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- f1r1cf TOPIC:r0 c7FTP
- r1cfDESCRIPTION:r0 c7File Transfer Protocol (FTP) menuing system
- c2
- THIS IS A LARGE FILE AND IS ADVISED YOU BUFFER THE INFORMATION
-
- The FTP menu system allows you to easily pick sites to FTP to. The menu
- system allows you to move from one directory to another and page from one
- to the next. It even allows you to pick from sites listed in your personal
- notebook database file (see document file labeled "NOTE").
- c6
- Commands listed on the FTP menu are:
-
- c5# c1Number of the menu item
- ccThis option allows you to pick from the available listing
- show to you on your screen. The listing can either be a
- subdirectory (ie MENU) or a site description. Entering the
- number of the site list will send you directly to the FTP
- client and attempt a connection to the site.
-
- c5P c1Move to previous page
- ccThis option only appears if there is a previous page of
- available to display.
-
- c5N c1Move to next page
- ccThis option only appears if there is another page ahead of
- the current page on the display.
-
- c5M c1Call up notebook entries
- ccThis option only appears if there are notebook entries in
- your notebook database file for FTP (See help file on NOTEBOOK).
- Choosing this option (if available) will pull up your entries
- from your FTP database and allow you to choose from the selected
- list.
-
- c5Q c1Quit and return to INetShell main menu
- ccThis option will return you to the INetShell main menu.
-
- c6
- NcFTP Client Commands:
- c7
-
- SYNOPSIS
- ncftp [program options] [[open options] hostname[:pathname]]
-
- DESCRIPTION
- NcFTP is a user interface to the Internet standard File
- Transfer Protocol. This program allows a user to transfer
- files to and from a remote network site, and offers addi-
- tional features that are not found in the standard inter-
- face, ftp.
-
- FEATURES
- Program options will be explained later in this document.
- Let's get down to business and go over the features that
- make this program worthwhile.
-
- Here is the list of section headers; I have my $MANPAGER
- environment variable set to use ``less -i'' so that I can
- skip to the section I want (otherwise, /regex commands to
- the pager won't match the section headers because of the
- formatting codes; the ``-i'' can search through the format-
- ting codes)
-
- Establishing the remote connection
- Format of the RC file
- The Recent-sites file
- Redialing a busy remote site
- Supplying a sitename from your shell's command line
- Using Colon-mode
- Using FTP-cat and FTP-more mode
- Supplying a port number with the open command
- Displaying and changing program variables
- Program variables
- Listing a remote directory
- Viewing a remote directory with your pager
- Redisplaying the last directory listing
- Fetching files from the remote host
- Viewing a remote file with your pager
- Creating a message file on the remote host
- Looking up site names and addresses
- Checking the configuration of the program
- Using the command shell
- Customizing the prompt
- Keeping a log of your file transfers
- Program options
- A sample RC file
-
- Establishing the remote connection
- Just opening a connection to a remote server was incon-
- venient enough in the stock ftp program to justify writing
- this program. Here at NCEMRSoft, we want to do our business
- as quickly and painlessly as possible. We'd rather save
- time and wear and tear on our metacarpals than bother typing
- entire site names, usernames, and email addresses masquerad-
- ing as passwords, and setting binary mode.
-
- We made all connections anonymous by default, and we
- automatically send our email address for the password on
- those connections. We allowed for site names to be abbrevi-
- ated.
-
- For each commonly accessed site, you can put an entry in
- your program preferences file (let's call it the ``ncftprc
- file'' or ``RC file'' for short). To open the site, from
- the command shell all you do is type:
-
- open wuarchive.wustl.edu
-
- or
-
- o wuarchive.wustl.edu
-
- As promised, you can abbreviate that further. Just use any
- abbreviation that would match only the site you had in mind.
- For the previous example, you could try:
-
- o wuarc
- o wustl
- o stl
- o wu
-
- Any of those abbreviations would open wuarchive.wustl.edu
- anonymously, sending your anon-password (usually set to your
- email address) as the password. Keep in mind that the pro-
- gram tries opening the first site that matches the abbrevia-
- tion you supplied. So:
-
- o w
-
- might match a site named bowser.nintendo.jp if that site
- appeared before your entry for wuarchive.wustl.edu.
