David L Norris wrote: > SSH should work great but you'd need a real user account on her machine. > In Nautilus, don't use ssh:// as it won't prompt for a password and > you'll be left with cryptic error messages. I use Nautilus with SFTP to > transfer files to/from my laptop, web server, etc. D. D. Brierton wrote: > Ah, now that really is interesting. One of the things that I've been > confused about is whether sftp needs to connect to a machine that has an > ftp server running on it, or whether all that needs to be running on the > machine you're connecting to is sshd. <snip> > Excellent. I've used this method to connect to other machines before, > but the machines in question always had *both* an ftp server and an ssh > server running on them. I know sftp is part of ssh, but I've never been > clear on whether all it requires at the other end is an ssh server, an > ftp server, or both. Um. The term "sftp" is used for two separate technologies. You're using the sftp command. That is built in to OpenSSH (and to the commercial SSH, I believe), and uses SSH channels. The protocol is inherently different to normal FTP, so doesn't use an FTP daemon. You can try it: disable your ftp daemon, and sftp connect to localhost. You can also get SSL-encrypted FTP: normal FTP, that just happens to have SSL encryption. Some companies will refer to this as SFTP. James. -- E-mail address: james | "Land Rover say it is permanent, I say I have a @westexe.demon.co.uk | large selection of spanners and a big hammer..." | -- Derry Hamilton