Provided by: putty-tools_0.73-2_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.
-no-sanitise-stderr
By default, PSCP will filter control characters from the standard error channel from the server,
to prevent remote processes sending confusing escape sequences. This option forces the standard
error channel to not be filtered.
-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.
PuTTY tool suite 2004‐03‐24 pscp(1)