File transfer to/from Unix/Linux machines

Ian! D. Allen – www.idallen.com

Fall 2015 - September to December 2015 - Updated 2018-08-30 21:55 EDT

1 Introduction to File TransferIndexup to index

This file explains how to copy files between Unix/Linux machines and between Unix/Linux and other machines running Windows or Mac OSX.

The Course Linux Server is an example of a Unix/Linux machine.

For security reasons, SFTP file transfer to the CLS is not permitted. You may only transfer files from the CLS to your local machine.

1.1 Connecting from other machines to the Course Linux ServerIndexup to index

Usually, you will be using some local machine (e.g. your own laptop or desktop machine running Windows or OSX) and you will want to connect to the Course Linux Server (CLS) to transfer a file. This means you need to know the network name of the CLS. It has two names:

The CLS is located on the Internet at address cst8207.idallen.ca (a public address). This address is visible anywhere on the Internet, giving you access to the machine without needing to use the Algonquin College VPN. Use it from home or off-campus.

The CLS also has an on-campus private IP address cst8207-alg.idallen.ca usable only via the VPN or while on campus at Algonquin College. Use the private address when you are on-campus.

1.2 Connecting from the Course Linux Server to other machinesIndexup to index

Rarely, you might be logged in to the CLS and want to connect from the CLS (the local machine) to another machine (the remote machine) to transfer a file.

Connecting from the local Course Linux Server out to a remote machine (e.g. using a command-line ftp or ssh command) requires that the remote machine have its own accessible IP address – the remote machine should not itself be behind a firewall, unless you have arranged a pass-through port on that firewall. The remote machine must be running a file transfer server of some sort, to receive a connection from the CLS.

This is not usually the case, so most file transfer is done by running the file transfer software on the local machine and connecting to the CLS as the remote machine.

1.3 Locked out of the CLSIndexup to index

All file transfer programs need your CLS account name and CLS account password. If you fail to provide both accurately, you will be locked out of the CLS after several failed connection attempts.

A common error is to fail to provide your account name to the file transfer program, so that it uses a blank name. Don’t do that. Always make sure your CLS userid is being used.

If your IP address gets locked out, follow the directions to get your IP address unlocked.

1.4 Text File Line End DifferencesIndexup to index

Text files contain lines of text delimited (or terminated) by an end-of-line character (or characters). The line end character(s) in text files is not the same between Unix/Linux, Windows, and some versions of MacOS.

Here is a Linux example using the od file dumper command to make the newline character visible:

$ echo hi >foo
$ wc foo
1 1 3 foo                      # third character is a NEWLINE (NL or LF)

$ od -c foo                    # dump the file in character form
0000000   h   i  \n            # \n means NEWLINE
0000003

The Unix/Linux command file can identify text files that have CR (Macintosh) or CRLF (DOS/Windows) line terminators:

$ file macintosh unix windows
macintosh: ASCII text, with CR line terminators
unix:      ASCII text
windows:   ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators

Line-end differences may result in “staircasing” text (missing carriage returns) if you send a Unix/Linux text file to a Windows printer from some programs (e.g. Notepad). MacOS files may end up over-printed all on one line, due to the missing line feed characters!

Print a small sample first, and on Windows try using Write or Wordpad to read or print a Unix/Linux file instead of the old Notepad.

Some file transfer programs may optionally translate line-endings if they recognize that the file being transferred is a text file.

2 Unix/Linux/OSX SCP and SFTP – Secure Copy Program, Secure FTPIndexup to index

To copy files using Windows, scroll down to the Microsoft Windows Users section.

This section is for Unix/Linux/OSX and Cygwin users that already have the scp and sftp commands installed.

The SCP and SFTP programs can be used to transfer files between Unix-like machines when a userid/password is required (e.g. to/from the Course Linux Server). Both these programs use the underlying SSH (Secure SHell) protocol that encrypts both your password and the data being transferred.

