Manpages

NAME

NcFTP - Internet file transfer program

SYNOPSIS

ncftp [program options] [[open options] hostname[:pathname]]

OPTIONS

Program options:
-D : Turn debug mode and trace mode on.
-L : Don’t use visual mode (use line mode).
-V : Use visual mode.
-H : Dump the version information.

Command-line open options:
-a : Open anonymously.
-u : Open with username and password prompt.
-p X : Use port number X when opening.
-r : Redial until connected.
-d X : Redial, delaying X seconds between tries.
-g X : Give up after X redials without connection.

Command-line retrieve options:
-C : Force continuation (reget).
-f : Force overwrite.
-G : Don’t use wildcard matching.
-R : Recursive. Useful for fetching whole directories.
-n X : Get selected files only if X days old or newer.

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 additional features that are not found in the standard interface, ftp.

The program runs in one of three modes: visual mode, line mode, and colon mode.

If your system is somewhat modern, the default mode should be visual mode. This is a full-screen interface that uses the curses library. With visual mode, you edit the program’s settings with a nice screen interface instead of typing arcane commands.

If you are not in visual mode, you will be using line mode for the interactive shell. This mode is a no-frills command-line interface that will look like the default ftp program’s command shell.

The third mode, colon mode, refers to the program’s ability to do a quick retrieve of a file directly from your shell command line, without going into the program’s own shell. This mode is useful for shell scripts.

INTRODUCTION TO VISUAL MODE

When entering visual mode, the screen clears and is rewritten with the splash screen. You should see the black status bar occupying the second to last row on the screen. Beneath the status bar is the input line, where you type commands to the program’s shell.

The program then waits for you to do something. Usually this means you want to open a remote filesystem to transfer files to and from your local machine’s filesystem. To do that, you need to know the symbolic name of the remote system, or its Internet Protocol (IP) address. For example, a symbolic name might be ’’typhoon.unl.edu,’’ and its IP address could be ’’129.93.33.24.’’ To open a connection to that system, you use the program’s open command:

open typhoon.unl.edu
open 129.93.33.24

Both of these try to open the machine called typhoon at the University of Nebraska. Using the symbolic name is the preferred way, because IP addresses may change without notice, while the symbolic names usually stay the same.

When you open a remote filesystem, you need to have permission. The FTP Protocol’s authentication system is very similar to that of logging in to your account. You have to give an account name, and its password for access to that account’s files. However, most remote systems that have anything you might be interested in don’t require an account name for use. You can often get anonymous access to a remote filesystem and exchange files that have been made publicly accessible. The program attempts to get anonymous permission to a remote system by default. What actually happens is that the program tries to use ’’anonymous’’ as the account name, and when prompted for a password, uses your E-mail address as a courtesy to the remote system’s maintainer. You can have the program try to use a specific account also. That will be explained later.

If the connection succeeded, you should see the status bar change to hold the remote system’s name on one side, and the current remote directory on the other side. To see what’s in the current remote directory, you can use the program’s ls and dir commands. The former is terse, preferring more remote files in less screen space, and the latter is more verbose, giving detailed information about each item in the directory.

You can use the program’s cd command to move to other directories on the remote system. The cd command behaves very much like the command of the same name in the Bourne and Korn shell.

The purpose of the program is to exchange data with other systems. You can use the program’s get command to copy a file from the remote system to your local system:

get README.txt

The program will display the progress of the transfer on the screen, so you can tell how much needs to be done before the transfer finishes. When the transfer does finish, then you can enter more commands to the program’s command shell.

You can use the program’s put command to copy a file from your system to the remote system:

put something.tar

When you are finished using the remote system, you can open another one or use the quit command to terminate the program.

THE BOOKMARKS FILE

One of the program’s goals is to minimize typing and maximize convenience. The program automatically saves information about the sites you call on in a special file called the bookmarks file, which is stored in the .ncftp subdirectory of your home directory. Each bookmark saves the host name along with other settings, including the remote directory you were in, the account information, and more. This makes it easy to call back a site later and have everything be like it was when you left the last time.