-
- Most of the time we open remote sites anonymously, but there
- are times where you need to specifically open a site with an
- actual username and password. Let's say my partner, Phil
- Dietz, wants to FTP something out of my account. Perhaps he
- wants to fetch the latest version of the source code to
- NcFTP so he can optimize something or add a new feature
- behind my back. Since the program opens remote sites
- anonymously by default (actually, you can change this
- behavior; more on that later), he would have to specify a
- flag to the open command so he can supply my username and
- password. He would try:
-
- o -u sphygmomanometer.unl.edu
-
- or, more likely:
-
- o -u sph
-
- Then the program would prompt him for a username (login,
- whatever) and a password:
-
- Login Name (pdietz): mgleason
- Password: ********
-
- If he got it right, he could raid my stuff. If not, he'd
- probably drop me an email asking me to quit changing my
- password so often.
-
- There are even times where you want to FTP from your own
- account, like if you are debugging an FTP client you wrote.
- At this prompt:
-
- Login Name (mgleason):
-
- I could just hit return to tell the program that I want
- ``mgleason'' as my username, then I would enter my password.
-
- Format of the RC file
- This release of the program is somewhat compatible with the
- stock _^f_^t_^p program's .netrc file. However, I can promise you
- that in the near future the program will use a new format,
- so don't invest too much time in it.
-
- The RC file can be named ``ncftprc'', ``netrc'', or
- ``.ncftprc'', but it is usually named ``.netrc'' so it can
- be used with the stock _^f_^t_^p program. NcFTP looks in the
- current working directory for any of those files, and then
- in your home directory, and after that it gives up (which is
- OK, because RC files aren't mandatory).
-
- The file usually starts with #set and #unset commands that
- do things to the programs variables. The reason for the
- ``#'' is so the stock ftp program will think they are com-
- ments. You might have this appearing as the first few lines
- in your RC file (I'll explain later):
-
- #set debug 1
- #set pager "less -EMi"
- #unset startup-msg
-
- After those, you put in machine entries for each of your
- favorite sites. Let's put in an entry for
- wuarchive.wustl.edu. First you would put:
-
- machine wuarchive.wustl.edu
-
- Then you could put in your username, password, and account
- if you like:
-
- user anonymous
- password -mgleason@cse.unl.edu
- account wuarc.does.not.use.accounts
-
- Following that, you would add the startup macro that is run
- each time you connect to wuarchive. You must start it with
- this line:
-
- macdef init
-
- Then put in the commands you want to do:
-
- cd /graphics/gif
- ls -lt
-
- After that, you end the macro with a blank line (impor-
- tant!). The finished machine entry would look like the fol-
- lowing. To make the transition to the impending new format
- less painful, I recommend you adhere to this format:
-
- machine wuarchive.wustl.edu
- user anonymous
- password -mgleason@cse.unl.edu
- account wuarc.does.not.use.accounts
- macdef init
- cd /graphics/gif
- ls -lt
- (mandatory blank line to end the macro)
-
- Of course, if all you want to do is open wuarchive
- anonymously, you needn't bother with the ``user'', ``pass-
- word'', and ``account'' lines. You may want to put them in
- if you plan on using the stock ftp program, though. Try
- something like this:
-
- machine wuarchive.wustl.edu
- macdef init
- cd /graphics/gif
- ls -lt
- (mandatory blank line to end the macro)
-
- You can tell the program to not run the startup macro if you
- supply -i to the open command.
-
- Really, you should only bother adding entries for sites that
- you want to run startup macros upon connection. The next
- section explains why.
-
- The Recent-sites file
- Each time you open a site, the program saves the name of the
- site and the last directory you were in to the recent-sites
- file which is named .ncrecent and placed in your home direc-
- tory. The program saves a predetermined number of these
- sites in the file, and when it reaches the limit, it dis-
- cards the oldest entry so it can add a new one.
-
- You can just go ahead and use the name of the site you want
- with the open command if you know it is in the recent-file
- (and you can abbreviate the name, just like those in the RC
- file). But if you cannot remember what the name of the site
- you want, all you do is run the open command with no site
- parameter:
-
- open
-
- This will pop up a list of the sites in the recent-file, and
- sites in your RC file. At the open prompt, just type the
- name (or an abbreviation of that name) or the number preced-
- ing the site name to open that site. After opening the site
- you wanted, the program sets the remote working directory to
- the same one you left in the last time you called.
-
- If you don't like the idea of having the sites you called
- stored on disk, you can turn this feature off using an unset
- command, explained later.
-
- Redialing a busy remote site
- Some remote sites limit the number of leeches, er, anonymous
- connections at a time to reduce the load on the host com-
- puter. You can use the open command's redial feature to
- keep attempting connections until you get on, although that
- is not a very polite thing to do. The simplest way to do
- this would be to just supply the -r option:
-
- open -r wuarc
-
- There are also options you can use to tweak redial. The -d
- flag sets the delay between dials, and the -g flag sets a
- limit on how many dials should be attempting before giving
- up. If you don't supply -g the program will dial a day and
- forever (which my Number Theory professor, Dr. Mientka, says
- is longer than forever and a day) until it connects success-
- fully, or until you get sick of waiting and hit the inter-
- rupt key (usually ^C).
-
-
- This example dials wuarchive every ten minutes, giving up
- after twenty attempts. Note that the redial delay is speci-
- fied in seconds:
-
- open -r -d 600 -g 20 wuarc
-
- Please be considerate when you use redialing, so you won't
- tax the network. Site administrators can and do get angry
- when they get flooded with connections.
-
- Supplying a sitename from your shell's command line
- When you run the program:
-
- ncftp
-
- by itself does nothing and waits for you to type commands to
- the program's own shell. Just like the stock ftp program,
- you can supply a site name on the command line:
-
- ncftp wuarchive.wustl.edu
-
- You can also use abbreviations as usual:
-
- ncftp wuarc
-
- This is equivalent to running the program, then issuing an
- open command to open wuarchive.
-
- Using Colon-mode
- The open command is not a one-trick pony. Another option is
- what I call colon-mode. This feature is used (most of the
- time) from your shell's command line.
-
- In ancient times, way back during the Disco era, you could
- use a program called tftp to fetch a file using the Internet
- standard Trivial File Transfer Protocol. You could use that
- program to do something like this from within its shell:
-
- get wuarchive.wustl.edu:/graphics/gif/README
-
- and that would call wuarchive and fetch the README file.
-
- You can use this program to do the same thing from your
- shell's command line:
-
- csh> ncftp wuarchive.wustl.edu:/graphics/gif/README
- csh> head README
-
- This tells your shell, in this case the ``c-shell'' to run
- NcFTP, which would open wuarchive, fetch
- /graphics/gif/README and write the file ./README in the
- current working directory, and then exits. This is nice if
- you don't want to browse around the remote site, and you
- know exactly want you want. It would also come in handy in
- shell scripts, where you don't want to enter the command
- shell, and might not want the program to spew output.
-
- You can use colon-mode to set the starting remote working
- directory also:
-
- csh> ncftp wuarchive.wustl.edu:/graphics/gif
-
- This would run the program, open wuarchive, and cd to the
- gif directory, then run the program's command shell so you
- can browse.
-
- Colon-mode is also available from within the program's com-
- mand shell. At a prompt you can do stuff like this:
-
- ncftp> open wuarchive.wustl.edu:/graphics/gif/README
- ncftp> o wuarc:/graphics/gif
-
- Using FTP-cat and FTP-more mode
- There are times where you might not want the program to
- write a colon-mode file in the current working directory, or
- perhaps you want to pipe the output of a remote file into
- something else. Colon-mode has options to do this. It was
- inspired by the guy who wrote the ftpcat perl script. The
- -c option tells the program to write on the standard output
- stream. The -m option pipes the file into your pager (like
- more) Of course this won't work if the thing you give
- colon-mode is a directory! This example just dumps a remote
- file to stdout:
-
- csh> ncftp -c wuarc:/graphics/gif/README
- ...
- csh>
-
- This example redirects a remote file into a different loca-
- tion:
-
- csh> ncftp -c wu:/README > ~pdietz/thesis.tex
-
- This one shows how to use a pipeline:
-
- csh> ncftp -c wuarc:/README | tail | wc -l
- 10
- csh>
-
- This shows how to page a remote file:
-
- csh> ncftp -m wuarc:/graphics/gif/README
- ...
