Command Line Interface (CLI)
Cyberduck with a command-line interface (CLI) is available for Mac, Windows & Linux. It is installed as duck
.
Installation
Homebrew
Available as a Homebrew package. Use
brew install duck
to install.
MacPorts
Note
The port is maintained by a third party. Use
sudo port install duck
to install.
Snapshot Builds
brew install iterate-ch/cyberduck/duck
Package
Download the latest installer package.
Chocolatey
Available as a Chocolatey package. Use
choco install duck
to install.
MSI Installer
Download the latest setup.
Snapshot Builds
Not currently available.

RPM Package Repository
To add the duck
repository to your system you need to put a file duck.repo
with the following content into /etc/yum.repos.d/
.
Snapshot Builds
Copy and paste
echo -e "[duck-nightly]\n\
name=duck-nightly\n\
baseurl=https://repo.cyberduck.io/nightly/\$basearch/\n\
enabled=1\n\
gpgcheck=0" | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/duck-snapshot.repo > /dev/null
to add the configuration.
Stable Builds
echo -e "[duck-stable]\n\
name=duck-stable\n\
baseurl=https://repo.cyberduck.io/stable/\$basearch/\n\
enabled=1\n\
gpgcheck=0" | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/duck-stable.repo > /dev/null
To install Cyberduck CLI use
sudo yum install duck
DEB Package Repository
Add the duck
repositories to your /etc/apt/sources.list
manually:
deb https://s3.amazonaws.com/repo.deb.cyberduck.io nightly main
deb https://s3.amazonaws.com/repo.deb.cyberduck.io stable main
or using
echo -e "deb https://s3.amazonaws.com/repo.deb.cyberduck.io stable main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/cyberduck.list > /dev/null
You need to download the GPG public key from keyserver.ubuntu.com
to verify the integrity of the packages:
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys FE7097963FEFBE72
Synchronize the repository using
sudo apt-get update
To install or upgrade Cyberduck CLI use
sudo apt-get install duck
Note
You may get a conflict with another package named duck
. As a workaround, install with a specific version number like sudo apt-get install duck=6.7.1.28683
.
Arch Linux Package
Manual installation
Packages can also be found for download.
Usage
Usage:duck [options...]
Run --help
to get the option screen.
URLs in arguments must be fully qualified. Paths can either denote a remote file ftps://user@example.net/resource
or folder ftps://user@example.net/directory/
with a trailing slash. You can reference files relative to your home directory with /~ftps://user@example.net/~/
.
Connection Profiles
You can install additional connection profiles in the application support directory. Use the --profile
option to reference a connection profile file to use not installed in the standard location.
URI
The <url>
argument for --copy
, --download
, --upload
, and --synchronize
must satisfy following rules:
Each URL must start with a scheme and a colon (
https:
)(unless you specify a--profile
)Depending on the type of protocol you are referencing different rules apply
For all protocols where no default hostname is set (e.g.
WebDAV
,SFTP
, andFTPS
) you must use a fully qualified URIhttps://user@hostname/path
For all protocols where a default hostname is set, but you are allowed to change it (e.g. S3) you may use fully qualified URIs or Absolute paths:
s3:/bucket/path
, Relative paths:s3:user@path
ors3:user@/path
. Omitting the first slash in a relative path uses the default home directory for this protocol.For all protocols where a default hostname is set and you are not allowed to change it (e.g.
OneDrive
,Dropbox
,Google Drive
) you may use any combination of the above with the following rules: Fully Qualified URIs are parsed as relative paths.onedrive://Some/Folder/
is parsed asonedrive:Some/Folder
.
For all protocols where a default path is set and you are not allowed to change it (e.g. accessing a prebuilt
NextCloud
profile with a path set to/remote.php/webdav
). You are allowed to change the path but it will be appended to the default path. Making nextcloud:/path reallynextcloud:/remote.php/webdav/path
.
Spaces and other special-characters are not required to be percent-encoded (e.g. %20
for space) as long as the path is quoted duck --upload "scheme://hostname/path with/spaces" "/Path/To/Local/File With/Spaces"
).
Protocol |
Fully Qualified URI required |
Absolute Path |
Relative Path |
---|---|---|---|
Windows Azure Storage |
No |
|
|
Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage |
No |
|
|
WebDAV (HTTP) |
Yes ( |
||
WebDAV (HTTPS) |
Yes ( |
||
Dracoon (Email Address) |
Yes ( |
||
Dropbox |
No |
|
|
Local |
No |
|
|
FTP (File Transfer Protocol) |
Yes ( |
||
FTPS (Explicit Auth TSL) |
Yes ( |
||
Google Drive |
No |
|
|
Google Cloud Storage |
No |
|
|
Microsoft OneDrive |
No |
|
|
Amazon S3 |
|
|
|
SFTP (SSH File Transfer |
Yes ( |
||
Spectra S3 (HTTPS) |
Yes |
||
Rackspace Cloud Files (US) |
No |
|
|
Swift (OpenStack Object |
Yes ( |
Examples
List all buckets in S3 with
duck --username <Access Key ID> --list s3:/
List all objects in a S3 bucket with
duck --username <Access Key ID> --list s3:/<bucketname>/
Generic options
--retry
Retry requests with I/O failures once per default. Useful on connnection timeout or latency issues.
