Provided by: fling_1.1-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       fling - quickly copy stdin over trusted network

SYNOPSIS

       fling [-vp] host port <input
       fling [-vp] [user@]host:/path/to/output <input
       fling [-vp] -r port >output
       fling [-vp] -r port -ooutput

DESCRIPTION

       fling  transfers  data  quickly over a trusted network.  It does not encrypt the data.  It
       tries to avoid copying data between kernel and userspace where it can; you  will  see  the
       most improvement over other tools like netcat on systems with low memory bandwidth.

       The input is read from stdin, which can be a file or a pipe.

       fling needs to be installed on both ends of the transfer.

OPTIONS

       -r     Receive instead of sending.  The received file is written by default to stdout.

       -v     Be more verbose about what's happening.

       -p     Report progress during transfer.

       -o     Specify output file when receiving to be used instead of stdout.

EXAMPLE

       You need to run fling on both ends of the transfer.  Run it first on the receiver:

              fling -r 12756 > file.dat

       Alternatively, you can run this to set the output file with an option:

              fling -r 12756 -o file.dat

       And then on the sender:

              fling other.host.address 12756 < file.dat

       You can also use the experimental support for ssh, and have fling run itself on the remote
       end, picking a port automatically.   This  avoids  having  to  start  it  manually,  in  a
       different terminal.  Note that the actual transfer is insecure and doesn't go via ssh.

              fling other.host:data < data

ENVIRONMENT

       FLING_REMOTE_EXE
              Name  of  command  on the remote end for fling itself.  Should include full path if
              not found via PATH.

       FLING_SSH
              Name of command locally to use ssh.  Defaults to "ssh" if not set.

   NOTES
       The SSH support in fling is experimental.  It may have bugs.

       Note that ssh is only used to set up the connection between  the  sending  fling  and  the
       receiving  fling.   The  actual  connection  through  which data is transferred is still a
       separate cleartext connection.

       You should not use fling if you mind that data is transferred over an unencrypted channel,
       or  that  an  attacker  may  modify data as it is transferred.  fling aims to be fast, not
       secure.

                                                                                         FLING(1)