WinSCP offers scripting interface that you can use to automate many operation that it supports, including file transfers.
To automate operation, you need to find out commands necessary to implement it. For simple operations you need at least to:
option batch on and option confirm off.open command (alternatively specify session on command line).put command. For downloads use get command. For other operations, see supported commands.exit command.Assemble the commands into script file. You can name the script file as you like. See simple example and some useful scripts.
Use /script command line option to pass the script to WinSCP. You can embed whole command line into Windows batch file (.bat), such as:
@echo off winscp /console /script=myscript.txt
Now to make using script easier/automatic you can:
.bat) or enter full command line to shortcut itself.When connecting to SSH host, you will need to accept its host key.
You may want to modify the script automatically. For example you may want to operate it with different file each time.
For simple modifications, you can use environment variables from the script:
option batch on option confirm off open session put %FILE_TO_UPLOAD% exit
Alternatively, you can generate new script file each time. To automate that, make a wrapper script file. For simple tasks you can use built-in Windows scripting functionality from batch file (.bat). For complex tasks, you will need to use some scripting language, such as PHP or Perl.
Following example shows batch file that takes filename on command line and generates WinSCP script file to upload that file to remote server:
rem Generate temporary script to upload %1 echo option batch on > script.tmp echo option confirm off >> script.tmp echo open session >> script.tmp echo put %1 >> script.tmp echo exit >> script.tmp rem Execute script winscp /script=script.tmp rem Delete temporary script del script.tmp
Now you can run the batch file like (supposing you have saved it to file upload.bat):
upload.bat c:\myfile.txt
You can also put the script on your desktop and than easily use it by dropping files on its icon. Windows automatically run the script and passes path to dropped file as command-line parameter.
To check results of the script your can:
/log.> filename at the end of commandline executing WinSCP). Note that you can redirect output of WinSCP.com only (see documentation).Once you find out what was the result of the script, you can perform any action you like. E.g. after evaluating exit code of WinSCP, you can send a “success” or “error” email. For that use any command-line email client you like, e.g. sendmail:
winscp.com /script=example.txt if errorlevel 1 goto error echo Success sendmail.exe -t < success_mail.txt goto end :error echo Error! sendmail.exe -t < error_mail.txt :end
Where for example content of success_mail.txt may be:
From: script@example.com To: me@example.com Subject: Success The files were uploaded successfully.