- csh>
-
-
- Supplying a port number with the open command
- This option just didn't fit anywhere else, so to finish out
- the open command, -p lets you supply a port number if you
- have to ftp to a site using an nonstandard port number.
- Personally, I have yet to use feature, but its there for
- compatibility with the stock ftp program.
-
- Displaying and changing program variables
- Now I'll explain the commands unique to NcFTP. The others
- should perform the same as they would in the stock ftp pro-
- gram; consult the man page for it if you want those
- explained, or use the help command for a brief blurb.
-
- The show command is used to display program variables and
- their values.
-
- show all
-
- or
-
- show
-
- would display all the variables with their values.
-
- show var1 var2 ... varN
-
- would display each specified variable and its value.
-
- The set command changes the value of a program variable.
- Its syntax is:
-
- set varname value
-
- For Boolean or Integer variables,
-
- set varname
-
- would set the value of the variable varname to 1 (true).
-
- The unset command can be used to set the variable to its
- default value, or for Boolean and Integer variables, set the
- value of the variable to 0 (false). For String variables,
- you can use this to set the value to an empty string.
-
- You can use any of those three commands in both the command
- shell, or in the RC file with a ``#'' prepended.
-
- Program variables
- Each variable can be one of the following types:
-
- Boolean:
- Can be ``on'' or ``off'' (you can also use ``1'' or
- ''0''.
-
- Integer:
- Can be any positive or negative number, or 0.
-
- String:
- Is a string of characters. If the string needs to have
- a space in it, make sure you surround the whole string
- with double quotes in a set command.
-
- Variables follow. Some variables are explained later in the
- relevant sections.
-
- anon-open (Boolean)
- Tells whether the default login mode is anonymous if
- on, or if off, will prompt for a username/password.
- You can always override this by using either -a or -u
- with the open command.
-
- anon-password (String)
- Sends this as the password when you login anonymously.
- By default this is your email address.
-
- ansi-escapes (Boolean)
- If on, the program can use boldface, underline, and
- inverse text.
-
- auto-binary (Boolean)
- If on, sets the transfer type to binary mode immedi-
- ately after connection.
-
- debug (Integer)
- Sets the debugging level.
-
- gateway-login (String)
- Tells which username to use when logging in to your
- firewall gateway host.
-
- gateway-host (String)
- The site which is acting as your firewall gateway, or
- empty if you aren't using one.
-
- local-dir (String)
- The current local working directory. I like to set
- this from my RC file, so all my files go into my down-
- load directory.
-
- logfile (String)
- The name of your personal transfer log, or empty if you
- aren't using a transfer log.
-
- logsize (Integer)
- The maximum ceiling of your log file, before the pro-
- gram removes old entries.
-
- mprompt (Boolean)
- If on, prompts for each remote file expanded from a
- wildcard globbing expression.
-
- netrc (String, Read-only)
- Tells you the name of the RC file in use.
-
- pager (String)
- The pathname and flags of the program used to display
- output one screenful at a time. The default is the
- value of your $PAGER environment variable.
-
- prompt (String)
- The prompt specification that expands into the prompt.
-
- progress-reports (Integer)
- Which progress meter to use, or 0 if you don't want
- progress reports during file transfers.
-
- recent-list (Boolean)
- If on, uses and updates the recent-file.
-
- remote-is-unix (Boolean)
- Set automatically by the program upon connection, you
- may need to use this in a startup macro if the program
- guessed that a remote site was UNIX when it really is
- not.
-
- startup-msg (Boolean)
- If on, prints the opening message and tip.
-
- tips (Boolean)
- If on, prints a tip on how to use the program better
- each time you run the program.
-
- type (String)
- The name of the file transfer mode in use, such as
- ``binary'' or ``ascii''.
-
- verbose (String/Integer)
- Controls the amount of output spewed by the program.
- You can supply either the first character of the name
- of the verbosity level, or its number:
-
- Quiet (-1)
- Won't print any output at all, even if an error
- occurs.
-
- Errors Only (0)
- No output, except when errors occur.
