Provided by: putty-tools_0.70-4_amd64
NAME
pscp - command-line SCP (secure copy) / SFTP client
SYNOPSIS
pscp [options] [user@]host:source target pscp [options] source [source...] [user@]host:target pscp [options] -ls [user@]host:filespec
DESCRIPTION
pscp is a command-line client for the SSH-based SCP (secure copy) and SFTP (secure file transfer protocol) protocols.
OPTIONS
The command-line options supported by pscp are: -V Show version information and exit. -pgpfp Display the fingerprints of the PuTTY PGP Master Keys and exit, to aid in verifying new files released by the PuTTY team. -ls Remote directory listing. -p Preserve file attributes. -q Quiet, don't show statistics. -r Copy directories recursively. -unsafe Allow server-side wildcards (DANGEROUS). -v Show verbose messages. -load session Load settings from saved session. -P port Connect to port port. -proxycmd command Instead of making a TCP connection, use command as a proxy; network traffic will be redirected to the standard input and output of command. command must be a single word, so is likely to need quoting by the shell. The special strings %host and %port in command will be replaced by the hostname and port number you want to connect to; to get a literal % sign, enter %%. Backslash escapes are also supported, such as sequences like \n being replaced by a literal newline; to get a literal backslash, enter \\. (Further escaping may be required by the shell.) (See the main PuTTY manual for full details of the supported %- and backslash- delimited tokens, although most of them are probably not very useful in this context.) -l user Set remote username to user. -batch Disable interactive prompts. -pw password Set remote password to password. CAUTION: this will likely make the password visible to other users of the local machine (via commands such as `w'). -1 Force use of SSH protocol version 1. -2 Force use of SSH protocol version 2. -4, -6 Force use of IPv4 or IPv6 for network connections. -C Enable SSH compression. -i keyfile Private key file for user authentication. For SSH-2 keys, this key file must be in PuTTY's PPK format, not OpenSSH's format or anyone else's. If you are using an authentication agent, you can also specify a public key here (in RFC 4716 or OpenSSH format), to identify which of the agent's keys to use. -noagent Don't try to use an authentication agent. -agent Allow use of an authentication agent. (This option is only necessary to override a setting in a saved session.) -hostkey key Specify an acceptable host public key. This option may be specified multiple times; each key can be either a fingerprint (99:aa:bb:...) or a base64-encoded blob in OpenSSH's one-line format. Specifying this option overrides automated host key management; only the key(s) specified on the command-line will be accepted (unless a saved session also overrides host keys, in which case those will be added to), and the host key cache will not be written. -scp Force use of SCP protocol. -sftp Force use of SFTP protocol. -sshlog logfile -sshrawlog logfile These options make pscp log protocol details to a file. (Some of these may be sensitive, although by default an effort is made to suppress obvious passwords.) -sshlog logs decoded SSH packets and other events (those that -v would print). -sshrawlog additionally logs the raw encrypted packet data.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information on pscp it's probably best to go and look at the manual on the PuTTY web page: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
BUGS
This man page isn't terribly complete. See the above web link for better documentation.