TH FTPFS 4
SH NAME
ftpfs \- file transfer protocol (FTP) file system
SH SYNOPSIS
B ftpfs
[
B -/dqn
]
[
B -m
I mountpoint
]
[
B -a
I password
]
[
B -e
I ext
]
[
B -o
I os
]
[
B -r
remoteroot
]
I system
SH DESCRIPTION
I Ftpfs
dials the TCP file transfer protocol (FTP) port, 21, on
I system
and mounts itself (see
IR bind (2))
on
I mountpoint
(default
BR /n/ftp )
to provide access to files on the remote machine.
If required by the remote machine,
I ftpfs
will prompt for a user name and password.
The user names
B ftp
and
B anonymous
conventionally offer guest/read-only access to
machines.
Anonymous FTP may be called without user interaction
by using the
B -a
option and specifying the
IR password .
PP
By default the file seen at the mount point is the user's
remote home directory if he has one.
The option
B -/
forces the mount point to correspond to the
remote root.
The option
B -r
forces the mount point to correspond to the
remote directory
IR remoteroot .
PP
To avoid seeing startup messages from the server use option
BR -q .
To see all messages from the server use option
BR -d .
PP
Some systems will hangup an ftp connection that has no activity
for a given period. The
BR -k
option causes ftp to send a NOP command every 15 seconds to attempt
to keep the connection open. This command can cause some servers to
hangup, so you'll have to feel your way.
PP
To terminate the connection,
B unmount
(see
IR bind (1))
the mount point.
PP
Since there is no specified format for metadata retrieved
in response to an FTP directory request,
I ftpfs
has to apply heuristics to steer the interpretation. Sometimes,
though rarely, these heuristics fail. The following options are
meant as last resorts to try to steer interpretation.
PP
A major clue to the heuristics is the operating system at the other
end. Normally this can be determined automatically using the
FTP SYST command. However, in some cases the server doesn't implement
the SYST command. The
B -o
option will force the case by specifyng the name of the operating
system. Known systems types are are:
BR Unix ,
BR Sun ,
BR Tops ,
BR Plan9
BR VM ,
BR VMS ,
BR MVS ,
BR NetWare ,
BR OS/2 ,
BR TSO ,
and
BR WINDOWS_NT .
PP
Some systems and/or FTP servers return directory listings that don't
include the file extension. The
B -e
option allows the user to specify an extension to append to all
remote files (other than directories).
PP
Finally, there are two FTP commands to retrieve the contents of a
directory, LIST and NLST. LIST is approximately equivalent to
L ls -l
and NLST to
LR ls .
I Ftpfs
normally uses LIST. However, some FTP servers interpret LIST
to mean, give a wordy description of the file.
I Ftpfs
normally notices this and switches to using NLST. However, in
some rare cases, the user must force the use of NLST with the
B -n
option.
SH EXAMPLE
You want anonymous FTP access to the system
BR export.lcs.mit.edu .
The first
IR import (4)
command is only necessary if your machine does not have access to the
desired system, but another, called
B gateway
in this example, does.
IP
EX
import gateway /net
ftpfs -a yourname@yourmachine export.lcs.mit.edu
EE
SH SOURCE
B /sys/src/cmd/ftpfs
SH "SEE ALSO"
IR bind (2)
SH BUGS
PP
Symbolic links on remote Unix systems will always have mode 0777
and a length of 8.
PP
After connecting to a TOPS-20 system, the mount point will contain
only one directory, usually
BR /n/ftp/PS:<ANONYMOUS> .
However, walking to any valid directory on that machine will succeed
and cause that directory entry to appear under the mount point.
PP
I Ftpfs
caches files and directories. A directory will fall from the cache
after 5 quiescent minutes or if the local user changes the
directory by writing or removing a file.
Otherwise, remote
changes to the directory that occur after the directory has
been cached might not be immediately visible.
PP
There is no way to issue the appropriate commands to handle special synthetic
FTP file types such as directories
that automatically return a
B tar
of their contents.