A big advantage of saving this information is that you can refer to a site by a shorter, more meaningful name, instead of using the full symbolic host name for a site. For example, if you called a site named ’’typhoon.unl.edu’’ frequently, its bookmark name might be just ’’typhoon.’’ Then, instead of:

open typhoon.unl.edu

you could use:

open typhoon

You could also abbreviate the bookmark name further, as long as the program will know which site you are referring to. If no other bookmark’s name starts with the letters ’’ty,’’ you could do just:

open ty

Use the bookmarking feature to assign mnemonic names to hosts whose real names don’t give much hint to what you call there for. A popular game called Nethack is archived at linc.cis.upenn.edu, in the /pub/NH3.1 directory. You could assign ’’nethack’’ as the bookmark name for this site. Then you could try:

open nethack

instead of:

open linc.cis.upenn.edu

USING THE BOOKMARK EDITOR

To manipulate the bookmarks stored in your bookmarks file, you use the program’s bookmark editor. Run the bookmark editor by typing the bookmarks command from within the program. This brings up a new screen of information.

On the right side is the list of remote systems the program has saved for you already. Each time you open a connection to a remote system, the program saves an entry in your bookmark file for you automatically. If you have not opened any sites successfully yet, this list would be empty.

On the left side is some instructions saying what you can do with the list. The bookmark editor is waiting for you to do something, like select a bookmark whose settings you want to edit.

Some bookmark editor ’’hot key’’ commands are one key only. You do not need to hit enter after the hot key commands. To exit the bookmark editor for example, you would just type the ’’x’’ key only. The multi-key commands require a slash first and do require the enter key. To delete the selected site, for example, you would type the ’’/’’ key, then ’’del,’’ and then the enter key.

You can use the ’’d’’ key to move down one line in the list, and the ’’u’’ key to move up one line. If you have many entries in the bookmark list, you won’t be able to see them all at once. The bookmark list scrolls as appropriate to bring the other sites into view. Use the ’’p’’ and ’’n’’ keys to move pages at a time.

Another way to select a site in the bookmark list is to use the capital letters. If I had many entries in my bookmark list, but wanted to select a site whose bookmark name was ’’nethack,’’ I could type ’’N’’ and the list would zoom to the first site with bookmark starting with the letter ’’n.’’

After you have hilited a bookmark you want to edit, use the /ed command. Doing that brings up another screen with the settings for that bookmark.

In the Bookmark Options screen, you use hot keys to select a setting to edit. To edit the bookmark name, for example, you would type ’’a.’’ When you are finished editing this bookmark, hit the ’’x’’ key to return to the bookmark editor’s screen.

BOOKMARK OPTIONS

Edit the Bookmark name field to change the name you use to open this site with. Remember, when you change the bookmark name , you must use this name to refer to this particular bookmark, so if you change it to ’’foobar,’’ you need to use ’’open foobar.’’ This is required because you can have multiple entries for a remote host. For example, you could have two bookmarks for wuarchive.wustl.edu, named ’’wumac’’ and ’’wuwindows.’’ If you were to say ’’open wuarchive.wustl.edu,’’ it would not be clear to the program which host entry to use.

Change the login information for the site by editing the User, Password, and Account fields. Normally you would want to leave these as is for anonymous logins. Depending on your situation, you might want to use a specific account on the remote system. This is one way to get the program to use a non-anonymous login.

The Directory field specifies the directory to move to upon successful connection to the remote host for this bookmark. When you close the site, this field is updated for you automatically to be the directory you were in when you closed the site.

The Transfer Type field can be changed to use a different translation mode when transferring files. This program is usually running on a UNIX system, and most remote systems are also UNIX variants, so the default transfer type is binary, which does no translation at all.

However, when you need to work with plain text files and transfer them between non-UNIX systems, you can change this to ASCII. That will guarantee that the text-only files will translate correctly. Most often, you will need to use the binary transfer type.

The Port field can be changed so that the program tries to use a non-standard port number. I have yet to ever need a different port number, but this capability is here in case it’s needed.

