1

I know that you can grab files with scp like this:

scp user@remote_machine:/path/to/source /path/to/destination

However, I'd like to know if there is an easier way to do this, when I'm already logged on in ssh on the remote machine - that is, to avoid specifying username, hostname and absolute path to source?

Flyk
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Septagram
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2 Answers2

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Maybe zssh?

zssh (Zmodem SSH) is a program for interactively transferring files to a remote machine while using the secure shell (ssh). It is intended to be a convenient alternative to scp , allowing to transfer files without having to open another session and re-authenticate oneself.

zssh is an interactive wrapper for ssh

It uses the venerable rz, sz implementations of zmodem file transfer.

1

You could add the host information to your ~/.ssh/config, something like:

Host            foo
HostName        foo.baz.com
User            bar

And then you can do scp foo:~/path/to/file instead of scp bar@foo:~/path/to/file, or alternatively you can setup an alias or function to do the same thing.

As for your actual question, I don't know. scp creates a new connection to transfer files and doesn't use the existing ssh connection.