How to exclude file when using scp command recursively

I

need to copy all the *.c files from local laptop named hostA to hostB including all directories. I am using the following scp command but do not know how to exclude specific files (such as *.out):

$ scp -r ~/projects/ user@hostB:/home/delta/projects/

How do I tell scp command to exclude particular file or directory at the Linux/Unix command line?

 

One can use scp command to securely copy files between hosts on a network. It uses ssh for data transfer and authentication purpose. Typical syntax is:

scp file1 user@host:/path/to/dest/

scp -r /path/to/source/ user@host:/path/to/dest/

Scp exclude files

I don’t think so you can filter or exclude files when using scp command. However, there is a great workaround to exclude files and copy it securely using ssh. This page explains how to filter or excludes files when using scp to copy a directory recursively.

How to use rsync command to exclude files

The syntax is:

rsync av -e ssh –exclude= *.out  /path/to/source/ user@hostB:/path/to/dest/

 

Where,

-a : Recurse into directories i.e. copy all files and subdirectories. Also, turn on archive mode and all other options (-rlptgoD)

-v : Verbose output

-e ssh : Use ssh for remote shell so everything gets encrypted

–exclude= *.out  : exclude files matching PATTERN e.g. *.out or *.c and so on.

Example of rsync command

In this example copy all file recursively from ~/virt/ directory but exclude all *.new files:

$ rsync -av -e ssh –exclude= *.new  ~/virt/ root@centos7:/tmp

 

Sample outputs:

rsync command in action

 

Rsync command will fail if rsync not found on the remote server. In that case try the following scp command that uses bash shell pattern matching in the current directory (it won’t work with the -r option):

$ ls

 

Sample outputs:

centos71.log  centos71.qcow2  centos71.qcow2.new  centos71.v2.qcow2.new meta-data  user-data

Copy everything in the current directory except .new file(s):

$ shopt -s extglob

$ scp !(.new)* root@centos7:/tmp/

 

Sample outputs:

centos71.log                                  100% 4262     1.3MB/s   00:00

centos71.qcow2                                100%  836MB  32.7MB/s   00:25

meta-data                                     100%   47    18.5KB/s   00:00

user-data                                     100% 1543   569.7KB/s   00:00

See the following man pages for more info:

$ man rsync

$ man bash

$ man scp

 

 

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