Am 2006-03-15 18:29:56, schrieb David Kirchner:
> On 3/15/06, Ted Gilchrist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > % scp -r html [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 1>>mylog 2>&1
> scp is automatically detecting that the standard output is not a tty,
> so it's not sending the progress bat. You can capture it in other w
Am 2006-03-15 16:39:56, schrieb Ted Gilchrist:
> I thought I could capture the progress status of scp to a file:
>
> % scp -r html [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 1>>mylog 2>&1
^^
> but the result is an empty file. Can someone tell me how to do this?
Try:scp -r htm
On 3/15/06, Ted Gilchrist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I thought I could capture the progress status of scp to a file:
>
> % scp -r html [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 1>>mylog 2>&1
>
> but the result is an empty file. Can someone tell me how to do this?
scp is automatically detecting that the standard outp
I thought I could capture the progress status of scp to a file:
% scp -r html [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 1>>mylog 2>&1
but the result is an empty file. Can someone tell me how to do this?
Thanks,
Ted Gilchrist
--
Botcast Network: http://www.botcastnetwork.com
Mike Dresser wrote:
On Mon, 3 Nov 2003, Rus Foster wrote:
Hi All,
Does anyone know of a nice way of being able to show a progress meter on
copying a large file from one part of the disk to another. I tried scp
localfile localfile2 but scp calls cp.
you can call it like this:
scp someFile hostn
On Mon, 3 Nov 2003, Rus Foster wrote:
> Hi All,
> Does anyone know of a nice way of being able to show a progress meter on
> copying a large file from one part of the disk to another. I tried scp
> localfile localfile2 but scp calls cp.
Ugly/weird/overkill way of doing it, but
rsync -P 3dmark200
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