Revamp of the local X11 connection code. We now parse X display
[sgt/putty] / doc / psftp.but
1 \define{versionidpsftp} \versionid $Id$
2
3 \C{psftp} Using \i{PSFTP} to transfer files securely
4
5 \i{PSFTP}, the PuTTY SFTP client, is a tool for \i{transferring files}
6 securely between computers using an SSH connection.
7
8 PSFTP differs from PSCP in the following ways:
9
10 \b PSCP should work on virtually every SSH server. PSFTP uses the
11 new \i{SFTP} protocol, which is a feature of SSH-2 only. (PSCP will also
12 use this protocol if it can, but there is an SSH-1 equivalent it can
13 fall back to if it cannot.)
14
15 \b PSFTP allows you to run an interactive file transfer session,
16 much like the Windows \i\c{ftp} program. You can list the contents of
17 directories, browse around the file system, issue multiple \c{get}
18 and \c{put} commands, and eventually log out. By contrast, PSCP is
19 designed to do a single file transfer operation and immediately
20 terminate.
21
22 \H{psftp-starting} Starting PSFTP
23
24 The usual way to start PSFTP is from a command prompt, much like
25 PSCP. To do this, it will need either to be on your \i{\c{PATH}} or
26 in your current directory. To add the directory containing PSFTP to
27 your \c{PATH} environment variable, type into the console window:
28
29 \c set PATH=C:\path\to\putty\directory;%PATH%
30
31 Unlike PSCP, however, PSFTP has no complex command-line syntax; you
32 just specify a host name and perhaps a user name:
33
34 \c psftp server.example.com
35
36 or perhaps
37
38 \c psftp fred@server.example.com
39
40 Alternatively, if you just type \c{psftp} on its own (or
41 double-click the PSFTP icon in the Windows GUI), you will see the
42 PSFTP prompt, and a message telling you PSFTP has not connected to
43 any server:
44
45 \c C:\>psftp
46 \c psftp: no hostname specified; use "open host.name" to connect
47 \c psftp>
48
49 At this point you can type \c{open server.example.com} or \c{open
50 fred@server.example.com} to start a session.
51
52 PSFTP accepts all the general command line options supported by the
53 PuTTY tools, except the ones which make no sense in a file transfer
54 utility. See \k{using-general-opts} for a description of these
55 options. (The ones not supported by PSFTP are clearly marked.)
56
57 PSFTP also supports some of its own options. The following sections
58 describe PSFTP's specific command-line options.
59
60 \S{psftp-option-b} \I{-b-PSFTP}\c{-b}: specify a file containing batch commands
61
62 In normal operation, PSFTP is an interactive program which displays
63 a command line and accepts commands from the keyboard.
64
65 If you need to do automated tasks with PSFTP, you would probably
66 prefer to \I{batch scripts in PSFTP}specify a set of commands in
67 advance and have them executed automatically. The \c{-b} option
68 allows you to do this. You use it with a file name containing batch
69 commands. For example, you might create a file called \c{myscript.scr}
70 containing lines like this:
71
72 \c cd /home/ftp/users/jeff
73 \c del jam-old.tar.gz
74 \c ren jam.tar.gz jam-old.tar.gz
75 \c put jam.tar.gz
76 \c chmod a+r jam.tar.gz
77
78 and then you could run the script by typing
79
80 \c psftp user@hostname -b myscript.scr
81
82 When you run a batch script in this way, PSFTP will abort the script
83 if any command fails to complete successfully. To change this
84 behaviour, you can add the \c{-be} option (\k{psftp-option-be}).
85
86 PSFTP will terminate after it finishes executing the batch script.
87
88 \S{psftp-option-bc} \I{-bc-PSFTP}\c{-bc}: display batch commands as they are run
89
90 The \c{-bc} option alters what PSFTP displays while processing a
91 batch script specified with \c{-b}. With the \c{-bc} option, PSFTP
92 will display prompts and commands just as if the commands had been
93 typed at the keyboard. So instead of seeing this:
94
95 \c C:\>psftp fred@hostname -b batchfile
96 \c Sent username "fred"
97 \c Remote working directory is /home/fred
98 \c Listing directory /home/fred/lib
99 \c drwxrwsr-x 4 fred fred 1024 Sep 6 10:42 .
