Preamble
Preamble
Preamble
Preamble
1.1 Contacting Me
1.2 Legalities and Distribution
1.3 History of this document
2. About FTP
3. Beginner's guide to using ftp
3.1 Running the ftp program
3.2 Logging into an FTP server
3.3 File transfer types
3.4 Navigating and listing directories
3.5 Downloading and uploading files
3.6 Running shell commands
3.7 Hash marks and tick
3.8 Other ftp commands
6. FTP Servers
6.1 How an FTP Server works
6.2 Help with FTP Servers
1. Preamble
This document was written by Matthew Borowski for the Linux Documentation Project. I have
not yet finished adding everything I want to add. There will be a section with information on
operating an FTP server.
1.1 Contacting Me
Please contact me if you have any additions or changes for this document. Please do not ask for
technical support -- you may purchase Unix consulting and support through my company,
WorldServe, or you can ask for help on newsgroups such as comp.os.linux.*. Please also keep
in mind that I can only understand English and Farsi.
2. About FTP
FTP (File Transfer Protocol) is a client/server protocol that allows a user to transfer files to and
from a remote network site. It works with TCP and is most commonly used on the Internet,
although it can also be used on a LAN.
An FTP site is a computer that is running FTP server software (also known an FTP daemon, or
ftpd). A public ftp site can usually be accessed by anybody by logging in as anonymous or ftp.
There are many excellent public ftp sites that make repositories of free Unix software available.
By learning how to use FTP, you give yourself access to an indespensible resource.
Private FTP sites require a user name or password. If you have a shell account with your ISP,
you may be able to access your files via FTP (contact your system administrator to check on
this).
An FTP client is the userland application that provides access to FTP servers. There are many
FTP clients available. Some are graphical, and some are text-based.
FTP was first developed by the University of California, Berkeley for inclusion in 4.2BSD
(Berkeley Unix). The RFC (Request for Comments) is available at
ftp://nic.merit.edu/documents/rfc/rfc0959.txt.
$ ftp metalab.unc.edu
The ftp program will attempt to connect to metalab.unc.edu. Another way to do this is to run ftp
from the command line with no parameters, and use the open command, with the site name as
an argument:
$ ftp
ftp> open metalab.unc.edu
Now, we enter a complete e-mail address as the password (this is what most public FTP sites
request).
331 Guest login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password.
Password:
ftp> ls
200 PORT command successful.
150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls.
total 33590
-r--r--r-- 1 root other 34348506 Dec 03 03:53 IAFA-LISTINGS
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root other 7 Jul 15 1997 README -> WELCOME
-rw-r--r-- 1 root other 890 Nov 15 13:11 WELCOME
dr-xr-xr-x 2 root other 512 Jul 15 1997 bin
dr-xr-xr-x 2 root other 512 Jul 15 1997 dev
dr-xr-xr-x 2 root other 512 Jul 18 1997 etc
drwxrwxrwx 11 ftp 20 4608 Nov 28 16:00 incoming
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root other 13 Jun 04 1998 ls-lR -> IAFA-LISTINGS
dr-xr-xr-x 17 root root 512 Jun 08 11:43 pub
dr-xr-xr-x 3 root other 512 Jul 15 1997 unc
dr-xr-xr-x 5 root other 512 Jul 15 1997 usr
226 Transfer complete.
If the ls command lists so many files that they scroll off the top of the screen, you can use Shift-
PageUp to scroll up. This works in Linux console mode as well as in xterm or rxvt.
On public FTP archives, the downloadable resources are usually held in the /pub directory. In
this example, you already know that the kernel sources are in the directory
/pub/Linux/kernel, so you type the following to get into that directory:
ftp> cd pub/Linux/kernel
250-README for kernel
250-
250-What you'll find here: kernel sources and patches
250-
250-
250 CWD command successful.
The messages you see, which begin with "250", are information messages sent by the server. In
this case, the ftp server is configured to automatically send you the README file when you cd
into the directory.
The ftp program has started saving the remote file linux-2.2.13.tar.gz as the local file
linux-2.2.13.tar.gz.
If you wanted to save it as the local file foo.tar.gz, you could have specified it like this:
If you want to download more than one file at a time, you'll have to use the mget (multiple get)
command. You can use mget together with a space-delimited list of filenames you want to
download, or you can use wildcards with the mget command. For example:
Would get all files starting with the string "linux". Normally, mget will prompt you for each file
before it downloads it. You can toggle this by using the prompt command.
Now let's say you've written a piece of software, and you want to upload it to MetaLab to be
included in their Linux software archive. First, you'd change to the /incoming directory (most
public FTP servers have a directory, usually called incoming or uploads, where files can be
uploaded), then you'd use the put command:
ftp> cd /incoming
ftp> put foo.tar.gz
local: foo.tar.gz remote: foo.tar.gz
200 PORT command successful.
150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for foo.tar.gz.
226 Transfer complete.
10257 bytes sent in 0.00316 secs (3.2e+03 Kbytes/sec)
The put command works the same way as the get command, so you can use mput to upload
multiple files at the same time. You can also upload a local file with a different filename on the
server by specifying the remote filename and/or pathname as an argument.
What if the file foo.tar.gz is not in your current local directory when you try to upload it? You
can switch local directories by using the lcd (local change directory) command:
ftp> lcd /home/foo/
Local directory now /home/foo
ftp> !ls
The way this works is that ftp calls the shell (specified in the $SHELL environment variable), and
it is the shell which runs ls. Thus, you can run any command-line which works with your shell
simply by prepending "!" to it (the default shell in most Linux distributions is bash, the Bourne
Again SHell). Please note that !cd does not work as you would expect, this is why the lcd
command exists.
ftp> hash
Hash mark printing on (1024 bytes/hash mark).
