On Mon, 20 Aug 2012 21:04:27 +0800 lina <lina.lastn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi, > > how to copy files from linux to windows via terminal. > > I know putty, prehaps I should install it? > > Better some already-installed program. > > Thanks with best regards, > > For a clean, easy job with a few files, yes, I'd go with puTTY. PuTTY is fine for low volumes, or you can probably find WinSCP which also uses ssh. PuTTY will not use OpenSSH keys (or it wouldn't last time I tried) but it will generate keys which OpenSSH can use. Some Windows FTP clients will also do SCP if pushed. If you have full control of non-domain Windows workstations, and many files to move, then samba is probably a good bet. I've had trouble with Windows domains, which tend to insist on higher security levels than a typical Linux samba server. I think samba tends to run about two server generations behind Microsoft. Finally, the RDP protocol does permit mapping local hard drive partitions into the client session, though I've never tried from a Linux client, I don't know if any can do it. That would presumably also use samba, but in a different manner than a straight network connection. That may be disabled by group policy in a domain environment, as it does constitute a significant security risk. -- Joe -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20120820191218.1b474...@jretrading.com