Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat FTP stuck in 150 ascii after executing command Post 302996484 by cees09 on Wednesday 26th of April 2017 04:11:51 PM
Old 04-26-2017
FTP stuck in 150 ascii after executing command

Hi,

We have 2 linux RH servers (Server A and Server B), that were configured the same way. Same OS version, same ftp client, etc.

The ftp client that we had installe, was downloaded from rpmbone site and the filename is: ftp-0.17-53.el6.x86_64

The permissions were already set up equally, at a firewall level, for both servers. Both are on the same vlan 10.240.194.x/23
The FTP server configuration is unknown to us, because it's own by another company. So far they provided ip, user/passwd and told us to use active mode.

Server A connects to the ftp server without issues. It allows to pwd, ls, change directory and of course upload/download files.

Server B does connect as well. But when we try to list files/directories, find current dir location, or upload/download files we can't. So far the only thing we are able to do, is change to another directory.


Everytime we try, to do at least a simple ls,pwd we get this msg
Code:
200 PORT command successful. 
150 Opening ASCII mode data connection.      (it gets stuck here for a couple of seconds)
500 Command not understood.

As far as I understand, that ftp client, which is installed in both servers, doesn't have anything to be changed or configured.


Does anyone has an idea of what could be check/change to make the other server work. Sadly the FTP server, is not owned by our company. I tried to do some search, but haven't been lucky.


Any help is appreciated.

Last edited by rbatte1; 04-27-2017 at 06:02 AM.. Reason: Added CODE tags for output
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

FTP - Executing Commands

I have written a script to ftp a file from Unix to an NT machine to authenticate ftp login I have added the information into the .netrc file when logged in using ftp the commands are not executed. Does anybody know how to make the command execute once username and password have been provided using... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hesmas
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing statements after quit in FTP.

In my shell script I am doing FTP along with other process. But all the statements after the "quit" command in FTP are not getting executed. Example: echo "This is a shell script to FTP a file" #ftp -inv <server name> <<eol>> <logfilename> #user <userid> <password> #put <filename> #quit... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dharmesht
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Ftp :bin and ascii

Hi , I am trying to ftp a file once using ascii mode and once binary mode The ftp prompt shows different bytes transferred for each of them but at the destination server,each one of these files gets created with the same byte size and are identical.Can anyone shed any light on this ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: smehra
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

FTP'ed in ASCII a word file, how to recover

This is my worst nightmare in recent years!!! I spent two days writing a proposal due tomorrow, ftp'ed the Word doc to a Unix machine in ASCII mode (i forgot to turn BIN on). Then I was trying to help a colleague download it and I accidently download the ASCII file back to the same dir on my... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: venkir
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

executing *.bat file on windows from Unix box via ftp command

I have created get_list.bat file containing following line: dir /B /O-d >file_list.txt I am executing ftp command from Unix box and transferring get_list.bat file to windows server. In my next ftp command I am trying to execute this test.bat file by entering this line: get_list or by... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: alx
9 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

ftp - determine ascii or binary file

Hello, How to i determine via ftp commandline if files on ftp server is ascii or binary files. Like every other comon windows ftp program does it automatically. regards Thomas (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: congo
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

executing commands through FTP session

Dears, i want to execute unix commands through FTP session those commands like grep XXXXX file name > new file tar new file ..... etc Please let me know how to so thank you (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: faiz
3 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

stuck in editing file with cat command

Hi, While editing a small text file with cat command i pressed ctrl-d to send eof, instead of coming out of cat command it echoed ^D to the screen. Same thing is happening to ctrl-c. After googling i found this is because of trap. The problem is i m stuck in editing mode and cannot get the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: TITANIUM
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

FTP Issue with Non ascii character

I have one file .dat file on windows server containg the following text "Bürki" Now When I am using FTP (get) command from UNIX server the text is appering is as "Bürki" I want to preserve the text in the file on UNIX server as it is in source file. Could you please suggest some... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bhushan D
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Stuck process when using sed command

$BIN/sql.py "select * from reporting.V_AMSNB_OPT_PB_LOAD" | sed -n "2,$ p" | sed "s/ /,/g" > $DATADIR/OPT_PB_LOAD_AMSNB.csv if The processes that get created from the above code gets stuck...as in the processes get created but then never completes. (or at least we assume it never completes... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mimiyj
1 Replies
FTP-UPLOAD(1p)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    FTP-UPLOAD(1p)