2.1 Unix/Linux/OSX: Copy a file from a remote machine to the local machineIndexup to index

Open a terminal window on your local machine. (Do not log in to the remote machine; the terminal commands given below must execute locally.)

In the local terminal window, use SCP to copy a file from the remote machine to a file on the local machine, as follows. The first file name below is the file name on the remote machine; the second file name is the name it will be copied to (or use a name of dot . to keep the same name locally):

Syntax: scp -p userid@remote.host.name:remote_file local_file

Examples (use your own userid and your own remote host name):

$ scp -p abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca:happy.txt happy.txt
$ scp -p abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca:/etc/passwd .
$ scp -p cst8207-alg.idallen.ca:/tmp/foo mydir/bar

You will be prompted to enter your password for the remote machine.

If the remote machine is behind a firewall and requires a special port to be used, the -P option (upper case P) must be used to set the firewall pass-through port: (Use the actual port number for your firewall.)

$ scp -P 2222 -p abcd0001@example.com:dodo.txt happy.txt

2.2 Unix/Linux/OSX: Copy a file from the local machine to a remote machineIndexup to index

To copy from local to remote via a Unix/Linux or Cygwin command line, just reverse the order of the arguments to SCP. If the remote name is a dot ., the remote file name will be the same as the base name of the local file.

Syntax: scp -p local_file userid@remote.host.name:remote_file

Examples (use your own userid and your own remote host name):

$ scp -p happy.txt abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca:happy.txt
$ scp -p /etc/passwd abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca:.
$ scp -p mydir/bar cst8207-alg.idallen.ca:/tmp/foo

To specify a special port number:

$ scp -P 2222 -p happy.txt abcd0001@example.com:dodo.txt

2.3 Unix/Linux/OSX: Using SFTP (includes Cygwin on Windows)Indexup to index

The SFTP program is a cover for SSH and SCP that makes it look like you are using the insecure FTP program; however, the actual connection and transfer is done using the secure SSH protocol. From a Unix/Linux (or Cygwin) command line, you can start SFTP like this:

    $ sftp abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca
    Connecting to cst8207.idallen.ca...
    abcd0001@cst8207.idallen.ca's password:
    sftp> help
    [... output similar to using insecure FTP ...]
    sftp> quit

If you are familiar with insecure FTP (see below), SFTP will operate much the same way. As with insecure FTP, you can list the contents of remote directories and transfer files both ways (using put and get) on the same connection.

Some versions of SFTP use -P to set the port number; others have an awkward way to specify the port number:

    $ sftp -oPort=2222 example.com
    Connecting to example.com...
    idallen@example.com's password:
    sftp> help
    [... output similar to using insecure FTP ...]
    sftp> quit

3 Unix/Linux Insecure FTP – File Transfer Protocol (do not use)Indexup to index

Avoid the standard insecure FTP program – it sends passwords in clear text across the Internet. (You are slightly safer using the FTP program locally here at school, but realize that anyone snooping packets on your local network will still see your password.)

The Course Linux Server does not support insecure FTP, but you can use SFTP instead with many of the same command meanings.

The old way to move files between machines was the insecure FTP (File Transfer Protocol) program. FTP is an insecure form of file transfer; because, any password you type into insecure FTP is visible across the network. Don’t use insecure FTP for transfer between machines requiring userids and passwords over an insecure network (e.g. the Internet).

If you log in to the Course Linux Server (using secure SSH), you can then use the insecure ftp or lftp commands on the Server to connect out from the Server to other remote machines (e.g. insecure FTP to your home computer or to ACADUNIX), if those other machines accept insecure FTP connections.

If you set up your home computer with an insecure FTP server [be careful!], you may use the insecure ftp command on the Course Linux Server to connect to your home machine, if your home machine has a public IP address and isn’t behind a firewall or NAT router. (Use SFTP instead.)

Once you have an insecure FTP connection set up, you can copy files in either direction using the put and get commands, as you wish.

