I would like to copy an entire directory structure with files and subfolders recursively using SFTP from a Linux server to a local machine (both Windows and Linux)using Python 2.7.
I am able to ping the server and download the files using WinSCP from the same machine.
I tried the following code, works fine on Linux but not on Windows.
I tried \
, /
, os.join
, all gives me same error, checked permissions as well.
import os
import pysftp
cnopts = pysftp.CnOpts()
cnopts.hostkeys = None # disable host key checking.
sftp=pysftp.Connection('xxxx.xxx.com', username='xxx',password='xxx',cnopts=cnopts)
sftp.get_r('/abc/def/ghi/klm/mno', 'C:\pqr',preserve_mtime=False)
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\pysftp_init_.py", line 311, in get_r preserve_mtime=preserve_mtime)
File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\pysftp_init_.py", line 249, in get self._sftp.get(remotepath, localpath, callback=callback)
File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\paramiko\sftp_client.py", line 769, in get with open(localpath, 'wb') as fl: IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: u'C:\\pqr\\./abc/def/ghi/klm/mno/.nfs0000000615c569f500000004'
Indeed, pysftp
get_r
does not work on Windows. It usesos.sep
andos.path
functions for remote SFTP paths, what is wrong, as SFTP paths always use a forward slash.But you can easily implement a portable replacement:
Use it like:
Side note: Do not "disable host key checking". You are losing a protection against MITM attacks.
For a correct solution, see Verify host key with pysftp.