The Has SIZE Command field will probably not need to be edited. This field is mostly for your information only. The SIZE command is an FTP Protocol command that the program would like the remote server to support. If it is supported, the program can get an exact number of bytes of remote files before transferring. That is nice to know so the progress reports work better.

The Has MDTM Command field will probably not need to be edited either. If the remote server supports it, the program can get the exact modification date of the remote file, and set the local file to the same date.

The Can Use Passive FTP field specifies whether the remote server allows use of the FTP Protocol’s PASV command. There are two ways to set up FTP connections. The default way is what I call Port FTP. Unfortunately, Port FTP cannot be used when your local host is hiding behind a Firewall. Passive FTP can be used with a firewall, and that’s why I would like to use that method if possible. You probably will not need to edit this field, since this can be detected automatically most of the time.

The Operating System field is used by the program to tell if it can rely on certain dependencies to specific operating systems. If the OS is a UNIX variant, the program can make some assumptions about the remote server’s responses. For example, if the OS is UNIX, the ls command tries to use the −CF flags, like you could with ’’/bin/ls −CF’’ on UNIX. If the OS wasn’t UNIX, the ’’−CF’’ might not make sense to the remote server and it might complain. You probably will not need to edit this field, since this can be detected automatically most of the time.

The comment field can be used to store a brief description about the site. For example, for my ’’nethack’’ entry, I could use this field to hold ’’Archive site for latest version of Nethack.’’ When you are in the bookmark editor’s window, if you hilite a site that has a comment, it is printed at the bottom of the screen so you do not have to edit the site to look at it.

PREFERENCES

In addition to remote-host specific options, the program has global options that are user-configurable. To change the program’s preferences, run the prefs command from within the program.

The Default open mode field specifies how the program should try to open connections. If you do a lot of anonymous FTPing, you should leave this set to anonymous. You might want to set this field to user & password if the hosts you FTP to most often don’t allow anonymous logins. For example, if you are using the program on your company network to copy things from different company machines, you would not want to use anonymous FTP mode.

The Anonymous password field lets you change the value given to the remote host when you use an anonymous login. It is customary (and sometimes required) to use your e-mail address as the password for anonymous FTP, so the remote host’s administrator knows who is using the service. If the program didn’t get your e-mail address right, or you want to use something different, you can change it here.

The program now uses more whitespace than before to reduce eyestrain. If you prefer, you can turn off that feature by changing the Blank lines between cmds field.

The program can log the transfers you do to a file so you can refer to the log if you can’t remember where you got something. To turn on the log, which is saved as ~/.ncftp/log, you can set the User log size field to a number greater than zero. You probably do not want to let this file grow forever, so you set the maximum size of the log by setting that field.

Although the program is perfectly happy saving every site you ever open in the bookmarks file, you may want to put an upper bound on the number of sites saved. If you have a slow machine, which might cause the program to take awhile to load and save the bookmarks, or if disk space is at a premium, you can set the Max bookmarks to save field to limit the number of bookmarks saved. Once that limit is reached, the program will discard sites whose time since the last connection is the longest. In other words, a site you only called once a long time ago and forgot about will be the first to go.

A few program functions need to use a pager program to view large amounts of text. For example, the page command retrieves a remote file and uses the pager to view it. You can specify the program to use (and its command line flags, if any) by setting the pager field.

When you transfer files between the remote host and your local host, the program uses a progress meter to show you the status of the transfer. The program has a few different progress meters to choose from, and you can try out the other ones by changing the Progress meter field.

You can control how much of the remote server’s chatter is printed by changing the Remote messages field. The program always prints error messages, but most of the time the remote server doesn’t have anything useful to say. There are a couple of messages that may be worth printing. The first is the startup message. Typically, when you connect to a server it has some important information about the server. Some servers have chdir messages, which are sent when you enter a special directory. You specify whether to print these messages by toggling the Remote messages field.

