498

I have an EC2 instance running (FreeBSD 9 AMI ami-8cce3fe5), and I can ssh into it using my amazon-created key file without password prompt, no problem.

However, when I want to copy a file to the instance using scp I am asked to enter a password:

scp somefile.txt -i mykey.pem [email protected]:/

Password:

Any ideas why this is happening/how it can be prevented?

3
  • Are you using excatly the same identifier for the user and host?
    – Lynch
    Jul 2, 2011 at 16:10
  • I'm not sure I understand what you mean by identifier, could you explain?
    – Hoff
    Jul 2, 2011 at 16:13
  • if for one connection you use an Ip address and for the other you use a name it will not work. I just saw that you use -i option to provide your identity. May be you should also show the command you use to log in with ssh.
    – Lynch
    Jul 2, 2011 at 16:18

16 Answers 16

965

I figured it out. I had the arguments in the wrong order. This works:

scp -i mykey.pem somefile.txt [email protected]:/
13
  • 20
    from who understand how to connect to ec2 through ssh, just change the ssh command to scp and add the name file after the pem file. Sep 28, 2013 at 12:08
  • 19
    Since this answer is a little old, a more recent example from my new EC2 instance: scp -i kp1.pem ./file.txt [email protected]:/home/ec2-user Jan 11, 2015 at 21:46
  • 3
    @siliconrockstar Your statement [email protected]:/home/ec2-user is easily replaced with the shorter and easier [email protected]:./ ./ FTW!
    – brock
    Apr 1, 2016 at 14:19
  • 2
    A very late comment, but what @ClaudioSantos suggests doesn't work exactly if you're using a non-standard port. It's -p for ssh and -P for scp.
    – Inukshuk
    Jan 17, 2019 at 3:04
  • 3
    I can use my *.PEM file to ssh into ec2. however, when I want to use it to SCP a file, it gives me the "Permission Denied" error! How can I solve this?
    – AleX_
    Jan 18, 2019 at 22:27
71
scp -i /path/to/your/.pemkey -r /copy/from/path user@server:/copy/to/path
2
  • (-r) parameter is not required but it's required to remove (/) from the end of remote path. Your example worked for me, Thanks a lot
    – Abbas
    Dec 6, 2017 at 4:40
  • how to delete existing from server before upload?
    – Santosh
    Apr 22, 2023 at 9:35
64

copy a file from a local server to a remote server

sudo scp -i my-pem-file.pem ./source/test.txt [email protected]:~/destination/

copy a file from a remote server to a local machine

sudo scp -i my-pem-file.pem [email protected]:~/source/of/remote/test.txt ./where/to/put

So the basically syntax is:-

scp -i my-pem-file.pem username@source:/location/to/file username@destination:/where/to/put

-i is for the identity_file

1
  • 1
    Only this worked for me. Rest all failed. Thanks a ton
    – Vinay Jain
    Apr 6, 2023 at 10:37
41

I've used below command to copy from local linux Centos 7 to AWS EC2.

scp -i user_key.pem file.txt [email protected]:/home/ec2-user
22

Making siliconerockstar's comment an answer since it worked for me

scp -i kp1.pem ./file.txt [email protected]:/home/ec2-user
19
scp -i ~/.ssh/key.pem ec2-user@ip:/home/ec2-user/file-to-copy.txt .

The file name shouldnt be between the pem file and the ec2-user string - that doesnt work. This also allows you to reserve the name of the copied file.

8

lets assume that your pem file and somefile.txt you want to send is in Downloads folder

scp -i ~/Downloads/mykey.pem ~/Downloads/somefile.txt [email protected]:~/

let me know if it doesn't work

3
  • scp -i /Users/Username/Downloads/myfile.pem -r [email protected]:~/ ~/Desktop/ in case u want to transfer file from server to local Mar 28, 2016 at 7:29
  • 2
    Thanks I got "access denied" with :/ at the end but with :~/ it works
    – cardamom
    Jul 3, 2017 at 11:51
  • yeah because :/ is root folder and :~/ is user folder so if you are root user then :/ or :~/ anything will work and if you are not root user then only :~/ you have to use. Jul 3, 2017 at 12:52
4

scp -i /home/barkat/Downloads/LamppServer.pem lampp_x64_12.04.tar.gz

this will be very helpful to all of you guys

3

My hadoopec2cluster.pem file was the only one in the directory on my local mac, couldn't scp it to aws using scp -i hadoopec2cluster.pem hadoopec2cluster.pem ubuntu@serverip:~.

Copied hadoopec2cluster.pem to hadoopec2cluster_2.pem and then scp -i hadoopec2cluster.pem hadoopec2cluster_2.pem ubuntu@serverip:~. Voila!

2

I was hung up on this because I was specifying my public key file in

scp -i [private key file path]

When I caught that mistake and changed it to the private key path instead, I was all set.

2

In your case, the user root won't have any issues. But in certain cases where you're required to login under SSH as a different user, make sure the directory you're scp-ing has adequate permissions for the user you're SSH-ing.

2

To use PSCP, you need the private key you generated in Converting Your Private Key Using PuTTYgen. You also need the public DNS address of your Linux instance

pscp -i C:\path\my-key-pair.ppk C:\path\Sample_file.txt ec2-user@public_dns:/home/ec2-user/Sample_file.txt
2

For ec2 server

#move your key to /tmp or right folder on server

Assign right permission

sudo chmod 600 /tmp/dev-sunrobotics-snippetbucketcom.pem

then connect to server or transfer

scp -i /tmp/dev-snippetbucketcom.pem filestore.tar.gz [email protected]:/tmp

Make sure in your ip security you have allow ip address to connect

0

write this code

scp -r -o "ForwardAgent=yes" /Users/pengge/11.vim [email protected]:/root/

If you have a SSH key with access to the destination server and the source server does not, adding -o "ForwardAgent=yes" will allow you to forward your SSH agent to the source server so that it can use your SSH key to connect to the destination server.

0

Please use this syntax to copy file using scp and key

scp -i [key_file_path] source_path user@hostname:[dest_path]
-6

Just tested:

Run the following command:

sudo shred -u /etc/ssh/*_key /etc/ssh/*_key.pub

Then:

  1. create ami (image of the ec2).
  2. launch from new ami(image) from step no 2 chose new keys.

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