3449

How do I copy a folder from remote to local host using scp?

I use ssh to log in to my server.
Then, I would like to copy the remote folder foo to local /home/user/Desktop.

How do I achieve this?

5
  • 106
    The OP's question was whether it is possible to copy file from remote to local host while ssh'd to remote host. I'm not sure why no single answer has correctly addressed his/her question.
    – JeffDror
    Jul 20, 2015 at 13:04
  • 16
    The premise of the question is incorrect. The idea is, once logged into ssh, how to move files from the logged-in machine back to the client that is logged in. However, scp is not aware of nor can it use the ssh connection. It is making its own connections. So the simple solution is create a new terminal window on the local workstation, and run scp that transfers files from the remote server to local machine. E.g., scp -i key user@remote:/remote-dir/remote-file /local-dir/local-file Jul 6, 2017 at 13:11
  • 1
    use mc: TAB, cd sh://USER@HOST, use the mc shortcuts, cd out when done.
    – sjas
    Oct 15, 2018 at 3:04
  • 1
    @sjas: in mc it's easier to use Left/Right on the menu > Shell link where you can type the alias you have in your ~/.ssh/config e.g. myhost: > OK
    – ccpizza
    Jan 21, 2022 at 14:52
  • 2
    @jeffmcneill yes your right. But you didn't address directly JeffDror, so I guess most people did not realize that your are answering JeffDror's question.
    – Adam
    Sep 11, 2022 at 7:28

14 Answers 14

6169
scp -r [email protected]:/path/to/foo /home/user/Desktop/

By not including the trailing '/' at the end of foo, you will copy the directory itself (including contents), rather than only the contents of the directory.

From man scp (See online manual)

-r Recursively copy entire directories

16
  • 1950
    I google this every time. Related comic: xkcd.com/1168
    – cptloop
    Nov 26, 2013 at 12:25
  • 20
    Two nice-to-knows I found: the -C flag adds compression and the -c flag lets you pass in other cipher types for better performance, like scp -c blowfish a@b:something . as seen in dimuthu's answer
    – Automatico
    Jun 26, 2014 at 20:48
  • 113
    use -p to preserve file modification times, permissions, etc! scp -pr user@...
    – Ber
    May 7, 2016 at 2:06
  • 36
    This answer lacks important explanation. Will you end up with Desktop/foo or will you have Desktop/allcontentsofFooGohere scp seems to act weird sometimes to me it does one thing then another
    – Toskan
    Jan 24, 2018 at 19:45
  • 21
    @Toskan with scp -r [email protected]:/path/to/foo /home/user/Desktop/ you should end up with Desktop/foo. With scp -r [email protected]:/path/to/foo/. /home/user/Desktop/ you will end up with the contents of foo in Desktop and all the sub-dirs of foo strewn under Desktop
    – Ioannis
    Dec 11, 2018 at 13:08
367

To use full power of scp you need to go through next steps:

  1. Public key authorisation
  2. Create SSH aliases

Then, for example if you have this ~/.ssh/config:

Host test
    User testuser
    HostName test-site.example
    Port 22022

Host prod
    User produser
    HostName production-site.example
    Port 22022

you'll save yourself from password entry and simplify scp syntax like this:

scp -r prod:/path/foo /home/user/Desktop   # copy to local
scp -r prod:/path/foo test:/tmp            # copy from remote prod to remote test

More over, you will be able to use remote path-completion:

scp test:/var/log/  # press tab twice
Display all 151 possibilities? (y or n)

For enabling remote bash-completion you need to have bash-shell on both <source> and <target> hosts, and properly working bash-completion. For more information see related questions:

How to enable autocompletion for remote paths when using scp?
SCP filename tab completion

8
  • Tab completion is nonsense, just completes from the local host for me.
    – Bernhard
    Mar 4, 2014 at 15:12
  • 17
    @b.long The question is "How to copy remote folder foo to local Desktop". My answer is "scp -r prod:/path/foo /home/user/Desktop". Hope you're able to see relations. Mar 6, 2014 at 3:30
  • @Bernhard Remote tab completion is a well know reature. It's nonsense just for you :) Mar 6, 2014 at 3:34
  • 2
    @Bernhard For me is was obvious because I'm using bash-shell. Thanks for pointing me on that! Answer updated. Mar 6, 2014 at 6:16
  • 1
    @Alexander Yancharuk : Thanks for the answer, this is more detailed than just covering the syntax alone.
    – Gladiator
    Mar 10, 2014 at 9:32
360

To copy all from Local Location to Remote Location (Upload)

scp -r /path/from/local username@hostname:/path/to/remote

To copy all from Remote Location to Local Location (Download)

scp -r username@hostname:/path/from/remote /path/to/local

Custom Port where xxxx is custom port number

 scp -r -P xxxx username@hostname:/path/from/remote /path/to/local

Copy on current directory from Remote to Local

scp -r username@hostname:/path/from/remote .

Help:

  1. -r Recursively copy all directories and files
  2. Always use full location from /, Get full location/path by pwd
  3. scp will replace all existing files
  4. hostname will be hostname or IP address
  5. if custom port is needed (besides port 22) use -P PortNumber
  6. . (dot) - it means current working directory, So download/copy from server and paste here only.