By default, the program stays in the same directory you were in when you ran the program, so that downloads will go in that directory. I like to use a ’’download directory’’ so that all of my downloads go to a specific directory. This prevents me from exceeding my quota, and overwriting my other files. You can set the Startup in Local Dir field to have the program change the local directory each time when the program starts up. Then you know where to expect your downloads to end up.

The program itself has some messages which you may get tired of and want to turn off. You can change the Startup messages field to specify whether the program prints its ’’splash screen’’ and whether it prints a tip on how to maximize use of the program.

When you retrieve a remote file, by default the program tries to also set the exact modification time of the local file as the remote file. You can turn that off by changing the File timestamps field.

If you don’t like the full-screen graphics, you can use the line-oriented mode by changing the Screen graphics field. Once you turn visual mode off from the Preferences screen, you won’t be able to get back to the preferences screen again when using line mode. To get back into visual mode, you can run the program with the ’’−V’’ flag, like:

ncftp -V

COMMAND REFERENCE

I will now describe the commands that the program’s command shell supports. The first command to know is help. If you just type

help

from the command shell, the program prints the names of all of the supported commands. From there, you can get specific help for a command by typing the command after, for example:

help open

prints information about the open command.

The shell escape command is simply the exclamation point, ! To spawn a shell, just do:

!

You can also use this to do one command only, like:

!date +%H:%M:%S

The cd command changes the working directory on the remote host. Use this command to move to different areas on the remote server. If you just opened a new site, you might be in the root directory. Perhaps there was a directory called ’’/pub/news/comp.sources.d’’ that someone told you about. From the root directory, you could:

cd pub
cd news
cd comp.sources.d

or, more concisely,

cd /pub/news/comp.sources.d

Then, commands such as get, put, and ls could be used to refer to items in that directory.

Some shells in the UNIX environment have a feature I like, which is switching to the previous directory. Like those shells, you can do:

cd -

to change to the last directory you were in.

The close command disconnects you from the remote server. The program does this for you automatically when needed, so you can simply open other sites or quit the program without worrying about closing the connection by hand.

Sometimes it may be necessary to use the create command. This makes an empty file on the remote host. This can be useful when you are unable to contact the remote server’s administrator, but hope someone in the know will spot your file. For example,

create readline2.0.tar_is_corrupt

might persuade someone to repost that file.

The debug command is mostly for use by me and the testers. You could type

debug 1

to turn debugging mode on. Then you could see all messages between the program and the remote server, and things I print only in debugging mode. If you report a bug, I might ask you to send me a trace file. To do that, you would run the program, and then type

debug trace 1

And so I could see how the program was compiled, you would type

version

After you quit the program, you could then send me an email with the contents of the ~/.ncftp/trace file, which would also have the version information in it.

The dir command prints a detailed directory listing. It tries to behave like UNIX’s ’’/bin/ls -l’’ command. If the remote server seems to be a UNIX host, you can also use the same flags you would with ls, for instance

dir -rt

would try to act like

/bin/ls -lrt

would on UNIX.

The echo command wouldn’t seem very useful, but it can be nice for use with the program’s macros. It behaves like the equivalent command does under a UNIX shell, but accepts some extra flags. All ’’percent’’ flags are fed through strftime(4). So you could type

echo It is now %H:%M on %B %d.

and you should get something like this printed on your screen:

It is now 19:00 on January 22.

There are also ’’at’’ flags, which the program expands:

@H : Name of connected host
@D : Full pathname of remote current working directory
@J : Short name of remote current working directory
@N : Newline.
@n : Bookmark name of connected host

Example:

echo "Connected to @H at %H:%M." >> junk

If you later looked at the contents of ’’junk,’’ it might say:

Connected to sphygmomanometer.unl.edu at 20:37.

The get command copies files from the current working directory on the remote host to your machine’s current working directory. To place a copy of ’’README’’ in your local directory, you could try:

get README

The get command has some powerful features which are described below, in ’’SPECIAL DOWNLOADING FEATURES.’’

The bookmarks command runs the Bookmark Editor. You already know how what that does, since you read the section above on it, right?

