Sds-hd SFTP: Difference between revisions
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*[http://www.sftpnetdrive.com/ SFTPNetDrive] (for Windows) |
*[http://www.sftpnetdrive.com/ SFTPNetDrive] (for Windows) |
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*[http://www.netdrive.net/ NetDrive] (for Windows) |
*[http://www.netdrive.net/ NetDrive] (for Windows) |
||
*[http://www.expandrive.com/expandrive ExpanDrive] (for Windows and |
*[http://www.expandrive.com/expandrive ExpanDrive] (for Windows, Mac and Linux) |
||
*[https://mountainduck.io/ MountainDuck] (for Windows and Mac) |
*[https://mountainduck.io/ MountainDuck] (for Windows and Mac) |
||
<hr> |
<hr> |
Revision as of 09:04, 21 April 2020
It is possible to access the SDS@hd service from Windows, Mac and Linux using the sshfs/sftp protocol.
This enables easy access to SDS@hd without additional registration of your own computer. This way can also be useful if you are in a network in which e.g. SMB and NFS are not available, e.g. due to firewall restrictions.
Attention: In principle, however, the connection is not suitable for permanent connections, since (due to technical reasons) it is not highly available.
Prerequisites
Attention: To access data served by SDS@hd via CIFS, You need a Service Password. See details Sds-hd_user_access.
Additionally the access to SDS@hd is currently only available inside the belwue-Network.
This means you have to use the VPN Service of your HomeOrganization, if you want to access SDS@hd from outside the bwHPC-Clusters (e.g. via edoroam or from your personal Laptop)
Using SFTP from Linux client
direct/interactive Access:
You can directly use sftp to "login" to SDS@hd. This will give you an interactive sftp-shell.
Example:
> sftp hd_xy123@lsdf02-sshfs.urz.uni-heidelberg.de Connected to lsdf02-sshfs.urz.uni-heidelberg.de. sftp> ls sd16j007 sd17c010 sd17d005 sftp> sftp> help ... sftp> put myfile sftp> get myfile
mounting network drive over SFTP:
In most linux distributions you could install a package for fuse mounting a network drive. This allows you to work with SDS@hd comparable to a local folder.
Example (debian/ubuntu):
- install sshfs package
> apt-get install sshfs
- create a local mountpoint
> mkdir ~/sds-hd
- mounting SDS@hd on command line
> sshfs -o reconnect hd_xy123@lsdf02-sshfs.urz.uni-heidelberg.de: ~/sds-hd
- accessing SDS@hd
> ls ~/sds-hd sd16j007 sd17c010 sd17d005 > touch ~/sds-hd/sd16j007/testfile
Example (CentOS/RedHat):
yum install fuse-sshfs > mkdir ~/sds-hd > sshfs -o reconnect hd_xy123@lsdf02-sshfs.urz.uni-heidelberg.de: ~/sds-hd > ls ~/sds-hd sd16j007 sd17c010 sd17d005 > touch ~/sds-hd/sd16j007/testfile
You can close/unmount the network drive with the command:
fusermount -u ~/sds-hd
You can of course also use /etc/fstab for mounting SDS@hd with the following entry:
sshfs#hd_xy123@lsdf02-sshfs.urz.uni-heidelberg.de: <your_local_mountpoint> fuse defaults,user,noauto,exec,reconnect 0 0
Using SFTP from Windows and Mac client
Windows clients do not have a SCP/SFTP client installed by default, so it needs to be installed before this protocol can be used.
Tools for example:
- OpenSSH
- Putty suite (for Windows and Unix)
- WinSCP (for Windows)
- FileZilla (for Windows, Mac and Linux)
- MobaXterm (for Windows)
network drive over SFTP:
- WebDrive (for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android)
- SFTPNetDrive (for Windows)
- NetDrive (for Windows)
- ExpanDrive (for Windows, Mac and Linux)
- MountainDuck (for Windows and Mac)