It's cp
Unfortunately.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 8, 2015, at 5:09 PM, Edward Berner 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

“cp” or “scp”?

If ”scp”, then you might increase performance a bit by selecting a different 
cipher, such as blowfish, using the “-c” option, and/or enabling compression 
with the “-C” option.  But I’d guess that the real problem is the size of the 
SSH receive window on the destination host, and I think the only fix is to 
update the ssh software.

Here are a couple links with more information about the ssh receive window 
issue:

High Performance SSH/SCP - HPN-SSH
http://www.psc.edu/index.php/hpn-ssh

SSH, SCP, and SFTP Speed Improvements
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E26505_01/html/E27003/gmdlh.html

--
Edward


From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David McSpadden
Sent: Thursday, January 08, 2015 9:49 AM
To: '[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>'
Subject: [NTSysADM] OT unix commands?

When running a ‘cp’ from one lan to another over a 100MB circuit my bandwidth 
utilization is 3MB but when running a ‘ftp’ to the same destination I utilize 
over10MB of the same circuit?
Why would an IBM AIX cp command be so different from an IBM AIX ftp command as 
far as same files to the same locations over the same networks??
Doesn’t really make any sense to me??

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