Hi, Just use winSCP <http://winscp.net/> on your Windows...
It's an opensource project which provide file transfert over ssh tunnel. --- JG 2012/8/20 Joe <j...@jretrading.com> > 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 > >