-
- Terse (1)
- Prints errors, and useful output from the remote
- host.
-
- Verbose (2)
- Prints everything, even junk output from the
- remote end.
-
- Listing a remote directory
- The ls and dir commands perform in a similar manner to those
- of the stock ftp program.
-
- The ls command sends the FTP command ``NLST'' for you. This
- command has been set so that it defaults to always listing
- files in columns (this is the -C option given to the UNIX ls
- command) and appending metacharacters to each item name
- (this is the -F option), so you can see which items are
- directories, files, links, etcetera. If you don't want your
- items columnized, you can try using the -1 option with ls to
- print one item per line.
-
- The dir command sends the FTP command ``LIST'' for you,
- which instead of printing just item names, it prints item
- sizes, owners, dates, and permissions as well. This command
- is equivalent to ``ls -l'' on most remote systems.
-
- The usage for both commands is the same. Here is the one
- for ls:
-
- ls [-flags] [directory and file names] [redirection]
-
- Note that in this program, you can supply both flags and
- items to list in the same command. The stock version of ftp
- doesn't let you do this:
-
- ls -lrt /info-mac/help
-
- Another thing that the program does which the others should
- have done is let you supply more than one item:
-
- ls -lrt /info-mac/help /pub /info-mac/README
-
- You can also redirect the output into a file, or pipe it
- into something. This example shows how to list the contents
- of the current remote directory, and save the output into a
- file in the current local directory:
-
- ls -t >ls.out
-
- Note that for this to work, there must be no whitespace
- between the ``>'' and the filename, unlike your shell com-
- mand line which allows for extra whitespace. This will be
- (actually, is) fixed in a future version of the program.
-
- These examples show how to use a pipe:
-
- ls -t |tail
- dir -t "|less -CM"
- ls -t "|tail | wc"
-
- Like the redirection example, there must be no whitespace
- between the first pipe character and the rest of the stuff.
- The trick is that it has to appear as one argument to the
- commands. The second and third examples illustrate the use
- of double quotes to squeeze extra parameters in. The second
- example can be done without all that typing. See the
- descriptions of the pdir and pls commands below.
-
- Viewing a remote directory with your pager
- Didn't you hate it when you listed a remote directory, only
- to have most of the stuff scrolled off your terminal before
- you could read it? The pls and pdir commands take care of
- this for you. As you might have guessed, they perform
- exactly like their regular counterparts, only you view them
- with your pager. The pager to use is controlled by the
- pager program variable.
-
- Redisplaying the last directory listing
- The program saves the listing into a local buffer, so if you
- need to see it again (probably forgot about pdir) you can
- use the redir and predir commands for this.
-
- Fetching files from the remote host
- The get and mget retrieve remote files for you. The usage
- for get is:
-
- get remote-file [local-file or redirection]
-
- To fetch /pub/README and write it as a file named
- ./junk/readme, try:
-
- get /pub/README ./junk/readme
-
- To fetch /pub/README and write it as ./README, just do:
-
- get /pub/README
-
- This lets you fetch a file using its whole pathname, and
- write a copy of it in the current directory, without having
- to bother with typing a local filename. In the unlikely
- event that you have write permission to a directory called
- /pub on your local machine, it would write ``README'' in
- that directory.
-
- Most of the time the file you want will be in the current
- remote directory, so you can just do these:
-
- get README
- get README ./junk/readme
-
- You can also use a redirection for get, just like you can
- with the ls, dir, and redir commands. As described earlier,
- you have to conform to the format below for this release of
- the program:
-
- get README >/dev/null
- get README |head
- get README "|head -8"
- get README "|less -EMi"
-
- The last example is facilitated by the page command
- described later.
-
- The get command can also use a wildcard expression in an
- attempt to match exactly one remote file. I call it ``Poor
- Man's File Completion.'' If you've done a remote listing,
- and you decide you want to download a file by the name of
- ``obnoxiouslylongpackagename.tar.Z'', you can use ``PMFC''
- to save some keystrokes. Choose an expression that will
- only match that one file, then use it with get:
-
- get obn*.Z a.tar.Z
-
- If your pattern was unique, get will fetch that file only.