100 \c drwxr-sr-x 25 fred fred 2048 Dec 14 09:36 ..
101 \c drwxrwsr-x 3 fred fred 1024 Apr 17 2000 jed
102 \c lrwxrwxrwx 1 fred fred 24 Apr 17 2000 timber
103 \c drwxrwsr-x 2 fred fred 1024 Mar 13 2000 trn
104
105 you might see this:
106
107 \c C:\>psftp fred@hostname -bc -b batchfile
108 \c Sent username "fred"
109 \c Remote working directory is /home/fred
110 \c psftp> dir lib
111 \c Listing directory /home/fred/lib
112 \c drwxrwsr-x 4 fred fred 1024 Sep 6 10:42 .
113 \c drwxr-sr-x 25 fred fred 2048 Dec 14 09:36 ..
114 \c drwxrwsr-x 3 fred fred 1024 Apr 17 2000 jed
115 \c lrwxrwxrwx 1 fred fred 24 Apr 17 2000 timber
116 \c drwxrwsr-x 2 fred fred 1024 Mar 13 2000 trn
117 \c psftp> quit
118
119 \S{psftp-option-be} \I{-be-PSFTP}\c{-be}: continue batch processing on errors
120
121 When running a batch file, this additional option causes PSFTP to
122 continue processing even if a command fails to complete successfully.
123
124 You might want this to happen if you wanted to delete a file and
125 didn't care if it was already not present, for example.
126
127 \S{psftp-usage-options-batch} \I{-batch-PSFTP}\c{-batch}: avoid
128 interactive prompts
129
130 If you use the \c{-batch} option, PSFTP will never give an
131 interactive prompt while establishing the connection. If the
132 server's host key is invalid, for example (see \k{gs-hostkey}), then
133 the connection will simply be abandoned instead of asking you what
134 to do next.
135
136 This may help PSFTP's behaviour when it is used in automated
137 scripts: using \c{-batch}, if something goes wrong at connection
138 time, the batch job will fail rather than hang.
139
140 \H{psftp-commands} Running PSFTP
141
142 Once you have started your PSFTP session, you will see a \c{psftp>}
143 prompt. You can now type commands to perform file-transfer
144 functions. This section lists all the available commands.
145
146 \S{psftp-quoting} \I{quoting, in PSFTP}General quoting rules for PSFTP commands
147
148 Most PSFTP commands are considered by the PSFTP command interpreter
149 as a sequence of words, separated by spaces. For example, the
150 command \c{ren oldfilename newfilename} splits up into three words:
151 \c{ren} (the command name), \c{oldfilename} (the name of the file to
152 be renamed), and \c{newfilename} (the new name to give the file).
153
154 Sometimes you will need to specify \I{spaces in filenames}file names
155 that \e{contain} spaces. In order to do this, you can surround
156 the file name with double quotes. This works equally well for
157 local file names and remote file names:
158
159 \c psftp> get "spacey file name.txt" "save it under this name.txt"
160
161 The double quotes themselves will not appear as part of the file
162 names; they are removed by PSFTP and their only effect is to stop
163 the spaces inside them from acting as word separators.
164
165 If you need to \e{use} a double quote (on some types of remote
166 system, such as Unix, you are allowed to use double quotes in file
167 names), you can do this by doubling it. This works both inside and
168 outside double quotes. For example, this command
169
170 \c psftp> ren ""this"" "a file with ""quotes"" in it"
171
172 will take a file whose current name is \c{"this"} (with a double
173 quote character at the beginning and the end) and rename it to a
174 file whose name is \c{a file with "quotes" in it}.
