I am really new to unix and want to setup an ftp server on my PC
I am running a Ultra 5 with solaris 9 on it.
I cannot seem to find *any* documentation on how to do this. So I was hoping somebody could point me in the right direction.
:confused: (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm attempting to FTP several files using MGET. My problem is that I need to cd to a directory with this naming convention:
YYMMDDHHMM - where the hour and minute is unknown
When I issue cd /ftpdirectory/YYMMDD* from FTP, I receive "No such file or directory
I need a way to get the... (6 Replies)
When a user FTP's to their own directory, they can go up the directory and view others files, of course they can not overwrite them but are able to download them if they wish to, is there any way to stop them from view their files and have them be only able to view files that they have permissions... (3 Replies)
Once a file is ftped to a server is there a way that you can prevent that file from being overwritten if the same process tries to ftp a file with the same name again? (6 Replies)
I'm basically trying to FTP a file to a differnt node, first putting the FTP commmands into a text file and then piping the commands file into the ftp command as follows....
echo "user $USERNAME $PASSWORD" > ftp_cmds
echo "put $SQLOUT /users/$USERNAME/$SQLOUT" >> ftp_cmds
echo "quit" >>... (4 Replies)
How do you limit an ftp user access to a certain Unix path when putting/getting file to/from your server? And how do you restrict the ftp user from using "cd" or "ls" commands? Given that the ftp user knows the ftp userid, password, and your server ip address.
Thanks in advanced :) (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I'm new to this group and this is my first post to this group.
I need to write a shell script for the requirement given below:
1. I need to connect to a ftp server with my username and password
2. I need to go to some(input) directory.
3. I will have files with same names and... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i have a simple question here--
if we dont use binary while doing a ftp of a file,any sort of problem can arise from this or it is ok.
Thanks (2 Replies)
HI
In my script its like this
------------
echo "Enter filename"
read fname
ftp -v -n abcd.efh.kk.com << EOF
user userid pwd
bin
mget $fname.tar--not working if i give "$fname", works only as "demo.tar"
bye
------------
My target is to get a $fname.tar from a remote host.How... (4 Replies)
I have this FTP script:
ADDR=168.218.95.172
ftp -inv $ADDR <<- ftpcmds
user HEHCFTP H$h673sp ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lena keung
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
funzip
FUNZIP(1) General Commands Manual FUNZIP(1)NAME
funzip - filter for extracting from a ZIP archive in a pipe
SYNOPSIS
funzip [-password] [input[.zip|.gz]]
ARGUMENTS
[-password]
Optional password to be used if ZIP archive is encrypted. Decryption may not be supported at some sites. See DESCRIPTION for more
details.
[input[.zip|.gz]]
Optional input archive file specification. See DESCRIPTION for details.
DESCRIPTION
funzip without a file argument acts as a filter; that is, it assumes that a ZIP archive (or a gzip'd(1) file) is being piped into standard
input, and it extracts the first member from the archive to stdout. When stdin comes from a tty device, funzip assumes that this cannot be
a stream of (binary) compressed data and shows a short help text, instead. If there is a file argument, then input is read from the speci-
fied file instead of from stdin.
A password for encrypted zip files can be specified on the command line (preceding the file name, if any) by prefixing the password with a
dash. Note that this constitutes a security risk on many systems; currently running processes are often visible via simple commands (e.g.,
ps(1) under Unix), and command-line histories can be read. If the first entry of the zip file is encrypted and no password is specified on
the command line, then the user is prompted for a password and the password is not echoed on the console.
Given the limitation on single-member extraction, funzip is most useful in conjunction with a secondary archiver program such as tar(1).
The following section includes an example illustrating this usage in the case of disk backups to tape.
EXAMPLES
To use funzip to extract the first member file of the archive test.zip and to pipe it into more(1):
funzip test.zip | more
To use funzip to test the first member file of test.zip (any errors will be reported on standard error):
funzip test.zip > /dev/null
To use zip and funzip in place of compress(1) and zcat(1) (or gzip(1) and gzcat(1)) for tape backups:
tar cf - . | zip -7 | dd of=/dev/nrst0 obs=8k
dd if=/dev/nrst0 ibs=8k | funzip | tar xf -
(where, for example, nrst0 is a SCSI tape drive).
BUGS
When piping an encrypted file into more and allowing funzip to prompt for password, the terminal may sometimes be reset to a non-echo mode.
This is apparently due to a race condition between the two programs; funzip changes the terminal mode to non-echo before more reads its
state, and more then ``restores'' the terminal to this mode before exiting. To recover, run funzip on the same file but redirect to
/dev/null rather than piping into more; after prompting again for the password, funzip will reset the terminal properly.
There is presently no way to extract any member but the first from a ZIP archive. This would be useful in the case where a ZIP archive is
included within another archive. In the case where the first member is a directory, funzip simply creates the directory and exits.
The functionality of funzip should be incorporated into unzip itself (future release).
SEE ALSO gzip(1), unzip(1), unzipsfx(1), zip(1), zipcloak(1), zipinfo(1), zipnote(1), zipsplit(1)URL
The Info-ZIP home page is currently at
http://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/
or
ftp://ftp.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/ .
AUTHOR
Mark Adler (Info-ZIP)
Info-ZIP 20 April 2009 (v3.95) FUNZIP(1)