As you can tell, ftp will print a hash mark for every 1024 bytes of data you download.
ftp> tick
Tick counter printing on (10240 bytes/tick increment).
For more elaborate information on using ftp, please see the online help in the ftp program
(accessible by typing help with no arguments for a list of commands, or help <commandname>
for specific help on a command). You can also read the Unix man page for ftp by typing man
ftp at your command prompt.
4. Console FTP clients
The original ftp program was the original ftp client, and it is a good investment to learn it. It's
the only ftp client that you can be certain is available on most systems (even Win32 comes with
the ftp command, albeit an archaic, braindead version of it).
There are many other console-mode (text-only) ftp clients available. The listing here is by no
means comprehensive, but includes the most popular ones. Search at FreshMeat to find more.
4.1 NcFTP
NcFTP is the all-time favorite ftp client of many Unix users. It comes bundled with most Linux
distributions, and offers many advanced features such as tab completion and bookmarks.
Version 2 of NcFTP had a curses based full-screen mode. This was done away with in Version 3
(now in beta).
It's not 100% compatible with the commands that standard ftp uses. For example, get and put in
NcFTP act like mget and mput do in standard ftp. So if you want to save a remote file as a
different local filename, you'd have to do get -z remotename localname. Thankfully, NcFTP has
a nice online help system to assist you in learning the commands.
4.2 lukemftp
A port of the NetBSD FTP client to other systems, lukemftp derives its name from the author of
most of the enhanced features, which include: command-line editing, command-line fetches of
FTP and HTTP URLs (including via proxies), context-sensitive word completion, dynamic
progress bar, IPv6 support, modification time preservation, paging of local and remote files,
passive mode support (with fallback to active mode), SOCKS support, TIS FWTK gate-ftp
server support, and transfer rate throttling.
I highly recommend lukemftp to users who don't want to change to anything drastically different
from the standard ftp client, but want more advanced features.
4.3 lftp
lftp is a sophisticated command line based FTP client. Like bash, it has job control. It uses the
GNU readline library for input, so you have command line completion and editing. lftp also has
bookmarks, mirroring support, and can transfer several files in parellel.
4.4 cftp
Comfortable FTP (cftp) is a full screen mode client. What it lacks in features, it makes up for in
ease of use. You browse through the directories using the arrow keys and enter.
4.5 yafc
Yafc is a very nice ftp client, with features including directory cache, remote filename
completion, aliases, colorized ls, recursive get/put/ls/rm, nohup mode transfers, tagging
(queueing), multiple connections, proxy support and more. It has support for Kerberos4
authentication.
5.1 gFTP
gFTP is an FTP client for X Windows written using Gtk. The interface has some similarities to
the popular WS_FTP software commonly used on a certain unstable operating system.
gFTP features simultaneous downloads, resuming of interrupted file transfers, file transfer
queues, downloading of entire directories, ftp proxy support, remote directory caching, passive
and non-passive file transfers, drag-n-drop support, a very nice connection manager and more.
If you are running Red Hat Linux and have the GNOME desktop installed, then you probably
already have gFTP. If not, you can download gFTP from its homepage at http://gftp.seul.org/.
5.2 WXftp
WXftp is an FTP client for the X Window System designed to be used mainly on Linux
workstations. It is written using the WXWindows toolkit, so it can be compiled to use either
Motif or GTK+
It includes an intuitive user interface (much like WS_FTP), a session manager, on-line help, a
progress bar, and more
5.4 guiftp
Guiftp is a simple ftp client written with the GTK+ toolkit. It's good if you don't need many
features and want a simple, clean look.
6. FTP Servers
6.1 How an FTP Server works
A traditional FTP server is executed from inetd (the internet superserver daemon). The standard
FTP port is port 21. When a user tries to log in, the FTP server uses a standard system call to
check the user name and password against the entries in the system password file, or the NIS
tables if you are using NIS. If the login is correct, the user is given access to the system.
Anonymous FTP works differently. The user logs in with either the anonymous or the ftp
username (this can be defined in the config file). He is then given access to a directory tree that
has been chroot()'ed. This ensures that the user can not gain access to directory trees he is not
authorized for. The chrooted directory tree usually contains a mock filesystem, with bin/, etc/,
and lib/ directories. The files for download are usually put in the pub/ directory.
The reason for a mock filesystem in an anonymous FTP tree is that the FTP daemon runs
external commands for ls requests. You can also place additional programs in the bin directory,
and a user can run them with the SITE command in his ftp client. For example, Red Hat's FTP
includes the RPM command (for users to query RPM packages on the site).
Some FTP servers work differently. For example, some will allow user accounts to be set up
independant of the system-wide password file (FTP-only accounts). Some servers (ProFTPD
and NcFTPd for instance) have built-in ls commands and do not need a special directory tree
within the chroot structure. Other ftp servers stray altogether from the standard ftp concept.
FTP4ALL, for example, does not use system passwords at all. It uses it's own user and group
file, and has features such as upload/download ratio and customizable server messages.
6.2 Help with FTP Servers
WU-FTPD
WU-FTPD is the ftp daemon included with many Linux distributions, including Red Hat and
Caldera. You can learn more about WU-FTPD at http://www.wu-ftpd.org.
ProFTPD
ProFTPD is a powerful FTP server that includes Apache-style configuration, extensive support
for virtual hosts, and internal ls.