175
176 (The one exception to the PSFTP quoting rules is the \c{!} command,
177 which passes its command line straight to Windows without splitting
178 it up into words at all. See \k{psftp-cmd-pling}.)
179
180 \S{psftp-wildcards} Wildcards in PSFTP
181
182 Several commands in PSFTP support \q{\i{wildcards}} to select multiple
183 files.
184
185 For \e{local} file specifications (such as the first argument to
186 \c{put}), wildcard rules for the local operating system are used. For
187 instance, PSFTP running on Windows might require the use of \c{*.*}
188 where PSFTP on Unix would need \c{*}.
189
190 For \e{remote} file specifications (such as the first argument to
191 \c{get}), PSFTP uses a standard wildcard syntax (similar to \i{POSIX}
192 wildcards):
193
194 \b \c{*} matches any sequence of characters (including a zero-length
195 sequence).
196
197 \b \c{?} matches exactly one character.
198
199 \b \c{[abc]} matches exactly one character which can be \cw{a},
200 \cw{b}, or \cw{c}.
201
202 \lcont{
203
204 \c{[a-z]} matches any character in the range \cw{a} to \cw{z}.
205
206 \c{[^abc]} matches a single character that is \e{not} \cw{a}, \cw{b},
207 or \cw{c}.
208
209 Special cases: \c{[-a]} matches a literal hyphen (\cw{-}) or \cw{a};
210 \c{[^-a]} matches all other characters. \c{[a^]} matches a literal
211 caret (\cw{^}) or \cw{a}.
212
213 }
214
215 \b \c{\\} (backslash) before any of the above characters (or itself)
216 removes that character's special meaning.
217
218 A leading period (\cw{.}) on a filename is not treated specially,
219 unlike in some Unix contexts; \c{get *} will fetch all files, whether
220 or not they start with a leading period.
221
222 \S{psftp-cmd-open} The \c{open} command: start a session
223
224 If you started PSFTP by double-clicking in the GUI, or just by
225 typing \c{psftp} at the command line, you will need to open a
226 connection to an SFTP server before you can issue any other
227 commands (except \c{help} and \c{quit}).
228
229 To create a connection, type \c{open host.name}, or if you need to
230 specify a user name as well you can type \c{open user@host.name}.
231 You can optionally specify a port as well:
232 \c{open user@host.name 22}.
233
234 Once you have issued this command, you will not be able to issue it
235 again, \e{even} if the command fails (for example, if you mistype
236 the host name or the connection times out). So if the connection is
237 not opened successfully, PSFTP will terminate immediately.
238
239 \S{psftp-cmd-quit} The \c{quit} command: end your session
240
241 When you have finished your session, type the command \c{quit} to
242 close the connection, terminate PSFTP and return to the command line
243 (or just close the PSFTP console window if you started it from the
244 GUI).
245
246 You can also use the \c{bye} and \c{exit} commands, which have
247 exactly the same effect.
248
249 \S{psftp-cmd-close} The \c{close} command: close your connection
250
251 If you just want to close the network connection but keep PSFTP
252 running, you can use the \c{close} command. You can then use the
253 \c{open} command to open a new connection.
254
255 \S{psftp-cmd-help} The \c{help} command: get quick online help
256
257 If you type \c{help}, PSFTP will give a short list of the available
258 commands.
259
260 If you type \c{help} with a command name - for example, \c{help get}
261 - then PSFTP will give a short piece of help on that particular
262 command.
263
264 \S{psftp-cmd-cd} The \c{cd} and \c{pwd} commands: changing the
265 remote \i{working directory}
266
267 PSFTP maintains a notion of your \q{working directory} on the
268 server. This is the default directory that other commands will
269 operate on. For example, if you type \c{get filename.dat} then PSFTP
270 will look for \c{filename.dat} in your remote working directory on
271 the server.