Note: Sometimes the custom port will not work due to the port not being allowed in the firewall, so make sure that custom port is allowed in the firewall for incoming and outgoing connection

9
  • 1
    It seems (at least in recent versions of Raspbian Jessie and Ubuntu) that scp uses -P (uppercase P) for port, while (oddly) ssh uses -p (lowercase). May 22, 2017 at 13:42
  • 1
    -p is reserved for preserving "modification times, access times, and modes from the original file". So if you're using that for port, it's probably not working ;-) Unless you have a different version that used the lowercase p differently. May 23, 2017 at 18:53
  • With ssh, yes. Not with scp (I assume). May 25, 2017 at 3:10
  • What should i put if the directory contain a space?
    – Brethlosze
    Jun 17, 2017 at 22:43
  • @hyprfrcb Use pwd to get location and use same
    – Shiv Singh
    Oct 24, 2017 at 6:03
86

What I always use is:

scp -r username@IP:/path/to/server/source/folder/  .

. (dot): it means current folder. so copy from server and paste here only.

IP: can be an IP address like 125.55.41.311 or it can be host like ns1.mysite.example.

1
  • 10
    Thank you for pointing out that . refers to current directory!
    – ericmjl
    Jan 12, 2015 at 21:52
45

Better to first compress catalog on remote server:

tar czfP backup.tar.gz /path/to/catalog

Secondly, download from remote:

scp [email protected]:/path/to/backup.tar.gz .

At the end, extract the files:

tar -xzvf backup.tar.gz
3
  • 14
    "Better" is highly depends on the data you are transferring and the effort it is to ssh to the server to do zipping/unzipping. And: you can add compression to scp with the -C flag, like scp -C a@b:bigfile ..
    – Automatico
    Jun 26, 2014 at 20:43
  • 5
    This reminds me of the comment made by @cptloop ! :D xkcd.com/1168
    – GoodSp33d
    Aug 13, 2015 at 8:51
  • 2
    You saved me one extra googling. Jun 7, 2021 at 22:52
24

Typical scenario,

scp -r -P port username@ip:/path-to-folder  .

explained with an sample,

scp -r -P 27000 [email protected]:/tmp/hotel_dump .

where,

port = 27000
username = "abc" , remote server username
path-to-folder = tmp/hotel_dump
. = current local directory
1
  • 1
    Thank your for the answer. -P for a specific SSH port was helpful for me.
    – redoff
    Jul 4, 2019 at 12:17
23

And if you have one hell of a files to download from the remote location and if you don't much care about security, try changing the scp default encryption (Triple-DES) to something like 'blowfish'.

This will reduce file copying time drastically.

scp -c blowfish -r [email protected]:/path/to/foo /home/user/Desktop/
1
  • 2
    According to this blog post you get even better performance with arcfour in stead of blowfish, but it has security flaws.
    – Automatico
    Jun 26, 2014 at 20:42
21

Go to Files on your unity toolbar

enter image description here

Press Ctrl + l and write [email protected]

The 192.168.1.103 is the host that you want to connect.

The here one example

enter image description here

1
  • Completely off-topic. Downvoted because it contributes to diluting the relevant answers with a suboptimal and excessively specific approach which doesn't even answer the question. Jan 2, 2023 at 10:58
17

In case you run into "Too many authentication failures", specify the exact SSH key you have added to your severs ssh server:

scp -r -i /path/to/local/key [email protected]:/path/to/folder /your/local/target/dir
15

The question was how to copy a folder from remote to local with scp command.

$ scp -r userRemote@remoteIp:/path/remoteDir /path/localDir

But here is the better way for do it with sftp - SSH File Transfer Protocol (also Secure File Transfer Protocol, or SFTP) is a network protocol that provides file access, file transfer, and file management over any reliable data stream.(wikipedia).

$ sftp user_remote@remote_ip

sftp> cd /path/to/remoteDir

sftp> get -r remoteDir

Fetching /path/to/remoteDir to localDir 100% 398 0.4KB/s 00:00

For help about sftp command just type help or ?.

5

I don't know why but I was had to use local folder before source server directive . to make it work

scp -r . [email protected]:/usr/share/nginx/www/example.org/
1
  • 1
    Assuming the user had permissions, could you do an absolute path without using root@
    – Jonathan
    Aug 25, 2017 at 21:48
4

It is better to use rsync than scp - because of ease-of use, while both are available on most Linux platforms

Simple one liner :

rsync -aP myfiles/ [email protected]:server_dir/

a to copy recursively, preserves symbolic links, special and device files, modification times, groups, owners, and permissions. It’s more commonly used than -r and is the recommended flag to use.

P to show progress

General form :

rsync -a ~/dir1 username@remote_host:destination_directory

With root as user, and to a specific IP address.

rsync -aP myfiles/ [email protected]:server_dir/

You can refer to digitalocean guide for Rsync

  • When inside the folder

rsync -ap . [email protected]:server_dir/

2
  • "It is better to use rsync than scp" - You should explain why.
    – BadHorsie
    Dec 5, 2023 at 11:16
  • rsync -aPI source/ remote:destination/ -a for recursive, -P for progress, and -I for overriding existing files. The command will show to the progress for every file, which is much clearer than scp.
    – FisNaN
    Mar 18 at 0:14
1

The premise of the question is incorrect. The idea is, once logged into ssh, how to move files from the logged-in machine back to the client that is logged in. However, scp is not aware of nor can it use the ssh connection. It is making its own connections. So the simple solution is create a new terminal window on the local workstation, and run scp that transfers files from the remote server to local machine. E.g., scp -i key user@remote:/remote-dir/remote-file /local-dir/local-file

0

For Windows OS, we used this command.

pscp -r -P 22 hostname@IP:/path/to/Downloads   ./

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.