The lcd command is the first of a few ’’l’’ commands that work with the local host. This changes the current working directory on the local host. If you want to download files into a different local directory, you could use lcd to change to that directory and then do your downloads.

Another local command that comes in handy is the lls command, which runs ’’/bin/ls’’ on the local host and displays the results in the program’s window. You can use the same flags with lls as you would in your command shell, so you can do things like:

lcd ~/doc
lls -lrt p*.txt

The program also has a built-in interface to the name service via the lookup command. This means you can lookup entries for remote hosts, like:

lookup cse.unl.edu ftp.cs.unl.edu sphygmomanometer.unl.edu

prints:

cse.unl.edu 129.93.33.1
typhoon.unl.edu 129.93.33.24
sphygmomanometer.unl.edu 129.93.33.126

There is also a more detailed option, enabled with ’’−v,’’ i.e.:

lookup -v cse.unl.edu ftp.cs.unl.edu

prints:

cse.unl.edu:
Name: cse.unl.edu
Address: 129.93.33.1

ftp.cs.unl.edu:
Name: typhoon.unl.edu
Alias: ftp.cs.unl.edu
Address: 129.93.33.24

You can also give IP addresses, so this would work too:

lookup 129.93.33.24

prints:

typhoon.unl.edu 129.93.33.24

The lpage command views a local file one page at a time. By default, the program uses your pager program to view the files. You can choose to use the built-in pager by using the ’’−b’’ flag. Example:

lpage -b ~/.ncftp/bookmarks

The lpwd command is prints the current local directory. Use this command when you forget where you are on your local machine.

The ls command prints a brief directory listing. It tries to behave like UNIX’s ’’/bin/ls -CF’’ command. If the remote server seems to be a UNIX host, you can also use the same flags you would with ls, for instance

ls -rt

would try to act like

/bin/ls -CFrt

would on UNIX.

The mkdir command tries to create a new directory on the remote host. For many public archives, you won’t have the proper access permissions to do that.

Some servers let you use different transfer modes. Most servers support only the default mode, which is stream mode. The program supports that mode and also block mode. The primary advantage to using this mode is that you can use the same data connection for all your transfers. With stream mode the program and server must establish a new data connection for each file, and doing that takes extra time and bandwidth. To use the mode command to turn on block mode, you would type

mode b

and the command to use stream mode would be

mode s

The program turns on block mode automatically when it knows the remote server supports it and implements it correctly, so you should not need to use this command.

The open command connects you to a remote host. Many times, you will simply open a host without using any flags, but nonetheless the open command has some flags to enable certain features.

To force an anonymous open, use the ’’−a’’ flag. On the ftp.ncftp.com machine, which is the official archive site for NcFTP, I have a need to use both anonymous logins and user logins. The Bookmark Editor remembers type of login I used last, so if the last time was a user login, I could use the ’’−a’’ flag to switch back to the anonymous login type without having to use the Bookmark Editor to change that.

Likewise, I could use the ’’−u’’ flag to force a user open. Then I could give my account name and password to access that account.

Many of the big archive sites like wuarchive.wustl.edu are busy, so you aren’t guaranteed a connection to them. The program lets you ’’redial’’ sites periodically, until a connection succeeds. Use the ’’−r’ flag to turn on automatic redial.

Redial itself has a few parameters. You can set the delay, in seconds, of the time spent waiting between redials. You can also have the program give up after a maximum number of redials is reached. Here’s an example that fully utilizes redial mode:

open -r -d 75 -g 10 bowser.nintendo.co.jp

The ’’−r’’ turns on redialing, the ’’−d’’ sets the redial delay to 75 seconds, and the ’’−g’’ flag limits redialing to 10 tries. If you like, you can just trust the default redial settings and only use ’’−r.’’

The open command will run the Bookmark Editor if you don’t supply a hostname to open. You can use the Bookmark Editor to select a host and open it by hitting the return key.

The page command lets you browse a remote file one page at a time. This is useful for reading README’s on the remote host without downloading them first. This command uses whatever program you have set the pager field in the Preferences screen to view the file.