272
273 To change your remote working directory, use the \c{cd} command. If
274 you don't provide an argument, \c{cd} will return you to your home
275 directory on the server (more precisely, the remote directory you were
276 in at the start of the connection).
277
278 To display your current remote working directory, type \c{pwd}.
279
280 \S{psftp-cmd-lcd} The \c{lcd} and \c{lpwd} commands: changing the
281 local \i{working directory}
282
283 As well as having a working directory on the remote server, PSFTP
284 also has a working directory on your local machine (just like any
285 other Windows process). This is the default local directory that
286 other commands will operate on. For example, if you type \c{get
287 filename.dat} then PSFTP will save the resulting file as
288 \c{filename.dat} in your local working directory.
289
290 To change your local working directory, use the \c{lcd} command. To
291 display your current local working directory, type \c{lpwd}.
292
293 \S{psftp-cmd-get} The \c{get} command: fetch a file from the server
294
295 To \i{download a file} from the server and store it on your local PC,
296 you use the \c{get} command.
297
298 In its simplest form, you just use this with a file name:
299
300 \c get myfile.dat
301
302 If you want to store the file locally under a different name,
303 specify the local file name after the remote one:
304
305 \c get myfile.dat newname.dat
306
307 This will fetch the file on the server called \c{myfile.dat}, but
308 will save it to your local machine under the name \c{newname.dat}.
309
310 To fetch an entire directory \i{recursive}ly, you can use the \c{-r}
311 option:
312
313 \c get -r mydir
314 \c get -r mydir newname
315
316 (If you want to fetch a file whose name starts with a hyphen, you
317 may have to use the \c{--} special argument, which stops \c{get}
318 from interpreting anything as a switch after it. For example,
319 \cq{get -- -silly-name-}.)
320
321 \S{psftp-cmd-put} The \c{put} command: send a file to the server
322
323 To \i{upload a file} to the server from your local PC, you use the
324 \c{put} command.
325
326 In its simplest form, you just use this with a file name:
327
328 \c put myfile.dat
329
330 If you want to store the file remotely under a different name,
331 specify the remote file name after the local one:
332
333 \c put myfile.dat newname.dat
334
335 This will send the local file called \c{myfile.dat}, but will store
336 it on the server under the name \c{newname.dat}.
337
338 To send an entire directory \i{recursive}ly, you can use the \c{-r}
339 option:
340
341 \c put -r mydir
342 \c put -r mydir newname
343
344 (If you want to send a file whose name starts with a hyphen, you may
345 have to use the \c{--} special argument, which stops \c{put} from
346 interpreting anything as a switch after it. For example, \cq{put --
347 -silly-name-}.)
348
349 \S{psftp-cmd-mgetput} The \c{mget} and \c{mput} commands: fetch or
350 send multiple files
351
352 \c{mget} works almost exactly like \c{get}, except that it allows
353 you to specify more than one file to fetch at once. You can do this
354 in two ways:
355
356 \b by giving two or more explicit file names (\cq{mget file1.txt
357 file2.txt})
358
359 \b by using a wildcard (\cq{mget *.txt}).
360
361 Every argument to \c{mget} is treated as the name of a file to fetch
362 (unlike \c{get}, which will interpret at most one argument like
363 that, and a second argument will be treated as an alternative name
364 under which to store the retrieved file), or a \i{wildcard} expression
365 matching more than one file.
366
367 The \c{-r} and \c{--} options from \c{get} are also available with
368 \c{mget}.
369
370 \c{mput} is similar to \c{put}, with the same differences.
371
372 \S{psftp-cmd-regetput} The \c{reget} and \c{reput} commands:
373 \i{resuming file transfers}
374
375 If a file transfer fails half way through, and you end up with half
376 the file stored on your disk, you can resume the file transfer using
377 the \c{reget} and \c{reput} commands. These work exactly like the
378 \c{get} and \c{put} commands, but they check for the presence of the
379 half-written destination file and start transferring from where the
380 last attempt left off.
