Document all the new command-line stuff.
[sgt/putty] / doc / pscp.but
1 \versionid $Id: pscp.but,v 1.21 2002/08/07 19:20:06 simon Exp $
2
3 \#FIXME: Need examples
4
5 \C{pscp} Using PSCP to transfer files securely
6
7 \i{PSCP}, the PuTTY Secure Copy client, is a tool for transferring files
8 securely between computers using an SSH connection.
9
10 If you have an SSH 2 server, you might prefer PSFTP (see \k{psftp})
11 for interactive use. PSFTP does not in general work with SSH 1
12 servers, however.
13
14 \H{pscp-starting} Starting PSCP
15
16 PSCP is a command line application. This means that you cannot just
17 double-click on its icon to run it and instead you have to bring up a
18 \i{console window}. With Windows 95, 98, and ME, this is called an
19 \q{MS-DOS Prompt} and with Windows NT and 2000 it is called a
20 \q{Command Prompt}. It should be available from the Programs section
21 of your Start Menu.
22
23 To start PSCP it will need either to be on your \i{\c{PATH}} or in your
24 current directory. To add the directory containing PSCP to your
25 \c{PATH} environment variable, type into the console window:
26
27 \c set PATH=C:\path\to\putty\directory;%PATH%
28
29 This will only work for the lifetime of that particular console
30 window. To set your \c{PATH} more permanently on Windows NT, use the
31 Environment tab of the System Control Panel. On Windows 95, 98, and
32 ME, you will need to edit your \c{AUTOEXEC.BAT} to include a \c{set}
33 command like the one above.
34
35 \H{pscp-usage} PSCP Usage
36
37 Once you've got a console window to type into, you can just type
38 \c{pscp} on its own to bring up a usage message. This tells you the
39 version of PSCP you're using, and gives you a brief summary of how to
40 use PSCP:
41
42 \c Z:\owendadmin>pscp
43 \c PuTTY Secure Copy client
44 \c Release 0.50
45 \c Usage: pscp [options] [user@]host:source target
46 \c pscp [options] source [source...] [user@]host:target
47 \c pscp [options] -ls user@host:filespec
48 \c Options:
49 \c -p preserve file attributes
50 \c -q quiet, don't show statistics
51 \c -r copy directories recursively
52 \c -v show verbose messages
53 \c -P port connect to specified port
54 \c -pw passw login with specified password
55
56 (PSCP's interface is much like the Unix \c{scp} command, if you're
57 familiar with that.)
58
59 \S{pscp-usage-basics} The basics
60
61 To receive (a) file(s) from a remote server:
62
63 \c pscp [options] [user@]host:source target
64
65 So to copy the file \c{/etc/hosts} from the server \c{example.com} as
66 user \c{fred} to the file \c{c:\\temp\\example-hosts.txt}, you would type:
67
68 \c pscp fred@example.com:/etc/hosts c:\temp\example-hosts.txt
69
70 To send (a) file(s) to a remote server:
71
72 \c pscp [options] source [source...] [user@]host:target
73
74 So to copy the local file \c{c:\\documents\\csh-whynot.txt} to the
75 server \c{example.com} as user \c{fred} to the file
76 \c{/tmp/csh-whynot} you would type:
77
78 \c pscp c:\documents\csh-whynot.txt fred@example.com:/tmp/csh-whynot
79
80 You can use wildcards to transfer multiple files in either
81 direction, like this:
82
83 \c pscp c:\documents\*.doc fred@example.com:docfiles
84 \c pscp fred@example.com:source/*.c c:\source
85
86 However, in the second case (using a wildcard for multiple remote
87 files) you may see a warning like this:
88
89 \c warning: remote host tried to write to a file called 'terminal.c'
90 \c when we requested a file called '*.c'.
91 \c If this is a wildcard, consider upgrading to SSH 2 or using
92 \c the '-unsafe' option. Renaming of this file has been disallowed.
93
94 This is due to a fundamental insecurity in the old-style SCP
95 protocol: the client sends the wildcard string (\c{*.c}) to the
96 server, and the server sends back a sequence of file names that
97 match the wildcard pattern. However, there is nothing to stop the
98 server sending back a \e{different} pattern and writing over one of
99 your other files: if you request \c{*.c}, the server might send back
100 the file name \c{AUTOEXEC.BAT} and install a virus for you. Since
101 the wildcard matching rules are decided by the server, the client
102 cannot reliably verify that the filenames sent back match the
103 pattern.
104
105 PSCP will attempt to use the newer SFTP protocol (part of SSH 2)
106 where possible, which does not suffer from this security flaw. If
107 you are talking to an SSH 2 server which supports SFTP, you will
108 never see this warning.
109
110 If you really need to use a server-side wildcard with an SSH 1
111 server, you can use the \c{-unsafe} command line option with PSCP:
112
113 \c pscp -unsafe fred@example.com:source/*.c c:\source
114
115 This will suppress the warning message and the file transfer will
116 happen. However, you should be aware that by using this option you
117 are giving the server the ability to write to \e{any} file in the
118 target directory, so you should only use this option if you trust
119 the server administrator not to be malicious (and not to let the
120 server machine be cracked by malicious people).
121
122 \S2{pscp-usage-basics-user} \c{user}
123
124 The login name on the remote server. If this is omitted, and \c{host}
125 is a PuTTY saved session, PSCP will use any username specified by that
126 saved session. Otherwise, PSCP will attempt to use the local Windows
127 username.
