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Full Discussion: Managed file transfer
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Managed file transfer Post 302518507 by dcarrion87 on Friday 29th of April 2011 11:49:46 PM
Old 04-30-2011
Thanks for your response. It's good to hear opinions from others on matters such as this. I would really like to have something like Tidal or JScape (Managed File Transfer and Network Solutions) but it becomes quite difficult convincing the bosses to fork out and more so get the guys to move their systems over. We're fairly small scale in all this but have enough systems to be painful to migrate.

I think for now I'm going to go with polling "hot folders", move them onto DMZ host with some sort of ticket as part of our existing queuing systems and then let the DMZ host handle the transfer. If it fails transfer (from DMZ host to third party), it can create a queue file in a folder, which I can monitor out of Nagios to see if there are any pending transfers. At this point, the onus has moved off the internal processing systems, and if necessary certain departments can get spammed about "Failed to send to third party". If it fails copying from processing server to DMZ host then the files stay where they are anyway and I get spammed about "Failed to send to transfer system".

Hopefully this thread may help others who are facing similar situations in the area of manged transfer systems.
 

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libcurl(3)						      libcurl easy interface							libcurl(3)

NAME
libcurl-easy - easy interface overview DESCRIPTION
When using libcurl's "easy" interface you init your session and get a handle (often referred to as an "easy handle"), which you use as input to the easy interface functions you use. Use curl_easy_init(3) to get the handle. You continue by setting all the options you want in the upcoming transfer, the most important among them is the URL itself (you can't transfer anything without a specified URL as you may have figured out yourself). You might want to set some callbacks as well that will be called from the library when data is available etc. curl_easy_setopt(3) is used for all this. When all is setup, you tell libcurl to perform the transfer using curl_easy_perform(3). It will then do the entire operation and won't return until it is done (successfully or not). After the transfer has been made, you can set new options and make another transfer, or if you're done, cleanup the session by calling curl_easy_cleanup(3). If you want persistent connections, you don't cleanup immediately, but instead run ahead and perform other transfers using the same easy handle. libcurl 7.10.7 12 Aug 2003 libcurl(3)
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