Many Internet sites support a form of anonymous insecure FTP that lets you connect to a site without requring a password, using the special insecure FTP userid anonymous or ftp. Since it requires no password, this form of insecure FTP is safe to use over the Internet. It is how software is often provided for download to Unix/Linux users.

Command-line insecure FTP is a subsystem kind of program with its own set of subcommands. Once inside the insecure FTP program, your prompt becomes ftp>. Inside insecure FTP, the help command will list the possible insecure FTP commands available, and help commandname will give you a bit more help on the given FTP command name.

The Unix manual page for insecure FTP (man ftp) explains the individual insecure FTP subcommands in much better detail.

Do not confuse Unix commands with insecure FTP subcommands. Pay attention to which program is prompting you for input. To quit FTP, type quit.

The command-line insecure FTP program is also available under Windows. (You may need to install insecure FTP from the Windows CDROM.) The list of insecure FTP commands is slightly different; but, the basic commands (ls, cd, get, put) are the same as for Unix. (You can run command-line insecure FTP from a DOS window or using the Run dialog box.) Remember: FTP is not secure.

Insecure FTP will not transfer entire directories; it may only be used to transfer files one at a time. (There are ways to get insecure FTP to fetch multiple files at once; but, the files must all be in the same directory; you can’t fetch multiple directories. See the help for the mget insecure FTP subcommand.)

Below is an example command-line insecure FTP session to a public FTP server. This insecure FTP command could be run on a Unix/Linux machine or under Windows.

    $ ftp ftp.gnu.org
    Connected to ftp.gnu.org.
    220 GNU FTP server ready.
    530 Please login with USER and PASS.
    Name (ftp.gnu.org:idallen): anonymous   # NOTE: special userid used
    230 Login successful.                   # NOTE: no password needed!
    Remote system type is UNIX.
    Using binary mode to transfer files.
    ftp> help
    [... many lines of FTP commands show here ...]
    ftp> help ls
    ls              list contents of remote directory
    ftp> help get
    get             receive file
    ftp> help cd
    cd              change remote working directory
    ftp> ls
    150 Here comes the directory listing.
    [... many files show here ...]
    ftp> cd gnu
    ftp> ls
    150 Here comes the directory listing.
    [... many files show here ...]
    ftp> cd chess
    ftp> ls
    150 Here comes the directory listing.
    [... many files show here ...]
    ftp> get README.gnuchess
    local: README.gnuchess remote: README.gnuchess
    150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for README.gnuchess (89 bytes).
    226 File send OK.
    89 bytes received in 0.0066 seconds (13 Kbytes/s)
    ftp> quit
    221 Goodbye.
    $ ls -l README.gnuchess
    -rw-r--r--   1 idallen  idallen   89 Oct  2 00:49 README.gnuchess

3.1 FTP Binary Mode vs. Text Mode file transferIndexup to index

Insecure FTP can transfer files in either text or binary mode. Almost always use binary mode, which makes an exact copy of the file.

Text mode can be used to translate line ends when copying plain text files between dissimilar systems, e.g. between Unix and Windows, but the line-end translation will corrupt all other non-text files (i.e. images sent in text mode will be corrupted).

3.2 Insecure FTP vs. the Unix ShellsIndexup to index

The syntax of insecure FTP commands is not the same as the syntax of Unix commands. This insecure FTP command doesn’t do what you think it does:

    ftp> ls -l filename
    output to local-file: filename?

If you answer yes to this prompt, you will copy the output of ls -l into the file filename in your current directory, erasing what was there before. This is probably not what you want. Don’t do it.

The insecure FTP command names resemble Unix command names; but, they are not Unix commands. The syntax is different. You are not typing into a shell, you are typing into the insecure FTP program. Be careful.

Also, don’t type insecure FTP commands into Unix and expect that they will work, e.g. the BASH shell doesn’t understand put filename.

4 Microsoft Windows UsersIndexup to index

MS Windows does not ship with any secure file transfer programs such as SCP or SFTP, even though versions exist that are open source and free software. You can buy expensive commercial versions of SSH/SCP/SFTP for Windows from various vendors; or, you can download and install some free (source code available) programs:

4.1 The FileZilla GUI ClientIndexup to index

FileZilla is a free multi-platform graphical SFTP, FTP, and SCP client. This client is already installed on the Windows computers in the Algonquin T126 labs.

