T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4749.1 | | SIEVAX::JAMIE | Batteries not included! | Thu May 16 1991 14:52 | 14 |
| Yeah, I got the same thing. A real pain. Though apparently you can FTP
mail by sending mail to DECWRL::FTPMAIL but I've NEVER got it to work
properly. I got the HELP file sent once but that was it. Also, given
that DECWRL is well and truly stuffed at the moment, it's fairly
academic for the time being anyway!
Shame about Princeton though. Wouldn't it be nice if we had FTP
available to us and be done with it !!!
Cheers,
Jamie.
|
4749.2 | it works for me | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Thu May 16 1991 19:31 | 17 |
|
after a suitable amount of grief, I figured out how to get
DECWRL::FTPMAIL to work for me. The following works for grabbing
binary files off of ab20.
From: BAGELS::BRANNON
To: NM%DECWRL::FTPMAIL
CC: BRANNON
Subj: ftp
reply [email protected]
connect ab20.larc.nasa.gov
uuencode
binary
get /amiga/utils/archivers/puttrax.lzh
quit
|
4749.3 | What are the FTPMAIL commands | DECWET::DAVIS | you always get what you deserve | Fri May 17 1991 00:14 | 7 |
| Do you have the help file for FTPMAIL? Are the commands similar
to bitftp(i.e get, dir, etc...)? I'm just full of questions tonight
;^)
mark
|
4749.4 | Good Advice | FOSTER::PILEEKI | | Fri May 17 1991 09:32 | 12 |
| re. 2
Your suggestion seems to be working. I sent mail last night
and received a reply this morning stating that my request for
the file had been entered in the queue and I should receive it
later today.
Thank you for the info.
Steve.............
|
4749.5 | Commands are:y | ARRODS::GOLDSTEIN | Steve G DTN: 847-5416/5455 | Fri May 17 1991 10:31 | 47 |
|
re.1
Here are the commands after I sent a HELP mail...:-
From: DECWRL::"[email protected]" "ftpmail" 17-MAY-1991 10:23:39.50
To: arrods::goldstein
CC:
Subj: your ftpmail request has been received
>>> this help file was last edited on 15-February-1991
>>>
>>> commands are:
reply <MAILADDR> set reply addr, since headers are usually wrong
connect [HOST [USER [PASS]]] defaults to gatekeeper.dec.com, anonymous
ascii files grabbed are printable ascii
binary files grabbed are compressed or tar or both
compress compress binaries using Lempel-Ziv encoding
compact compress binaries using Huffman encoding
uuencode binary files will be mailed in uuencode format
btoa binary files will be mailed in btoa format
ls (or dir) PLACE short (long) directory listing
get FILE get a file and have it mailed to you
quit terminate script, ignore rest of mail message
(use if you have a .signature or
are a VMSMAIL user)
>>> notes:
-> you must give a "connect" command, default host is
gatekeeper.dec.com, default user is anonymous, default
password is your mail address.
-> binary files will not be compressed unless 'compress' or 'compact'
command is given; use this if at all possible, it helps a lot.
-> binary files will always be formatted into printable ASCII
with "btoa" or "uuencode" (default is "btoa").
-> all retrieved files will be split into 60KB chunks and mailed.
-> VMS/DOS/Mac versions of uudecode, atob, compress and compact
are available, ask your LOCAL wizard about them.
% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
Received: by enet-gw.pa.dec.com; id AC07454; Fri, 17 May 91 02:21:59 -0700
Received: by uucp-gw-1.pa.dec.com; id AA16181; Fri, 17 May 91 02:17:12 -0700
Date: Fri, 17 May 91 02:17:12 -0700
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected] (ftpmail)
To: arrods::goldstein
Subject: your ftpmail request has been received
|
4749.6 | More help | KALI::PLOUFF | Ahhh... cider! | Fri May 17 1991 11:15 | 13 |
| Couple of notes from a user...
1. Expect to wait overnight up to several days.
2. Always use "binary" and "uuencode" commands for binary files.
3. When retrieving the typical binary archive file, do NOT use
"compress" or "compact."
4. You must use the full directory path in each "get" and "dir"
command. There's no "cd" command.
5. This notesfile is the "LOCAL wizard" -- Paul Vixie has funny ideas
about VMS system support.
