![]() ![]() To put file back, scp again switching the paths. ![]() Your server is on internet or in LAN, same subnet?Īnyways if you only need to edit a file, why don't you simply use scp to copy the file to your local machine? You can use ssh to browse for the file on the remote server and when you have its path, enter in your local machine (in another terminal): scp /local/path/to/save/file Is your local machine accessible from the server? Can you ping it? I'm asking that because what you are doing should work if your machine is accessible. I'm sure I must be missing something quite obvious here, but for the life of me I can't get a handle on it.Īny help, links or general nudging in the right direction would be greatly appreciated! So the above facts make me think that I am in the clear with regards to firewalls etc on the local and remote machines. If I try and SSH into another server (not my local machine) from my remote server, I can get connected up with no problems. If I try and SSH into my mac from another machine on out LAN I can connect no problems. I'm on a Mac(OS X 10.6.4) and I have Remote Login enabled in system preferences/sharing I am trying to discover where I should be calling by looking at the output of the $SSH_CLIENT variable, but I'm on a standard vanilla internet connection (no static ip address) I think this might be what is causing the problem. ![]() Hopefully that makes sense!Īt the moment if I SSH back to the local machine once I am logged in to the remote server, the terminal will just sit there whirring away, no errors even with -v. Basically I need to jump through these hoops to be able to browse the remote server and then send file information back to my local machine so it can be dealt with by an application on the local machine. Now the tricky bit, with the connection to the remote server established I want to then initiate a connection from the remote server BACK to the local machine. I want to establish a connection to a remote server from my Mac using SSH. I'm trying to do something rather unusual (for me anyway) with SSH and I can't get it to work, hopefully you can help. ![]()
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