In the FileZilla Quickconnect bar, enter the Public (or Private) address sftp://cst8207.idallen.ca in the Host: box and your Algonquin userid in the Username: box to connect to the Course Linux Server. Accept the remote SSH host key when prompted to do so.

Upon successful connection, the left side of the window becomes the Local site: and the right side of the screen becomes the Remote site:.

Highly recommended for sysadmin: Under the Transfer menu, turn on Preserve timestamps of transferred files.

You can now drag items from Local to Remote or vice-versa. You can right-click on items for other options.

4.2 The WinSCP GUI ClientIndexup to index

WinSCP is a free graphical SCP/SFTP client for Windows. It is one of the easiest ways to copy files from the Course Linux Server, but it cannot be automated or scripted. For use in scripts, see the PuTTY suite of programs.

Here is a brief 2m 52s Lynda.com tutorial on using PuTTY and WinSCP. (You need a free Lynda.com account to see this tutorial.) This tutorial does not set the full set of required PuTTY options!

WinSCP has two GUI interface modes: Commander and Explorer. Use the default drag-and-drop Explorer interface if you are not familiar with the two-pane format of Norton Commander. Use the Commander interface if you want to move files quickly using mouse-free keyboard shortcuts.

WinSCP Connection

One you log in to the CLS with WinSCP, you can drag items from the CLS on the right to your local machine on the left. The “Refresh” button refreshes the CLS pane on the right to show new files.

When transferring files from the CLS to your local machine and then up to Brightspace, make sure the Transfer Type is set to Binary. (This is the default.) Do not transfer the files from the CLS to your local machine and then up to Brightspace using the Text Transfer Type.

4.2.1 Transfer Type – use Binary not TextIndexup to index

Warning: WinSCP will optionally translate files between Unix/Linux/Windows Text File Line-End Differences if the file name is a recognized text file, e.g. the name ends in .txt, and you select a Text Transfer Type. If you transfer a file from Linux to Windows using the Text Transfer Type, the result will be a Windows/DOS format text file, not a Linux format text file.

Do not change Linux text files from the CLS into Windws/DOS text files as you transfer files from the CLS to Brightspace; Windows/DOS files will not be accepted!

4.2.2 Editing files using the WinSCP GUIIndexup to index

WinSCP lets you text-edit files directly from the GUI, but you won’t learn any Linux editing skills if you do that.

Be careful that you don’t make edits to files that you later overwrite with older versions by doing a file transfer.

4.2.3 WinSCP Error due to: too large SFTP packetIndexup to index

If you get a WinSCP Error similar to this “Received too large SFTP packet”:

WinSCP Error Message

go to your .bashrc file and insert this exact line at the beginning:

[ -z "${PS1-}" ] && return

Your .bashrc and .bash_profile files must not produce any output when called in non-interactive mode, otherwise the output confuses the SFTP protocol used by WinSCP.

4.3 The PuTTY suite of programs (PSCP, PSFTP)Indexup to index

PuTTY is a graphical telnet/SSH client and a suite of command-line (DOS window) file transfer clients.

Here is a brief 2m 52s Lynda.com tutorial on using PuTTY and WinSCP. (You need a free Lynda.com account to see this tutorial.) This tutorial does not set the full set of required PuTTY options!

If you download and install the full PuTTY program suite under Windows (PuTTY comes with an executable auto-installer that will do this for you), you will find the programs PSCP and PSFTP under the installation directory (usually under C:\Program Files\PuTTY). Start up a DOS command prompt, change to this directory, and run the secure commands you need to copy files to/from other systems. See below for examples of how to do this.

Unless you change your DOS search PATH, you will only be able to execute the PSCP and PSFTP commands from the directory into which you downloaded them.