NAME
ftp-upload - batch transfer local files to an FTP server SYNOPSIS
ftp-upload [any-switch]... {[repeatable-switch]... file...}... DESCRIPTION
ftp-upload is used to send local files to an FTP server. It isn't interactive, it's meant to be used from scripts. It is disciplined about its exit value and it doesn't output informational messages by default. There are two kinds of switches. Initial switches have to appear before any filenames, they affect the session as a whole. Repeatable switches can appear interspersed with the file names, they affect the transfer of the files which appear after them on the command line. OPTIONS
Initial switches These have to be used before any file names listed on the command line. --debug Turn debugging on. --help Show the usage message and die. --ignore-quit-failure Don't complain or set a failure exit code just because the QUIT command fails. This can be necessary because some servers, in blatant disregard of RFC 959, close the command channel when you send them an ABOR command. -v, --verbose Print informational messages to stdout. --version Show the version number and exit. Initial switches which specify connection information These also have to be used before any file names listed on the command line. They specify the information used to set up the FTP connec- tion. --account account This specifies the account to be used when logging into the remote system. This is distinct from the user name used to log in. Few systems need this. There is no default. -h, --host host Specify the host to which to connect. There is no default, you have to specify this switch. --passive Force the use of passive (PASV) transfers. Passive transfers are required with some firewall configurations, but if you have such you'd do better to configure Net::FTP so that it knows when to use them (see Net::Config). If you need to use passive transfers with certain (broken) servers, however, this switch is your best bet. Alternatively, you can set $FTP_PASSIVE to 1 in the environment (see Net::FTP). --password pw This gives the password which will be used to login. The default is your email address. Note that you should not specify a real (secret) password this way, as on most systems anybody on the machine can see the arguments you pass to your commands. Use one of other password-setting switches instead. -s, --password-stdin This tells ftp-upload to read the password from standard input. No prompt will be printed, and a single line will be read. Most peo- ple will use this switch to specify the password. Eg, echo 3x9sjJJh | ftp-upload -sh $host -u $user $file Using echo this way is safe where the --password switch isn't if the echo command is built in to the shell. --password-fd fd This is like --password-stdin except that it reads the password from the file descriptor numbered fd. ftp-upload -h $host -u $user --password-fd=3 3<$pw_file $file -u, --user user Specify the user name to use when logging in. The default is "anonymous". Repeatable switches These switches can be used anywhere on the command line (except after the last file name). They affect the transfer of files listed after them. --as remote-name Normally a file is transferred using the same name it has locally. If you use this switch the next file transferred will be called remote-name on the other host instead. ftp-upload --host $host --as index.htm index.html -a, --ascii Perform transfers in ASCII mode. -b, --binary Perform transfers in binary mode. This is the default. -d, --dir dir Change directory to dir on the FTP server before continuing. You can use this multiple times between files, ftp-upload will chdir once for each time you specify it. Using ".." as the dir will cause an FTP "CDUP" to be done rather than a "CWD". --full-path Normally uploaded files go into the current directory on the remote host, even when the local file name given contains slashes. Eg, if you say ftp-upload -h $host /etc/motd ftp-upload will upload the file as motd, not /etc/motd. This differs from how the standard ftp program works, and it also differs with how ftp-upload worked before version 1.3. If you specify --full-path, you'll get the other behavior. A request to upload dir/file will tell the server to store dir/file rather than file. When you use --as the --full-path setting doesn't matter. --full-path only tells the program what name to use when it's choosing the name. --no-full-path Disable --full-path. This is the default. -l, --ls Try to get a remote directory listing of files after transferring them. I say "try" because there's no guaranteed way to do this with the FTP protocol. The command I run is "LIST file". This will generally work if file doesn't contain any special characters. -L, --no-ls Disable the --ls behavior. --tmp-none Transfer files directly, don't do anything special to try to ensure that they don't appear under their real names on the remote machine until the transfer is finished. Each file is transferred with a single simple "STOR". This is the default. --tmp-samedir Transfer files to the remote machine using a temporary name, then rename them when the transfer finishes. This won't work if the remote server doesn't give a recognizable response to the "STOU" command. If the server's response to "STOU" isn't recognized by Net::FTP but is reasonable, Graham Barr might be willing to change Net::FTP to recognize it. If you like you can send the "--debug" output to me and I'll coordinate such requests. --tmp-dir dir Transfer files to dir on the remote host, then rename them when the transfer is complete. This is safer than --tmp-samedir because it doesn't use "STOU" and so it works with more servers. ftp-upload -h $host --tmp-dir incoming $file --tmp-format fmt Transfer files to "sprintf(fmt, file base name)", then rename them when the transfer is complete. Like --tmp-dir, this is safer than --tmp-samedir because it doesn't use "STOU" and so it works with more servers. ftp-upload -h $host --tmp-format tmp.%s $file AUTHOR
Roderick Schertler <roderick@argon.org> perl v5.8.7 2006-03-16 FTP-UPLOAD(1p)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:58 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy