rcp(1)
NAME
rcp − remote file copy
SYNOPSIS
Copy Single File
rcp [-p] source_file1 dest_file
Copy Multiple Files
rcp [-p] source_file1 [source_file2]... dest_dir
Copy One or More Directory Subtrees
rcp [-p] -r source_dir1 [source_dir2]... dest_dir
Copy Files and Directory Subtrees
rcp [-p] -r file_or_dir1 [file_or_dir2]... dest_dir
DESCRIPTION
The rcp command copies files, directory subtrees, or a combination of files and directory subtrees from one or more systems to another. In many respects, it is similar to the cp command (see cp(1)).
To use rcp, you must have read access to files being copied, and read and search (execute) permission on all directories in the directory path.
Options and Arguments
rcp recognizes the following options and arguments:
source_file
source_dir The name of an existing file or directory on a local or remote machine that you want copied to the specified destination. Source file and directory names are constructed as follows:
user_name@hostname:pathname/filename
or
user_name@hostname:pathname/dirname
Component parts of file and directory names are described below. If multiple existing files and/or directory subtrees are specified (source_file1, source_file2, ..., etc.), the destination must be a directory. Shell file name expansion is allowed on both local and remote systems. Multiple files and directory subtrees can be copied from one or more systems to a single destination directory with a single command.
dest_file The name of the destination file. If host name and path name are not specified, the existing file is copied into a file named dest_file in the current directory on the local system. If dest_file already exists and is writable, the existing file is overwritten. Destination file names are constructed the same way as source files except that file name expansion characters cannot be used.
dest_dir The name of the destination directory. If host name and path name are not specified, the existing file is copied into a directory named dest_dir in the current directory on the local system. If dest_dir already exists in the specified directory path (or current directory if not specified), a new directory named dest_dir is created underneath the existing directory named dest_dir. Destination directory names are constructed the same way as source directory tree names except that file name expansion characters cannot be used.
file_or_dir If a combination of files and directories are specified for copying (either explicitly or by file name expansion), only files are copied unless the -r option is specified. If the -r option is present, all files and directory subtrees whose names match the specified file_or_dir name are copied.
-p Preserve (duplicate) modification times and modes (permissions) of source files, ignoring the current setting of the umask file creation mode mask. If this option is specified, rcp preserves the sticky bit only if the target user is superuser.
If the -p option is not specified, rcp preserves the mode and owner of dest_file if it already exists; otherwise rcp uses the mode of the source file modified by the umask on the destination host. Modification and access times of the destination file are set to the time when the copy was made.
-r Recursively copy directory subtrees rooted at the source directory name. If any directory subtrees are to be copied, rcp recursively copies each subtree rooted at the specified source directory name to directory dest_dir. If source_dir is being copied to an existing directory of the same name, rcp creates a new directory source_dir within dest_dir and copies the subtree rooted at source_dir to dest_dir/source_dir. If dest_dir does not exist, rcp creates it and copies the subtree rooted at source_dir to dest_dir.
Constructing File and Directory Names
As indicated above, file and directory names contain one, two, or four component parts:
user_name Login name to be used for accessing directories and files on remote system.
hostname Hostname of remote system where directories and files are located.
pathname Absolute directory path name or directory path name relative to the login directory of user user_name.
filename Actual name of source or destination file. File name expansion is allowed on source file names.
dirname Actual name of source or destination directory subtree. File name expansion is allowed on source directory names.
Each file or directory argument is either a remote file name of the form hostname:path, or a local file name (with a slash (/) before any colon (:)). hostname can be either an official host name or an alias (see hosts(4)). If hostname is of the form ruser@rhost, ruser is used on the remote host instead of the current user name. An unspecified path (that is, hostname:) refers to the remote user’s login directory. If path does not begin with /, it is interpreted relative to the remote user’s login directory on hostname. Shell metacharacters in remote paths can be quoted with backslash (\), single quotes (”), or double quotes ( "" ), so that they will be interpreted remotely.
The rcp routine does not prompt for passwords. The current local user name or any user name specified via ruser must exist on rhost and allow remote command execution via remsh(1) and rcmd(3). remshd(1M) must be executable on the remote host.
Third-party transfers in the form:
rcp ruser1@rhost1:path1 ruser2@rhost2:path2
are performed as:
remsh rhost1 -l ruser1 rcp path1 ruser2@rhost2:path2
Therefore, for a such a transfer to succeed, ruser2 on rhost2 must allow access by ruser1 from rhost1 (see hosts.equiv(4)).
WARNINGS
The rcp routine is confused by any output generated by commands in a .cshrc file on the remote host (see csh(1)).
Copying a file onto itself, for example:
rcp path ‘hostname‘:path
may produce inconsistent results. The current HP-UX version of rcp simply copies the file over itself. However, some implementations of rcp, including some earlier HP-UX implementations, corrupt the file. In addition, the same file may be referred to in multiple ways, for example, via hard links, symbolic links, or NFS. It is not guaranteed that rcp will correctly copy a file over itself in all cases.
Implementations of rcp based on the 4.2BSD version (including the implementations of rcp prior to HP-UX 7.0) require that remote users be specified as rhost.ruser. If the first remote host specified in a third party transfer (rhost1 in the example below) uses this older syntax, the command must have the form:
rcp ruser1@rhost1:path1 rhost2.ruser2:path2
since the target is interpreted by rhost1. A common problem that is encountered is when two remote files are to be copied to a remote target that specifies a remote user. If the two remote source systems, rhost1 and rhost2, each expect a different form for the remote target, the command:
rcp rhost1:path1 rhost2:path2 rhost3.ruser3:path3
will certainly fail on one of the source systems. Perform such a transfer using two separate commands.
AUTHOR
rcp was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.
SEE ALSO
cp(1), ftp(1), remsh(1), remshd(1M), rcmd(3), hosts(4), hosts.equiv(4).
ftp chapter in Using Internet Services.
Hewlett-Packard Company — HP-UX Release 10.20: July 1996