- If the pattern matched more than one file, the program will
- bitch and moan.
-
- The mget command is used to fetch many files at a time. The
- difference between get and mget is that get lets you write
- only one file, but you can put it in a different directory,
- while mget fetches many files, always writing them in the
- current local directory. This example fetches several
- remote files at once:
-
- mget a.file.Z b.file.Z c.tar d.tar.Z
-
- The mget command, and its ugly sisters, mput and mdelete let
- you use wildcard expressions. I could have done the previ-
- ous example as:
-
- mget *.Z c.tar
-
- instead. The ``m'' commands will verify each file, if you
- have the program variable mprompt set.
-
- Viewing a remote file with your pager
- If you would like to read a file on the remote host without
- saving a copy of it on your machine, you can use the page
- (or more if you wish) command:
-
- page README
- page obn*README
- page README.Z
-
- The second example show that you can use ``PMFC'' like you
- can for get. The third example will work also, because if
- the program knows how to decompress the file, it will do so
- before feeding it to your pager. As stated earlier, you can
- change the program to use to page by setting the program
- variable pager.
-
- Creating a message file on the remote host
- Use the create an empty file on the remote site. Sometimes
- it is necessary to leave a note if you can't get in touch
- with the remote site's administrator. For example if a file
- is corrupted, you could try:
-
- create Foo.tar_is_corrupt
-
- in hopes that the original uploader will replace it.
-
- Looking up site names and addresses
- You can use the program's builtin mini-nslookup facility.
- If you wanted to know the site's IP number, but only knew
- the name you could do:
-
- lookup cse.unl.edu
-
- This would spit out IP number for that site, in this case
- ``129.93.1.12''. If you needed to know what a site's name
- was, but only knew the IP number, try:
-
- lookup 129.93.1.12
-
- This would spit out the name for that site, in this case
- ``cse.unl.edu''.
-
- Checking the configuration of the program
- Use the version command to print version and compilation
- information about the program. This will also tell you
- which optional features are compiled into the program, such
- as logging to the system log and which command line editor
- (if any) has been installed.
-
- The author's email address is listed, and if you need to
- report something, send the output of this command along with
- your message.
-
- Using the command shell
- Just like the stock ftp program, you type commands to it
- until you get bored and hit either ^D or type the quit com-
- mand.
-
- The program supports links to popular command line editing
- libraries. If the person who compiled it went to the
- effort, you will be able to edit the command line with arrow
- keys and other editing commands, and also scroll up and down
- in the command line history, usually with the up and down
- arrows. You can check the version command to see if either
- ``GETLINE'' or ``READLINE'' are installed.
-
- Customizing the prompt
- You can set the shell's prompt string to whatever you like.
- You can use several metacharacters that expand into some-
- thing each prompt. The ``%'' flags are passed to
- strftime(3), so you can put the date or time in the prompt
- formatted as you like it:
-
- set prompt "%I:%M ncftp>"
-
- That would the current time in the prompt.
-
- The ``@'' flags are expanded by the program itself. Here's
- the list of them.
-
- If you have an ANSI-compatible terminal, or you have the
- program variable ansi-escapes set, you can use @B, @I, and
- @U to turn on boldface, inverse, and underline text respec-
- tively (otherwise they won't insert anything). You can also
- use @R to turn on inverse (reverse) text. @P sets the text
- back to plain text.
-
- @D Inserts the full path of the current remote directory.
- The @J flag is similar except it inserts only the directory
- name.
-
- @H Inserts the name of the remote host. @C inserts the host
- and current directory path in colon-mode format, such as
- ``cse.unl.edu:/pub/mgleason'', or ``(not connected)''. The
- @c flag is similar, only it will insert
- ``cse.unl.edu:/pub/mgleason'' and a newline if connected,
- otherwise it prints nothing. The default prompt uses this
- flag to print a two line prompt when connected and a one
- line prompt when not connected.
-
- @E or @! inserts the event number (how many commands you've
- typed).
-
- @M inserts ``(Mail) '' if mail has arrived since running the
- program.
-
- @N inserts a newline character.
-
- Keeping a log of your file transfers
- You can have the program keep a personal log file. I find
- it is useful so I can see where I got a certain file, or
- what the name of that site was I called two weeks ago.