--verbose
Print protocol transcript for requests and responses. This includes the HTTP headers.
--nokeychain
Do not save passwords in login keychain (macOS), credentials manager (Windows), or plain text password file (Linux).
--quiet
Suppress progress messages.
--throttle
Throttle bandwidth to the number of bytes per second.
Credentials
You can pass username as part of the URI prepending to the hostname with username@host
. Alternatively use the --username
option. You can give the password with the --password
option or you will be prompted before the connection is opened by the program if no password matching the host is found in your login keychain (OS X) or user configuration shared with Cyberduck (Windows).
Private Key
When connecting with SFTP you can give a file path to a private key with --identity
for use with public key authentication.
Tenant Name
When connecting with OpenStack Swift
you can set the tenant name (OpenStack Identity Service, Keystone 2.0) or project (OpenStack Identity Service, Keystone 3.0) with --username <tenant>:<user>
.
Downloads with --download
Glob pattern support for selecting files to transfer
You can transfer multiple files with a single command using a glob pattern for filename inclusion such as duck --download ftps://<hostname>/directory/*.css
.
Uploads with --upload
Glob pattern support for selecting files to transfer
If your shell supports glob expansion you can use a wildcard pattern to select files for upload like duck --upload ftps://<hostname>/directory/ ~/*.jpg
.
Use of ~
You can use the tilde to abbreviate the remote path pointing to the remote home folder as in sftp://duck.sh/~/
. It will be expanded when constructing absolute paths.
Remote directory listing with --list
Make sure to include a trailing ‘/’ in the path argument to denote a directory. Use the -L
option to print permission mask and modification date in addition to the filename.
Edit with --edit
You can edit remote files with your preferred editor on your local system using the --edit
command. Use the optional --application
option to specify the absolute path to the external editor you want to use.
Purge files in CDN with --purge
Purge files in CloudFront or Akamai CDN for Amazon S3 or Rackspace CloudFiles connections. For example to invalidate all contents in a bucket run duck --username AKIAIWQ7UM47TA3ONE7Q --purge s3:/github-cyberduck-docs/
Multiple transfer connections with --parallel
Transfer files with multiple concurrent connections to a server.
Cryptomator
Access to your Cryptomator vaults from the command line. When accessing a vault using --download
, --list
or --upload
, you will be prompted to provide the passphrase for the vault if not found in the keychain.
Use --vault <path>
in conjunction with --upload
to unlock a vault. This allows uploading into a subdirectory of a vault where the auto-detect feature does otherwise not work.
Samples
Watching changes in directory with fswatch
and upload
fswatch
is a file change monitor; an application to watch for file system changes. Refer to their documentation.
fswatch -0 ~/Sites/mywebsite/ | xargs -0 -I {} -t sh -c 'f="{}"; duck --upload ftps://<hostname>/sandbox`basename "${f}"` "${f}" -existing overwrite'
Upload build artifacts from continuous integration (Jenkins) to CDN
use a post build script action.
cd ${WORKSPACE}; find build -name '*.tar' -print0 | xargs -0 -I {} -t sh -c 'f="{}"; duck --quiet --retry --existing skip --region DFW --upload rackspace://<container>/ "${f}"'
Upload files matching glob pattern to Windows Azure
duck --username kahy9boj3eix --upload azure://kahy9boj3eix.blob.core.windows.net/<containername>/ *.zip
Download files matching glob pattern from FTP
duck -v --download ftp://mirror.switch.ch/mirror/apache/dist/httpd/*.gz ~/Downloads
Download file from Amazon S3 public bucket
duck --verbose --download s3://repo.maven.cyberduck.io/releases/ch/cyberduck/s3/6.1.0/s3-6.1.0.jar ~/Downloads/
Application Support Directory
Profiles
The directory location is printed with --help
following the list of supported protocols.
The support directory is ~/Library/Group Containers/G69SCX94XU.duck/Library/Application Support/duck/
on Mac. You can install third party profiles in ~/Library/Group Containers/G69SCX94XU.duck/Library/Application Support/duck/Profiles
.
Install additional profiles in %AppData%\Cyberduck\Profiles
on Windows.
The support directory is ~/.duck/
on Linux. You can install third party profiles in ~/.duck/profiles/
.
Preferences
You can override default preferences by setting environment variables in your shell.
env "property.name=value" duck
You can override default preferences by setting environment variables in your shell.
set "property.name=value" & duck
You can override default preferences by setting environment variables in your shell.
env "property.name=value" duck
Known Issues
Slow execution due to low entropy in /dev/random
As a workaround run haveged
, a service to generate random numbers and feed Linux random device.