128
129 \S2{pscp-usage-basics-host} \c{host}
130
131 The name of the remote server, or the name of an existing PuTTY saved
132 session. In the latter case, the session's settings for hostname, port
133 number, cipher type and username will be used.
134
135 \S2{pscp-usage-basics-source} \c{source}
136
137 One or more source files. \i{Wildcards} are allowed. The syntax of
138 wildcards depends on the system to which they apply, so if you are
139 copying \e{from} a Windows system \e{to} a UNIX system, you should use
140 Windows wildcard syntax (e.g. \c{*.*}), but if you are copying \e{from}
141 a UNIX system \e{to} a Windows system, you would use the wildcard
142 syntax allowed by your UNIX shell (e.g. \c{*}).
143
144 If the source is a remote server and you do not specify a full
145 pathname (in UNIX, a pathname beginning with a \c{/} (slash)
146 character), what you specify as a source will be interpreted relative
147 to your home directory on the remote server.
148
149 \S2{pscp-usage-basics-target} \c{target}
150
151 The filename or directory to put the file(s). When copying from a
152 remote server to a local host, you may wish simply to place the
153 file(s) in the current directory. To do this, you should specify a
154 target of \c{.}. For example:
155
156 \c pscp fred@example.com:/home/tom/.emacs .
157
158 ...would copy \c{/home/tom/.emacs} on the remote server to the current
159 directory.
160
161 As with the \c{source} parameter, if the target is on a remote server
162 and is not a full path name, it is interpreted relative to your home
163 directory on the remote server.
164
165 \S{pscp-usage-options} Options
166
167 PSCP accepts all the general command line options supported by the
168 PuTTY tools, except the ones which make no sense in a file transfer
169 utility. See \k{using-general-opts} for a description of these
170 options. (The ones not supported by PSCP are clearly marked.)
171
172 PSCP also supports some of its own options. The following sections
173 describe PSCP's specific command-line options.
174
175 These are the command line options that PSCP accepts.
176
177 \S2{pscp-usage-options-p}\c{-p} preserve file attributes
178
179 By default, files copied with PSCP are \i{timestamp}ed with the date and
180 time they were copied. The \c{-p} option preserves the original
181 timestamp on copied files.
182
183 \S2{pscp-usage-options-q}\c{-q} quiet, don't show \i{statistics}
184
185 By default, PSCP displays a meter displaying the progress of the
186 current transfer:
187
188 \c mibs.tar | 168 kB | 84.0 kB/s | ETA: 00:00:13 | 13%
189
190 The fields in this display are (from left to right), filename, size
191 (in kilobytes) of file transferred so far, estimate of how fast the
192 file is being transferred (in kilobytes per second), estimated time
193 that the transfer will be complete, and percentage of the file so far
194 transferred. The \c{-q} option to PSCP suppresses the printing of
195 these statistics.
196
197 \S2{pscp-usage-options-r}\c{-r} copies directories \i{recursive}ly
198
199 By default, PSCP will only copy files. Any directories you specify to
200 copy will be skipped, as will their contents. The \c{-r} option tells
201 PSCP to descend into any directories you specify, and to copy them and
202 their contents. This allows you to use PSCP to transfer whole
203 directory structures between machines.
204
205 \S2{pscp-usage-options-batch}\c{-batch} avoid interactive prompts
206
207 If you use the \c{-batch} option, PSCP will never give an
208 interactive prompt while establishing the connection. If the
209 server's host key is invalid, for example (see \k{gs-hostkey}), then
210 the connection will simply be abandoned instead of asking you what
211 to do next.
212
213 This may help PSCP's behaviour when it is used in automated
214 scripts: using \c{-batch}, if something goes wrong at connection
215 time, the batch job will fail rather than hang.
216
217 \S{pscp-retval} Return value
218
219 PSCP returns an \cw{ERRORLEVEL} of zero (success) only if the files
220 were correctly transferred. You can test for this in a batch file,
221 using code such as this:
222
223 \c pscp file*.* user@hostname:
224 \c if errorlevel 1 echo There was an error
225
226 \S{pscp-pubkey} Using public key authentication with PSCP
227
228 Like PuTTY, PSCP can authenticate using a public key instead of a
229 password. There are two ways you can do this.
230
231 Firstly, PSCP can use PuTTY saved sessions in place of hostnames
232 (see \k{pscp-usage-basics-host}). So you would do this:
233
234 \b Run PuTTY, and create a PuTTY saved session (see
235 \k{config-saving}) which specifies your private key file (see
236 \k{config-ssh-privkey}). You will probably also want to specify a
237 username to log in as (see \k{config-username}).
238
239 \b In PSCP, you can now use the name of the session instead of a
240 hostname: type \c{pscp sessionname:file localfile}, where
241 \c{sessionname} is replaced by the name of your saved session.
242
243 Secondly, PSCP will attempt to authenticate using Pageant if Pageant
244 is running (see \k{pageant}). So you would do this:
245
246 \b Ensure Pageant is running, and has your private key stored in it.
247
248 \b Specify a user and host name to PSCP as normal. PSCP will
249 automatically detect Pageant and try to use the keys within it.
250
251 For more general information on public-key authentication, see
252 \k{pubkey}.
253
254 \H{pscp-ixplorer} \i{Secure iXplorer}
255
256 Lars Gunnarson has written a graphical interface for PSCP. You can
257 get it from his web site, at
258 \W{http://www.i-tree.org/}{www.i-tree.org}.