You need to have WinSCP installed on your windows client and use windows schedule and the command described in the link above to automate the process. Add IP address in UNC path: although that is not state-of-the-art, it works correctly on the "other" side, Windows would rise a security risk by accessing a UNC path containing an IP address of course.
Add the urgency from swarna in a following mail: sorry, but I understand this forum as a medium to get tips and hints, but not to expect a ready solution without any costs. If you can get the Windows team to install a ssh server on the Windows server, then I would suggest this is the way to go.
As FTP is not a secure form of transport, you can ask the Windows team to make a virtual directory to the required "output" directory. The FTP server and the "output" directory do not even need to be on the same host. An additional advantage of a virtual directory is that it does not show in the root directory listing, but can still be accessed. You should probably ask the Windows team to set the directory view as UNIX-style; but if they decide to leave it as DOS-style, then it can be changed on the fly using the "quote site dirstyle" command.
To set this up in AIX is less than 5 minutes work. Thanks for the great comments. And the issue is I have to re-direct the file into the windows machine from UNIX machine and update the latest file which should be placed in the directory. I mean, the previous day the file should be replaced by nextday file everyday. But, the file name should not be changed. Even I am having the same requirement, to copy files from Windows to Unix box.
I did read the above links, but they all require manually intervention which we want to avoid. We want something which we can schedule and it should get kick based on completion of dependency and copy the files. I can say this about Samba, maybe winscp is the same: After configuring and starting the server, then there is no more manual intervention.
No Account? Sign up. By signing in, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Already have an account? Sign in. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Enter the email address associated with your account. We'll send a magic link to your inbox. Email Address. All Sign in options. Enter a Email Address. SCP is the most direct way to transfer files from remote servers to local systems. It makes use of the same SSH protocols, so the connection is encrypted all the way through, making it immune to man-in-the-middle attacks.
Hopefully, this tutorial will help you use it in an efficient, and easy manner. If this tutorial helped you move files from your remote server to your local machine, maybe consider sharing this knowledge with your friends by using our share shortcuts. You can also leave any additional tips or questions in our comment section below. Thank you. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Improve this answer. Yaron Yaron 3, 2 2 gold badges 18 18 silver badges 33 33 bronze badges. The Overflow Blog. Podcast An oral history of Stack Overflow — told by its founding team. Millinery on the Stack: Join us for Winter Summer? Bash, ! Featured on Meta. New responsive Activity page. It appears to be trying to save it to a directory on the remote system but I'm not sure.
Thanks for all your help. Download Torrent For Mac
0コメント