When transferring files between Windows and Unix/Linux machines, remember that pathnames on the Windows machines contain backward slashes while pathnames on Unix/Linux machines contain forward slashes. For example, you might find yourself typing something like this:

    psftp> put "d:\folder\myfile.txt" "public_html/dir/page.txt"
    local:d:\dir\myfile.txt => remote:/home/abcd0001/public_html/page.txt

Windows pathnames contain backslashes and the Unix/Linux pathnames contain forward slashes. Some versions of PSFTP also accept forward slashes for Windows pathnames. You must surround the pathnames with double quotes if the pathnames contain blanks.

4.3.1 PSCPIndexup to index

PSCP is a command-line copy program, similar to the Unix/Linux SCP program.

If the remote machine is behind a firewall and requires a gateway and special port to be used, the -P option (upper case P) must be used to set the firewall pass-through port. Leave it out otherwise.

The backslash at the end of a line below indicates that the line continues. Type what is written all on one line without the backslash.

    C:\> cd "C:\Program Files\PuTTY"

    C:\Program Files\PuTTY> pscp -h
...the -h displays a short help listing here...

    C:\Program Files\PuTTY> \
        pscp -P 2222 "abcd0001@example.com:dir/foo.txt" "folder\bar.txt"
    abcd0001@example.com's password:
...only use the -P option if you need the special port number...
...you may be asked to accept the host key here (say yes)...
...file transfers remote "dir/foo.txt" to local "folder\bar.txt"...
  • You must use your own userid on the remote machine. You must replace “example.com” with the machine name or IP address to which you wish to connect. The -P option sets a non-standard port number, if you need it.

  • Windows pathnames should contain backslashes and the Unix/Linux pathnames contain forward slashes. Some versions of PSCP accept forward slashes for Windows pathnames. You must surround the pathnames with double quotes if the pathnames contain blanks.

4.3.2 PSFTPIndexup to index

PSFTP is a secure command-line FTP-like program, similar to standard FTP.

If the remote machine is behind a firewall and requires a special port to be used, the -P option (upper case P) must be used to set the firewall pass-through port. Leave it out otherwise.

    C:\> cd "C:\Program Files\PuTTY"

    C:\Program Files\PuTTY> psftp -h
...the -h displays a short help listing here...

    C:\Program Files\PuTTY> psftp -P 2222 abcd0001@example.com
...only use the -P option if you need the special port number...
...you may be asked to accept the host key here (say yes)...
    abcd0001@example.com's password:
    Remote working directory is /home/abcd0001
    psftp> help
...short help listing displays here...
    psftp> ls
...listing of directory displays here...
    psftp> get ".bashrc" "foo.txt"
    remote:/home/abcd0001/.bashrc => local:foo.txt
    psftp> put "d:\dir\myfile.txt" "public_html/page.txt"
    local:d:\dir\myfile.txt => remote:/home/abcd0001/public_html/page.txt psftp> quit
...file "foo.txt" is now in the current directory...
  • You must use your own userid on the remote machine. You must replace example.com with the machine name or IP address to which you wish to connect. The -P option sets a non-standard port number, if you need it.

  • Windows pathnames should contain backslashes and the Unix/Linux pathnames contain forward slashes. Some versions of PSFTP accept forward slashes for Windows pathnames. You must surround the pathnames with double quotes if the pathnames contain blanks.

  • The options to the PuTTY Windows version of SFTP (named PSFTP) are not the same as the options to the Unix/Linux version of SFTP. In particular, the option -P has different meanings!