The pdir and pls commands are equivalent to dir and ls respectively, only they feed their output to your pager. These commands are primarily for line mode because directory listings can scroll offscreen. If you do a normal ls while in visual mode, if it would go offscreen, the built-in pager kicks in automatically. Therefore I don’t recommend using pdir and pls while in visual mode.

The redir and predir commands give you a way to re-display the last directory listing. The program saves the output from the last dir or ls command you did, so if you want to see it again you can do this without wasting network bandwidth. The predir command is the same as redir, except that the output is fed to your pager.

I have found that I mostly download, and have next to no need at all to upload. But the put command is there in case you need to upload files to remote hosts. For example, if I wanted to send some files to a remote host, I could do:

lcd ~/docs/files
put 02.txt 03.txt 05.txt 07.txt 11.txt

The put command won’t work if you don’t have the proper access permissions on the remote host. Also, this command doesn’t have any of the special features that the get command has, except for the ’’−z’’ option.

The pwd command prints the current remote working directory. In visual mode, this is in the status bar.

If you need to change the name of a remote file, you can use the rename command, like:

rename SPHYGMTR.TAR sphygmomanometer-2.3.1.tar

Of course, when you finish using the program, type quit to end the program (You could also use bye, exit, or ^D).

The quote command can be used to send a direct FTP Protocol command to the remote server. Generally this isn’t too useful to the average user (or me either).

The rhelp command sends a help request to the remote server. The list of FTP Protocol commands is often printed, and sometimes some other information that is actually useful, like how to reach the site administrator.

Depending on the remote server, you may be able to give a parameter to the server also, like:

rhelp NLST

One server responded:

Syntax: NLST [ <sp> path-name ]

If you need to delete a remote file you can try the rm command. Much of the time this won’t work because you won’t have the proper access permissions. This command doesn’t accept any flags, so you can’t nuke a whole tree by using ’’-rf’’ flags like you can on UNIX.

Similarly, the rmdir command removes a directory. Depending on the remote server, you may be able to remove a non-empty directory, so be careful.

The set command is provided for backward compatibility with older versions of the program, and is superseded by the prefs command. The basic syntax is:

set option value

Where the option is the short name of the corresponding field in the Preferences screen. The short names of the preferences fields can be found by browsing your ~/.ncftp/prefs file. This command is mainly for use with line mode, but since that mode is no longer officially supported by me, I want to discourage the use of this command.

One obscure command you may have to use someday is site. The FTP Protocol allows for ’’site specific’’ commands. These ’’site’’ commands vary of course, but one common sub-command that is useful that some sites support is chmod, i.e.:

site chmod 644 README

Try doing one of these to see what the remote server supports, if any:

rhelp SITE
site help

You may need to change transfer types during the course of a session with a server. You can use the type command to do this. Try one of these:

type ascii
type binary
type image

If you ever need to contact me about the program, please familiarize yourself with the version command. This command dumps a lot of information that tells me which edition of the program you are using, and how it was installed on your system. Here’s a way to save the output of this command to a file, so you can send it to me:

version > version.txt

SPECIAL DOWNLOADING FEATURES

You probably already know that you use the get command to copy files on the remote host to the local host. But the get command has a few other tricks that you might find useful. First of all, ncftp skips files you already have. If you try to

get file24

and there is a file named ’’file24’’ in the current local directory already, the program uses some additional heuristics to determine if it should actually waste network bandwidth to download it again.

The program tries to get the date and size of the remote file ’’file24.’’ If that file has the exact same date and size as the local file ’’file24,’’ the program will skip over that file. If the program could not get the date or size of the remote file, or the size differs, the program will go ahead and fetch the file.

In addition, if the local file’s date is newer than the remote file’s date, the program skips the download because it concludes you already have a more recent version.

What all this means for you is that you can use the program to mirror another archive. For example, you might have a task that requires you keep a mirror of all the files of a remote directory called ’’files.’’ In that directory, there might be dozens of files, some of which are updated occasionally. You could use ncftp to help you out by setting the appropriate local and remote directories, then simply doing:

get *

The program will skip over the old files, and only download the files that you don’t have or have been updated since the last time.

