Well, worry no more as I will show you how you can do a tar on the fly while ssh'ing, to overcome that limitation.
Method 1:
ssh foo@machine-to-keep-the-data "tar czpf - /data/to/be/transferred" | tar xzpf - -C /the/data/new/place
What this command will do is to create a tar file (tar czpf), and untar it at the other side of the ssh (tar xvpf) command, where c is for create tar, z is to use gzip, p is for preserving permission, f is for file which is to be zipped, - is for stdin or stdout and x is for extractMethod 2:
tar cpf - /data/to/be/transferred | ssh foo@machine-to-keep-the-data tar xpf - -C /the/data/new/place"
This command will tar the file, and untar it at the other end, same as above, but just different command arrangementMethod 3 (this is useful if you want to tar it. and keep it that way on the other end, without untarring it):
tar czf - -C /data/to/be/transferred | ssh foo@machine-to-keep-the-data "cat - > /the/data/new/place/backup.tar.gz"
Method 4 (add pv to the middle of the pipes to monitor the transfer speed):
sudo apt-get install pv; ssh foo@machine-to-keep-the-data "tar czpf - /data/to/be/transferred" | pv | tar xzpf - -C /the/data/new/place
That's all, hope you will find these useful.
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