4.3.3 Example SCP and SFTP Windows Command LinesIndexup to index

First, here are some typical PSCP command lines for file transfer from a local (Windows) computer to the public_html directory of the abcd0001 account on the Course Linux Server. The first line uses the Public gateway and special port 2222; the second uses the Private IP address (via the VPN or On-Campus):

    pscp -P 2222 d:\dir\image.jpg abcd0001@cst8281.idallen.ca:public_html/a10/image.jpg

    pscp d:\dir\image.jpg abcd0001@10.50.254.148:public_html/a10/image.jpg

Second, here is the same transfer using the PSFTP command instead of PSCP:

    psftp -P 2222 abcd0001@cst8281.idallen.ca
    password:
    psftp> put d:\dir\image.jpg public_html/a10/image.jpg
    psftp> help

    psftp abcd0001@10.50.254.148
    password:
    psftp> put d:\dir\image.jpg public_html/a10/image.jpg
    psftp> help
  1. You must replace abcd0001 with your own userid. You will be asked for your password on the Course Linux Server. If you are asked to accept the server encryption key, say yes.

  2. You must remember to insert the web directory name public_html into all your file names for the Course Linux Server, since that is where the web server looks in your account. Files put into your home directory will not be visible on the Web.

  3. Slashes go backwards for Windows pathnames and forwards for Unix pathnames.

  4. The psftp and pscp commands may not be in your Windows DOS search PATH. You can add the directory containing these commands to your DOS search PATH, or you can change to the directory containing these commands when you want to run them, or you can type the absolute path of the command names if you aren’t in the right directory.

4.4 Windows Insecure FTP (do not use)Indexup to index

The Course Linux Server does not support insecure FTP.

MS Windows has a command-line version of insecure FTP available from a DOS prompt or in a DOS window. You can also download various graphical insecure FTP clients. Many recommend the insecure programs FileZilla or WS_FTP.

4.4.1 Using Windows GUI via Windows ExplorerIndexup to index

Some versions of Windows also let you use an insecure FTP URI to connect to an insecure FTP server and log in and transfer files, e.g. using this form of URI:

    ftp://ftp.algonquincollege.com/

The Windows Explorer (not Internet Explorer!) will let you open an insecure FTP URI such as the one above and drag-and-drop files between your machine and a remote machine graphically. Underneath, Windows is using the insecure FTP protocol and your data and passwords are visible to anyone who can snoop your network connection. Don’t use this.

  1. You must log in with your own Linux userid. You will be asked for your FTP password.

  2. Your password and data are not encrypted when you use insecure FTP. Do not use this method on an untrusted network (i.e. Internet).

  3. You may be able to access a file via FTP that cannot be displayed in a web browser, since the FTP program is logged in as your account name and the web browser accesses your files as other. You must ensure that your files have read permissions for other after you transfer them to the Course Linux Server.

  4. Windows Explorer, using insecure FTP, may create directories and files with the wrong Linux permissions. Directories under your public_html directory must be readable and searchable (not writable!) by other. Files under your public_html directory must also be readable (not writable or executable!) by others. Inaccessible files and directories will generate Permission Denied errors in your web browser. Files and directories with unwanted write permissions will allow other users to delete or erase your web pages.

5 File Transfer HacksIndexup to index

Here are some ways to move files around without using a file transfer program:

5.1 Use EMail for text filesIndexup to index

If the file you want to take home from Unix is a text file (not an image), you can usually EMail it to yourself somewhere using a command-line Unix EMail program with standard input redirected to come from the file you want. Unix mail programs that work this way are mutt, Mail, mailx, and mail. For example:

    $ mail  user@example.com  <.bashrc
    $ mail  abcd0001@algonquincollege.com  <.bashrc

You can only send text files this way, and you can only send one file per mail message using file input redirection (unless you concatenate many files together first). See man mail for further details.

To send binary programs via email you must encode them as ASCII first and decode them after receiving them. See man uuencode.

Author: 
| Ian! D. Allen, BA, MMath  -  idallen@idallen.ca  -  Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
| Home Page: http://idallen.com/   Contact Improv: http://contactimprov.ca/
| College professor (Free/Libre GNU+Linux) at: http://teaching.idallen.com/
| Defend digital freedom:  http://eff.org/  and have fun:  http://fools.ca/

Plain Text – plain text version of this page in Pandoc Markdown format

Campaign for non-browser-specific HTML   Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional   Valid CSS!   Creative Commons by nc sa 3.0   Hacker Ideals Emblem   Author Ian! D. Allen