How to copy files between computers on an ethernet switch?
Michael Sammartano
volinaz at cox.net
Wed May 23 17:29:37 MST 2007
I am thinking some of you missed the basics, but I may be wrong. He first and foremost must give the 2 computers ip addresses. After that he can just share a folder. If I am reading this correctly, there is no reason to make it a "secure" transfer as there are no other computers on the switch that wouls be accessing the 2 computers in question.
---- Jeremy Miller <jmminaz at gmail.com> wrote:
=============
Yet another way to do that is sftp. It acts just like an ftp server
and is set up and runs automaticaly if you have ssh running. Assuming
you are Linux to Linux the command to initiate it is
username at ip-adress and then you get an ftp console. If one of the
computers is an M$ or mac or you just don't like command line you can
use Filezilla as a client by the Mozilla project. If neither of the
computers is a Linux box I would recomend trying to find a windows
user group ; ) Hope you can get something working.
On 5/23/07, Darrin Chandler <dwchandler at stilyagin.com> wrote:
> On Wed, May 23, 2007 at 11:10:10AM -0600, Josef Lowder wrote:
> > .
> > Is there an efficient way to copy files between two computers
> > on the same ethernet switch? I would like to know what is the
> > most efficient way to copy files from one computers to another,
> > especially if there is a good way to do this when two computers
> > are on the same ethernet switch.
> >
> > I have been copying files to a flash stick and then physically
> > moving the flash stick from one computer to another.
> >
> > And, I have ftp uploaded (copied) some files from one of my
> > computers to my web space, and then downloaded the same files
> > to another computer.
> >
> > But it seems like there must be some more efficient way to
> > just send (ftp?) files from one computer to another on my
> > locate ethernet network.
> >
> > Or, could I connect two computers together via their usb ports
> > and transfer files that way?
>
> Yes, these computers are networked and you can transfer files directly
> between them. There are a variety of methods you can use. Just loads of
> methods...
>
> Perhaps the easiest to get going from scratch would be to use scp, as
> long as you have sshd running on one or both computers. Something like
> "scp *.jpg 192.168.1.12:" would do the trick.
>
> Alternatively, you can set up an ftp server on one computer, and access
> it just like any other ftp server.
>
> Also, you can set up samba to provide shares, like on windows...
>
> --
> Darrin Chandler | Phoenix BSD User Group | MetaBUG
> dwchandler at stilyagin.com | http://phxbug.org/ | http://metabug.org/
> http://www.stilyagin.com/ | Daemons in the Desert | Global BUG Federation
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