-
- To use a log, add:
-
- #set logfile ~/.ftplog
-
- (or whatever you want to name the log) to your RC file. I
- don't want my log growing too large and using up all my disk
- space, so I also have:
-
- #set logsize 10240
-
- in my RC file. If you set the limit on the maximum log
- size, the program will keep the log file at or below that
- size, discarding old entries.
-
- Note that this is different from having SYSLOG appear in the
- version command's output. When this is on, your actions are
- recorded to the system log, so your system administrator can
- make sure you aren't doing anything ``bad.''
-
- Program options
- Remember that you can treat the command line like an open
- command, so all lowercase options are passed to the open
- command, and the uppercase options are handled by the main
- program. The uppercase options are described below; refer
- to the open command for descriptions of its options.
-
- -D x sets the debugging level to x.
-
- -H runs the version command and exits, so you can save the
- output of it to use when you need to mail me something.
-
- -I toggles the mprompt variable; this is provided for com-
- patibility with ``ftp -i''.
-
- -N disables reading of the RC file; this is provided for
- compatibility with ``ftp -n''.
-
- -V x sets verbosity to level x (-1, 0, 1, 2) or (quiet,
- errs, terse, verbose). See the description of the
- verbose program variable for more information.
-
- Here are some example command lines. Again, see the
- description of the open command (especially colon-mode and
- FTP-cat mode) and all its functions for more information.
-
- This just enters the NcFTP command shell:
-
- csh> ncftp
-
- This fetches CONTENTS and then quits:
-
- csh> ncftp cse.unl.edu:/pub/mgleason/CONTENTS
-
- Some others examples, with open options and main program
- options mixed in:
-
- csh> ncftp -V quiet -u ftp.unl.edu
- csh> ncftp -c cse.unl.edu:/pub/mgleason/CONTENTS
- csh> ncftp -D 2 -r -d 120 -g 10 -N ftp.unl.edu
-
- A sample RC file
- Here is a sample RC file:
-
- #set logfile ~/.ftplog
- #set progress-reports 2
- #set local-dir /usr/tmp/zz
- #set prompt "@B@E @UNcFTP@P @B@M@D@P ->"
-
- machine sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- macdef init
- cd /info-mac
- get ./help/recent-files.txt "|grep -v '.abs' > sumex
- !less sumex
- pwd
-
- # This site is in here just so I can use ``apple''
- # as an abbreviation.
- machine ftp.apple.com
-
- # NcFTP will only ask for your password:
- machine cse.unl.edu
- login mgleason
-
- # You can supply a login and a password:
- machine fake.machine.unl.edu
- login mgleason
- password mypass
- macdef init
- cd ./foo/bar
-
- # If an antiquated non-UNIX machine doesn't use
- # the "SYST" command, you may need to unset
- # remote-is-unix, if the remote host complains
- # about ``ls -CF''.
- machine some.vms.unl.edu
- macdef init
- unset remote-is-unix
-
-
- AUTHORS
- NcFTP was written by Mike Gleason, NCEMRSoft
- (mgleason@cse.unl.edu), and based on code by the authors of
- the ftp from the BSD 4.3 distribution. NcFTP is copyrighted
- 1992, 1993 by NCEMRSoft and 1985, 1989 by the Regents of
- California.
-
- Ideas and some code contributed by Phil Dietz, NCEMRSoft
- (pdietz@cse.unl.edu). Testing and debugging done by Phil
- and Kok Hon Yin (hkok@cse.unl.edu).
-
- Extensive man page formatting work by DaviD W. Sanderson
- (dws@ssec.wisc.edu).
-
- BUGS
- Correct execution of many commands depends upon proper
- behavior by the remote server.
-
- The remote server may drop the connection if you take a long
- time to page remote files.
-
- Termcap padding is not correctly displayed.
-
- There are no such sites named bowser.nintendo.jp or
- sphygmomanometer.unl.edu.
-
-
-
- u1cfOTHER COMMANDS AVAILABLE AT THIS PROMPTu0:c7
-
- ARCHIE CONFIG DIR HELP IRC MAIN
- NOTE QUIT REDRAW TELNET PING VIEW
-