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SSHaring
=============

or

the sharing machine as a garden
==========================

Upload (a) file(s) that you brought  with you to the server in your home folder. 
You can just use the drag and drop solution from the web browser

Copy them to the web folder (/var/www/) to appear from the address: http://10.9.8.7/ .

A fundamental thing about file sharing, is also the care that goes with preparing the material.
Naming the file, putting in the right folder or creating the folder if it's missing; they are not trivial things.

To add a folder or move files around, you need to connect via ssh to the server:

Generating an ssh key
------------------------
```bash
ssh-keygen
ssh-copy-id
```

* sshkey: private + public parts
* ssh-copy-id: copies your public key to the server (adds to file ~/.ssh/authorized_keys)

Getting around (File commands)
------------------
|||
|---|-----|
|pwd|print working directory: Show the current folder you are *working* with|
|ls|list: show the current files in the *working directory*|
|mkdir images|make directory: make the directory called images (in the working directory)|
|cd|change directory: move to another directory\
when used by itself it jumps to your home folder|
|cd images|Attempts to enter a directory named *images* in the working directory, \
this is a relative path (as it does *not* start with a slash)\
it is considered relative to the working directory|
|cd /var/www|Change working directory to /var/www \
this is an *absolute path* (starts with a slash) |
|touch *somefile*|Pretend you just edited and saved this file, \
creating a new file if necessary|
|cat *somefile*|Dump the contents of a file to the screen to read|
|less *somefile*|A pager: shows the contents of a file with the ability to scroll\
(using the arrow keys), press *q* to quit|

SSH  can be used like ftp to move files to and from a server. It's more  secure than ftp though as your password and the contents of the files  transmitted are encrypted.

Terminal
-----------

### scp

With  the terminal, try commands like the following (where *myfile* matches  the name of a file on your machine, and *username* and *server* are your  username and the address of the local server).

```bash
scp myfile username@server:
```

Copies  myfile to your home folder on the server. NB: The colon at the end is  essential as this makes the address a file location. If you forget the  ":", the scp program will copy the file to another file named  "username@server" -- not at all what you wanted!

```bash
scp -r folder username@server:images
```

Copies a folder (recursively --- meaning contents included) to a folder named "images" in you home folder on the server.

```bash
scp -r folder username@server:/var/www
```

Copies a folder (recursively --- meaning contents included) to an absolute path on the server (the root of the webserver).


GUI!
-------------
Generally,  anytime you have ssh access to a server, this means that you can use  *sftp* (secure file transfer protocol) to send and receive files from  that same server. *sftp* is built on top of the ssh protocol. There are  different graphical programs that give convenient access to working with  files on a remote server.

### Linux/Gnome
Gnome supports a "Connect to server" feature that directly allows sftp connections:

        sftp://username@server

### Cyberduck
On  Mac OSX and Windows, cyberduck is free software that provides a  graphical interface to drag and drop files to and from a remote server. 

* Permissions!
* chmod, chgrp
* ssh
* scp, sftp
* graphics tools: cyberduck, transmission
* ssh tunneling

sshfs
---------
Another option is to use *sshfs* to mount the server like it was a local hard drive or USB stick. In Debian you can:

        sudo apt-get install sshfs

and then:

        mkdir mnt
        sshfs user@serveranme: mnt

Will  connect your home folder with the local (initially empty) folder named  mnt. The great thing about *sshfs* is that it allows you to use any  software (commandline or graphical) with files on the server as if they  were on your local computer.

sharing machine as a library: bibliotecha
-------------------------------------------------------



Links
--------

* http://embraceubuntu.com/2006/12/08/ssh-tunnel-socks-proxy-forwarding-secure-browsing/
* [The black magic of ssh]( https://vimeo.com/54505525)
* http://blog.trackets.com/2014/05/17/ssh-tunnel-local-and-remote-port-forwarding-explained-with-examples.html