Nonetheless, you may want to ignore the program’s advice and download a file anyway, despite the program’s thinking that you don’t need to. You can use the ’’−f’’ flag with get to force a download:

get -f README

You may also need to use the ’’−C’’ flag to force the program to continue downloading where it left off. I sometimes call that feature ’’forced reget’’ for historical reasons.

You can also turn off wildcard matching with get by using the ’’−G’’ flag. Other FTP programs used the syntax

get remote-file [local-file]

which allowed you to specify a local pathname for the file you were trying to download. NcFTP differs in that respect, and if you used the older programs, you would find that the program’s get behaves more like those other program’s mget command. This means that in NcFTP,that

get file01 file02

tries to download remote files named ’’file01’’ and ’’file02.’’ If you like, you can get that older behavior by using the ’’−z’’ flag, so:

get -z file01 ../junk/files/01.txt

would get ’’file01’’ and use the local name ’’../junk/files/01.txt.’’

Another thing that get does is that you can use the ’’−n’’ flag to fetch files that are a certain number of days old or newer. If you just want to get the newest files at an archive, you don’t have to use a full mirror. You can just say ’’download all files that are 3 days old or newer.’’ Do that by going to a directory, and trying:

get -n 3 *

The program also has ’’reget’’ mode built into the get command. Other FTP programs provided a reget command, which was useful when you lost a connection during a download. Instead of the remote host resending the entire file, you could use the reget command to continue the transfer where it was cut off.

NcFTP has this capability built-in, and it examines the date and size of the remote file and local file to determine if the program should continue where it left off last time. If the dates are the same, but the local file is smaller, the program attempts to ’’reget.’’

The last, and most wasteful feature of get is recursive mode, which is turned on with the ’’−R’’ flag. This feature lets you download an entire directory’s contents, i.e.:

get -R /pub/info/help

That creates a directory called ’’./help’’ in the current local directory, and copies all files and subdirectories into it.

Please use some discretion with this feature. If you get a large directory, you could really bog down the remote host. Archive administrators are providing a public service, so don’t abuse the archive so much that they have to shut down public access because the real users of that archive can’t get their work done.

MACROS

The program has a simple macro/alias facility. You can use macros to roll your own commands, or do things when certain events happen.

To use macros, you will need to create and edit the macros file in your .ncftp subdirectory of your home directory. Your ~/.ncftp directory is created for you automatically the first time you run the program, but you have to make the macros file yourself since most users won’t have a need for them.

You can have any number of macros. The syntax is:

macro macro-name
macro-body...
end

Here’s a simple macro that users of the old ftp program might appreciate:

macro binary
type i
end

You could run that macro simply by running the program and typing the macro name as if it were a regular ncftp command.

Macros can also have parameters, much like the Korn Shell’s shell functions and the C-Shell’s aliases. These parameters are sent to your macro, and if your macro uses the appropriate ’’dollar’’ variables, they are expanded. To illustrate, try this macro:

macro cdls
cd $1
ls
end

To run that macro, open a connection and try:

cdls /pub

That would try to cd to /pub, and then try to list its contents with ls.

Dollar variables are somewhat like those in the Bourne and Korn shells. Example syntax:

$4 : Argument 4
$* : All arguments.
$@ : All arguments, each of them surrounded by double quotes.
$(2-5) : Arguments 2, 3, 4, and 5.
$(2,5) : Arguments 2 and 5.
$(3+) : Arguments 3, 4, 5, ..., N.

A better way to code the ’’cdls’’ macro might be:

macro cdls
cd $1
ls $(2+)
end

There are some special macros, which I call event macros. The program looks for macros by special names, and if they exist, runs the macro when that event happens.

One event macro is the .start.ncftp macro. If you have a macro by that name defined in your macros file, the program will run that macro each time you run the program.

Similarly, there is also a .quit.ncftp macro that is run each time you quit the program.