6. For more information, read the Usenet newsgroup "dec.mail.ftpmail".
Wes
|
4749.7 | | SIEVAX::JAMIE | Batteries not included! | Fri May 17 1991 11:23 | 12 |
| Wow! It'd be faster to pull it across over my old 300 baud modem!
I'd have thought that the speed could be upped a bit!
Oh well! I'll have to stick to my old method of mailing people on the
machine who then mail me the files I want!
Cheers,
Jamie.
|
4749.8 | But it's free... | KALI::PLOUFF | Ahhh... cider! | Fri May 17 1991 13:47 | 24 |
| Jamie,
The problem is not the transfer speed. DEC Western Research Lab is
connected at 10 MBPS to many large institutions across the country
(much better than internal DEC connectivity, as a matter of fact).
However, Paul Vixie, writer and maintainer of the decwrl ftpmail
server, has sensibly decreed that it should run during the nighttime in
the Pacific time zone. What with lousy connectivity to/from California
inside the corporation, rather frequent outages, and loading that's
sure to increase with the restriction of BITFTP, it's quite possible
that a request might not be serviced the first night.
Fastest service I ever got was to dial in at 7:30 AM Eastern time, send
my request, and get the files back an hour later. On the other hand,
during holiday weekends, the BITFTP server has responded in minutes.
The topic of external FTP access for mere mortal DECcies is better
suited for somewhere like HUMAN::SECURITY_POLICY.
It's worth pointing out that Vixie put this thing on the air as an
intellectual challenge, and that it is not funded or supported except
in Paul's spare time.
Wes
|
4749.9 | FTP Deep Thought... | CSCOA1::KENDRIX_J | Crisis?! No Crisis, This is FUN! | Fri May 17 1991 17:38 | 9 |
| Speaking of FTPing... has anyone been able to get a reponse from Deep Thoughts
file server? I've tried serveral times just to get it to send me the help
file, all to no avail...
Cheers,
JK
--==++ "CARPE DIEM - Sieze the Day!!" ++==--
|
4749.10 | lost in deepthot | DECWET::DAVIS | you always get what you deserve | Fri May 17 1991 19:46 | 5 |
| I tried deepthot with no results. The IP routing gets hosed somewhere
along the way. I just sent another list request and am awaiting a
reply.
md
|
4749.11 | deepthot list request filled | DECWET::DAVIS | you always get what you deserve | Sat May 18 1991 16:56 | 7 |
| I finally got through to deepthot. I have a lharc'd listing of the
files located there. If there is interest I will upload to TAPE, or I
can mail you the uuencoded archive. It arrived in 5 pieces. Let me
know.
mark
|
4749.12 | | SIEVAX::JAMIE | Batteries not included! | Sun May 19 1991 08:18 | 6 |
| There's a message from Paul Vixie in dec.mail.ftpmail saying that it IS
now funded, they've got FOUR new machines to connect up for the gateway
and possibly DECUAC and CRL will have FTP mail servers on them as well!
So it's starting to look good... just got to be patient (not a quality
of mine ;-)
|
4749.13 | AB20 FTP index uploaded to TAPE:: | BOMBE::MOORE | Amiga: Where 'multimedia' REALLY began | Mon Jun 03 1991 05:28 | 3 |
| I've uploaded a current version of the index of files on AB20 (FILES.Z)
to TAPE::AMIGA:[UPLOAD]AB20_FILES.LIS. This will help you locate file
for your FTPmail requests...
|
4749.14 | Directory Listings - Getting Them | XSTACY::PATTISON | A rolling stone gets the worm | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:06 | 19 |
|
>> ls (or dir) PLACE short (long) directory listing
The trouble with this is you only get one directory's worth of information,
which might (and probably will) contain subdirectories.
However where the ftp site is a VMS system I was able in one case to get the
directory of USR:[ANONYMOUS.AMIGA-SIG...]*.*;*
Can anyone suggest how to get a 'tree' of information sent via ftp to you
from a unix system? As far as I know there is no direct translation of [...]
in unix-ese.
Is it worth trying, for example, something along the lines of...
dir "-R /amiga"
dir "`find /amiga -name \* -print`"
Dave
|
4749.15 | | STAR::GUINEAU | but what was the question? | Mon Jun 24 1991 14:50 | 7 |
| I think most ftp mail servers will parse the commands you send. Unless the
server has a recursive listing command, you might be out of luck.
If you are connected to an ftp site over the internet, you can just
use the Unix commands (ls -R).
john
|