edu:Public/web/ Desktop/
In my case, I am restricted to only using the sftp command.
So, I had to use a batchfile with sftp. I created a script such as the following. This assumes you are working in the /tmp directory, and you want to put the files in the destdir_on_remote_system on the remote system. This also only works with a noninteractive login. You need to set up public/private keys so you can login without entering a password. Change as needed.
#!/bin/bash
cd /tmp
# start script with list of files to transfer
ls -1 fileset1* > batchfile1
ls -1 fileset2* >> batchfile1
sed -i -e 's/^/put /' batchfile1
echo "cd destdir_on_remote_system" > batchfile
cat batchfile1 >> batchfile
rm batchfile1
sftp -b batchfile user#host
In the specific case where all the files have the same extension but with different suffix (say number of log file) you use the following:
scp user_name#ip.of.remote.machine:/some/log/folder/some_log_file.* ./
This will copy all files named some_log_file from the given folder within the remote, i.e.- some_log_file.1 , some_log_file.2, some_log_file.3 ....
In my case there were too many files with non related names.
I ended up using,
$ for i in $(ssh remote 'ls ~/dir'); do scp remote:~/dir/$i ./$i; done
1.txt 100% 322KB 1.2MB/s 00:00
2.txt 100% 33KB 460.7KB/s 00:00
3.txt 100% 61KB 572.1KB/s 00:00
$
scp uses ssh for data transfer with the same authentication and provides the same security as ssh.
A best practise here is to implement "SSH KEYS AND PUBLIC KEY AUTHENTICATION". With this, you can write your scripts without worring about authentication. Simple as that.
See WHAT IS SSH-KEYGEN
serverHomeDir='/home/somepath/ftp/'
backupDirAbsolutePath=${serverHomeDir}'_sqldump_'
backupDbName1='2021-08-27-03-56-somesite-latin2.sql'
backupDbName2='2021-08-27-03-56-somesite-latin1.sql'
backupDbName3='2021-08-27-03-56-somesite-utf8.sql'
backupDbName4='2021-08-27-03-56-somesite-utf8mb4.sql'
scp -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub user#server.domain.com:${backupDirAbsolutePath}/"{$backupDbName1,$backupDbName2,$backupDbName3,$backupDbName4}" .
. - at the end will download the files to current dir
-i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub - assuming that you established ssh to your server with .pub key
scp -r root#ip-address:/root/dir/ C:\Users\your-name\Downloads\
the -r will let you download all the files inside the dir directory of your remote server