Another set of event macros are site-specific. For example, if I have a site bookmarked as ’’typhoon’’ I could then define macros named .open.typhoon and .close.typhoon which would run each time I opened and closed ’’typhoon.’’

Another, more generic set of event macros are the .open.any and .close.any macros which run when I open or close any site. One possible use for these macros is to run separate shell scripts to do some processing after you finish using a site. I could have a macro like this:

macro .quit.ncftp
echo "Started post-processing downloads at %H:%M:%S"
!sh ~/scripts/download-decoder
echo "Finished post-processing downloads at %H:%M:%S"
end

Another use is to duplicate the old macdef init hack that the traditional ftp program used in its .netrc file. For example:

macro .open.infomac
echo "Getting recent files list"
get -z /pub/info-mac/help/recent-files ~/docs/recent
ls -lrt
end

USING COLON MODE

The colon-mode feature is used 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.

The colon-mode feature is nice if you don’t want to browse around the remote site, and you know exactly want you want. It also comes 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 the Uniform Resource Locator standard also. For example, this would work:

csh> ncftp ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/gif/README

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

This example redirects a remote file into a different location:

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

USING LINE MODE

The only reason I provide line mode is so that the primitive operating systems whose curses library is missing or dysfunctional won’t render the program completely useless.

exceptions of the functions that require visual mode, such as the Preferences screen and the Bookmark Editor. You will have to edit the ~/.ncftp/prefs and ~/.ncftp/bookmarks file manually, with a text editor.

As a small consolation, you get to use the full-powered line-editing libraries, like GNU Readline if they were compiled with the program.

SUMMARY OF COMMAND LINE OPTIONS

When you invoke the program from your shell, there are ’’dash flags’’ you can use like you can with most other UNIX programs.

Here’s a list of options you can use from the command line:

-D : Turns on debugging mode and tracing.
-V : Uses ’’visual’’ mode for this session.
-L : Uses ’’line mode’’ for this session.
-H : Prints the information from the ’’version’’ command and exits.

When you turn on tracing, the program writes a log with debugging information to a file called trace in your .ncftp subdirectory of your home directory. If you need to report a bug, it would be helpful to mail me the trace file so I can track it down better.

In addition to the program flags, you can also use flags from the open and get commands with a colon mode path. Here’s a really complex example:

csh> ncftp −r −d 120 −n 3 sphygmomanometer.unl.edu:/pub/stuff/*

This tries redialing that host every two minutes, and fetching all files from the ’’/pub/stuff’’ directory that are 3 days old or newer.

AUTHOR

NcFTP was written by Mike Gleason, (mgleason [AT] NcFTP.com). NcFTP is copyrighted 1995 by Mike Gleason. All rights reserved.

As of this writing, the most recent version is archived in <ftp://ftp.ncftp.com/ncftp/>;.

THANKS

Ideas and some code contributed by my partner, Phil Dietz,

Thanks to everyone who has helped test the program, and sent in feedback over the years. Your support is what drives me to improve the program!

I’d like to thank my former system administrators, most notably Charles Daniel, for making testing on a variety of platforms possible, letting me have some extra disk space, and for maintaining the UNL FTP site.

I also thank Dale Botkin and Tim Russell at Probe Technology, for giving ncftp a home on probe.net.

For testing above and beyond the call of duty, I am especially grateful to: Phil Dietz, Kok Hon Yin (hkok [AT] yoda.edu), Andrey A. Chernov (ache [AT] astral.su).

Thanks to Tim MacKenzie (t.mackenzie [AT] trl.au) for the filename completion code.

Thanks to DaviD W. Sanderson (dws [AT] ssec.edu), for helping me out with the man page.

BUGS

Due to a limitation in the curses library, scrolling may be slow in visual mode.

Shell escapes, suspending (^Z) and resuming, and interruping (^C) still have quirks with visual mode.

There are no such sites named bowser.nintendo.co.jp or sphygmomanometer.unl.edu.

SEE ALSO

ftp(1), ftpd(8), nslookup(1), archie(1), rcp(1), tftp(1).