Book Image

Windows Terminal Tips, Tricks, and Productivity Hacks

By : Will Fuqua
5 (1)
Book Image

Windows Terminal Tips, Tricks, and Productivity Hacks

5 (1)
By: Will Fuqua

Overview of this book

Windows Terminal is a new and open-source command-line application for Windows 10, built for the Command Prompt, PowerShell, Windows Subsystem for Linux, and more. It's fast, modern, and configurable thanks to its GPU-accelerated rendering, excellent UTF-8 support, and JSON-based configurability, and this book can help you learn how to leverage these features. You’ll start by learning the benefits of Windows Terminal and its open-source development, as well as how to use the built-in tabs, panes, and key bindings to build your own efficient terminal workflows. After you’ve mastered Windows Terminal, this book shows how to use and configure PowerShell Core and the Windows Subsystem for Linux within Windows Terminal. You’ll maximize your productivity using powerful tools such as PSReadLine for PowerShell and ZSH on Linux, and discover useful tips and tricks for common developer tools like Git and SSH. Finally, you’ll see how Windows Terminal can be used in common development and DevOps tasks, such as developing frontend JavaScript applications and backend REST APIs, and managing cloud-based systems like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. By the end of this book, you'll not only be well-versed with Windows Terminal, but also have learned how to effectively use shells like PowerShell Core and ZSH to become proficient at the command line.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introducing the New Windows Terminal
5
Section 2: Configuring your Windows Terminal and its shells
12
Section 3: Using your Windows Terminal for development

Copying files with SCP

While SSH allows us to send commands to a remote computer, SCP allows us to send files. This can be useful if we want to upload a file to a server as part of an application deploy, or even just to share that file with other people.

The command structure is scp source destination, where source and destination represent either local or remote files. A local file is represented by its file path, and a remote file is represented by username@server:/path/to/file.

For example, if we wanted to copy a file from our client computer to a server, we can run the following command:

scp my-file.txt william@my-server:/Users/william/Desktop/

The preceding command will send our file named my-file.txt to the server named my-server, after logging in with the username william. The destination path will be /Users/William/Desktop/my-file.txt.

If we wanted to copy a directory of files instead of a single file, we could use the -r command flag to recursively copy an...