381
382 The syntax of \c{reget} and \c{reput} is exactly the same as the
383 syntax of \c{get} and \c{put}:
384
385 \c reget myfile.dat
386 \c reget myfile.dat newname.dat
387 \c reget -r mydir
388
389 These commands are intended mainly for resuming interrupted transfers.
390 They assume that the remote file or directory structure has not
391 changed in any way; if there have been changes, you may end up with
392 corrupted files. In particular, the \c{-r} option will not pick up
393 changes to files or directories already transferred in full.
394
395 \S{psftp-cmd-dir} The \c{dir} command: \I{listing files}list remote files
396
397 To list the files in your remote working directory, just type
398 \c{dir}.
399
400 You can also list the contents of a different directory by typing
401 \c{dir} followed by the directory name:
402
403 \c dir /home/fred
404 \c dir sources
405
406 And you can list a subset of the contents of a directory by
407 providing a wildcard:
408
409 \c dir /home/fred/*.txt
410 \c dir sources/*.c
411
412 The \c{ls} command works exactly the same way as \c{dir}.
413
414 \S{psftp-cmd-chmod} The \c{chmod} command: change permissions on
415 remote files
416
417 \I{changing permissions on files}PSFTP
418 allows you to modify the file permissions on files and
419 directories on the server. You do this using the \c{chmod} command,
420 which works very much like the Unix \c{chmod} command.
421
422 The basic syntax is \c{chmod modes file}, where \c{modes} represents
423 a modification to the file permissions, and \c{file} is the filename
424 to modify. You can specify multiple files or wildcards. For example:
425
426 \c chmod go-rwx,u+w privatefile
427 \c chmod a+r public*
428 \c chmod 640 groupfile1 groupfile2
429
430 The \c{modes} parameter can be a set of octal digits in the Unix
431 style. (If you don't know what this means, you probably don't want
432 to be using it!) Alternatively, it can be a list of permission
433 modifications, separated by commas. Each modification consists of:
434
435 \b The people affected by the modification. This can be \c{u} (the
436 owning user), \c{g} (members of the owning group), or \c{o}
437 (everybody else - \q{others}), or some combination of those. It can
438 also be \c{a} (\q{all}) to affect everybody at once.
439
440 \b A \c{+} or \c{-} sign, indicating whether permissions are to be
441 added or removed.
442
443 \b The actual permissions being added or removed. These can be
444 \I{read permission}\c{r} (permission to read the file),
445 \I{write permission}\c{w} (permission to write to the file), and
446 \I{execute permission}\c{x} (permission to execute the file, or in
447 the case of a directory, permission to access files within the
448 directory).
449
450 So the above examples would do:
451
452 \b The first example: \c{go-rwx} removes read, write and execute
453 permissions for members of the owning group and everybody else (so
454 the only permissions left are the ones for the file owner). \c{u+w}
455 adds write permission for the file owner.
456
457 \b The second example: \c{a+r} adds read permission for everybody to
458 all files and directories starting with \q{public}.
459
460 In addition to all this, there are a few extra special cases for
461 \i{Unix} systems. On non-Unix systems these are unlikely to be useful:
462
463 \b You can specify \c{u+s} and \c{u-s} to add or remove the Unix
464 \i{set-user-ID bit}. This is typically only useful for special purposes;
465 refer to your Unix documentation if you're not sure about it.
466
467 \b You can specify \c{g+s} and \c{g-s} to add or remove the Unix
468 \i{set-group-ID bit}. On a file, this works similarly to the set-user-ID
469 bit (see your Unix documentation again); on a directory it ensures
470 that files created in the directory are accessible by members of the
471 group that owns the directory.
472
473 \b You can specify \c{+t} and \c{-t} to add or remove the Unix
474 \q{\i{sticky bit}}. When applied to a directory, this means that the
475 owner of a file in that directory can delete the file (whereas
476 normally only the owner of the \e{directory} would be allowed to).
