Dear Steve, the most commonly used version is part of openssh, part of openbsd, and the Linux version maintained as "portable" version: https://www.openssh.com/portable.html primary SCM is at https://anongit.mindrot.org/openssh.git/ Best regards, Bernd Am Freitag, den 11.01.2019, 00:11 -0600 schrieb Steve French: > In discussing an interesting problem with scp recently with Pavel, we > found a fairly obvious bug in scp when it is run with a progress > indicator (which is the default when the source file is remote). > > scp triggers "SIGALRM" probably from update_progress_meter() in > progressmeter.c when executed with "scp localhost:somelargefile /mnt" > ie with an ssh source path but a local path for the target, as long > as > the flush of the large amount of cached data to disk (which seems to > be triggered by the ftruncate call in scp.c) takes more than a few > seconds (which can be common depending on disk or network speed). > > It is interesting that this can be avoided easily by running in quiet > mode ("-q") which disables the progress meter in scp, but it seems > very, very broken that scp of a large file can 'fail' when using a > progress meter (unless caching were disabled on the file system) due > to the slight delay in ftruncate due to triggering a flush of a large > amount of cached data to disk sequentially. > > Any thoughts of whether scp is actively maintained and best approach > to fix progressmeter.c so it doesn't break on Linux? >