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I try to write a script to "scp" a file from local server A to remote server B. What I have done is generate the public key from server A, and add it into server B "authorized_keys". Everything is find. I do a small test, and ssh from A to B without password successfully. Here is the command

$ ssh userid@serverB

But here is the question. when I try to execute scp command, get failure because of "Unauthorized access is prohibited".

-bash-4.1$ scp file_name userid@serverB:~
Unauthorized access is prohibited
file_name                                         100%    0     0.0KB/s   00:00

I have spent a lots of time to find out the reason, but cannot get the right answer. Could anyone let me know, why this happen? Thanks a lot.

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  • You don't need that trailing ~. scp copies to the remote user's home directory by default if you don't give a directory. Mar 22, 2012 at 12:51

2 Answers 2

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that looks like a message that's coming out of a login script. is the file actually getting copied? I think that message has nothing to do with the success of the file copy itself.

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  • Thanks, dldnh. What a foolish mistake I made. My head stop running in the past hours, and mislead by "Unauthorized access is prohibited". Thanks a lot.
    – Chan
    Mar 22, 2012 at 8:53
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I think it was a MOTD.

Wich distribution do you use ?

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