SCP between two different servers with two different ports












2















The thing is, you can specify a port to SCP, and you can transfer stuff from a remote host to another.



If both hosts use different ports on SSH (i.e. 2203 and 2541), how can I specify these ports to the SCP command?



I know I can do



scp -P <port> host1:/file host2:/file


But that port will apply to both hosts.



So... how can I specify two different ports for the two different hosts?










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  • 4





    askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

    – Rui F Ribeiro
    May 12 '17 at 17:51






  • 2





    The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

    – DopeGhoti
    May 12 '17 at 17:52
















2















The thing is, you can specify a port to SCP, and you can transfer stuff from a remote host to another.



If both hosts use different ports on SSH (i.e. 2203 and 2541), how can I specify these ports to the SCP command?



I know I can do



scp -P <port> host1:/file host2:/file


But that port will apply to both hosts.



So... how can I specify two different ports for the two different hosts?










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 11 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.











  • 4





    askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

    – Rui F Ribeiro
    May 12 '17 at 17:51






  • 2





    The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

    – DopeGhoti
    May 12 '17 at 17:52














2












2








2








The thing is, you can specify a port to SCP, and you can transfer stuff from a remote host to another.



If both hosts use different ports on SSH (i.e. 2203 and 2541), how can I specify these ports to the SCP command?



I know I can do



scp -P <port> host1:/file host2:/file


But that port will apply to both hosts.



So... how can I specify two different ports for the two different hosts?










share|improve this question














The thing is, you can specify a port to SCP, and you can transfer stuff from a remote host to another.



If both hosts use different ports on SSH (i.e. 2203 and 2541), how can I specify these ports to the SCP command?



I know I can do



scp -P <port> host1:/file host2:/file


But that port will apply to both hosts.



So... how can I specify two different ports for the two different hosts?







scp remote






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked May 12 '17 at 17:47









KyngoKyngo

113




113





bumped to the homepage by Community 11 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 11 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 4





    askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

    – Rui F Ribeiro
    May 12 '17 at 17:51






  • 2





    The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

    – DopeGhoti
    May 12 '17 at 17:52














  • 4





    askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

    – Rui F Ribeiro
    May 12 '17 at 17:51






  • 2





    The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

    – DopeGhoti
    May 12 '17 at 17:52








4




4





askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

– Rui F Ribeiro
May 12 '17 at 17:51





askubuntu.com/questions/153960/scp-with-two-different-ports

– Rui F Ribeiro
May 12 '17 at 17:51




2




2





The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

– DopeGhoti
May 12 '17 at 17:52





The simplest way would be to add an entry for each host in ~/.ssh/config specifying each host's specific port.

– DopeGhoti
May 12 '17 at 17:52










1 Answer
1






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0














The source and target can be specified as a URI in the form scp://[user@]host[:port][/path]



so you can run:



scp scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2


And to copy between two remote hosts through the local host add "-3":



scp -3 scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2





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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
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    The source and target can be specified as a URI in the form scp://[user@]host[:port][/path]



    so you can run:



    scp scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2


    And to copy between two remote hosts through the local host add "-3":



    scp -3 scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2





    share|improve this answer




























      0














      The source and target can be specified as a URI in the form scp://[user@]host[:port][/path]



      so you can run:



      scp scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2


      And to copy between two remote hosts through the local host add "-3":



      scp -3 scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2





      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        The source and target can be specified as a URI in the form scp://[user@]host[:port][/path]



        so you can run:



        scp scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2


        And to copy between two remote hosts through the local host add "-3":



        scp -3 scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2





        share|improve this answer













        The source and target can be specified as a URI in the form scp://[user@]host[:port][/path]



        so you can run:



        scp scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2


        And to copy between two remote hosts through the local host add "-3":



        scp -3 scp://user1@host1:port1/path/to/file1 scp://user2@host2:port2/path/to/file2






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 3 '18 at 15:55









        user3403199user3403199

        1




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