477
478 \S{psftp-cmd-del} The \c{del} command: delete remote files
479
480 To \I{deleting files}delete a file on the server, type \c{del} and
481 then the filename or filenames:
482
483 \c del oldfile.dat
484 \c del file1.txt file2.txt
485 \c del *.o
486
487 Files will be deleted without further prompting, even if multiple files
488 are specified.
489
490 \c{del} will only delete files. You cannot use it to delete
491 directories; use \c{rmdir} for that.
492
493 The \c{rm} command works exactly the same way as \c{del}.
494
495 \S{psftp-cmd-mkdir} The \c{mkdir} command: create remote directories
496
497 To \i{create a directory} on the server, type \c{mkdir} and then the
498 directory name:
499
500 \c mkdir newstuff
501
502 You can specify multiple directories to create at once:
503
504 \c mkdir dir1 dir2 dir3
505
506 \S{psftp-cmd-rmdir} The \c{rmdir} command: remove remote directories
507
508 To \i{remove a directory} on the server, type \c{rmdir} and then the
509 directory name or names:
510
511 \c rmdir oldstuff
512 \c rmdir *.old ancient
513
514 Directories will be deleted without further prompting, even if
515 multiple directories are specified.
516
517 Most SFTP servers will probably refuse to remove a directory if the
518 directory has anything in it, so you will need to delete the
519 contents first.
520
521 \S{psftp-cmd-mv} The \c{mv} command: move and \i{rename remote files}
522
523 To rename a single file on the server, type \c{mv}, then the current
524 file name, and then the new file name:
525
526 \c mv oldfile newname
527
528 You can also move the file into a different directory and change the
529 name:
530
531 \c mv oldfile dir/newname
532
533 To move one or more files into an existing subdirectory, specify the
534 files (using wildcards if desired), and then the destination
535 directory:
536
537 \c mv file dir
538 \c mv file1 dir1/file2 dir2
539 \c mv *.c *.h ..
540
541 The \c{rename} and \c{ren} commands work exactly the same way as
542 \c{mv}.
543
544 \S{psftp-cmd-pling} The \c{!} command: run a \i{local Windows command}
545
546 You can run local Windows commands using the \c{!} command. This is
547 the only PSFTP command that is not subject to the command quoting
548 rules given in \k{psftp-quoting}. If any command line begins with
549 the \c{!} character, then the rest of the line will be passed
550 straight to Windows without further translation.
551
552 For example, if you want to move an existing copy of a file out of
553 the way before downloading an updated version, you might type:
554
555 \c psftp> !ren myfile.dat myfile.bak
556 \c psftp> get myfile.dat
557
558 using the Windows \c{ren} command to rename files on your local PC.
559
560 \H{psftp-pubkey} Using \i{public key authentication} with PSFTP
561
562 Like PuTTY, PSFTP can authenticate using a public key instead of a
563 password. There are three ways you can do this.
564
565 Firstly, PSFTP can use PuTTY saved sessions in place of hostnames.
566 So you might do this:
567
568 \b Run PuTTY, and create a PuTTY saved session (see
569 \k{config-saving}) which specifies your private key file (see
570 \k{config-ssh-privkey}). You will probably also want to specify a
571 username to log in as (see \k{config-username}).
572
573 \b In PSFTP, you can now use the name of the session instead of a
574 hostname: type \c{psftp sessionname}, where \c{sessionname} is
575 replaced by the name of your saved session.
576
577 Secondly, you can supply the name of a private key file on the command
578 line, with the \c{-i} option. See \k{using-cmdline-identity} for more
579 information.
580
581 Thirdly, PSFTP will attempt to authenticate using Pageant if Pageant
582 is running (see \k{pageant}). So you would do this:
583
584 \b Ensure Pageant is running, and has your private key stored in it.
585
586 \b Specify a user and host name to PSFTP as normal. PSFTP will
587 automatically detect Pageant and try to use the keys within it.
588
589 For more general information on public-key authentication, see
590 \k{pubkey}.