/sys$common/syshlp/helplib.hlb TCPIP Services, FTP, FTP Conventions *Conan The Librarian (sorry for the slow response - running on an old VAX) |
Use the following rules for command syntax, quotation marks, and wildcards when you type FTP command lines. o Command formats With the FTP command and most of the commands at the FTP prompt, you can use either DCL-style or UNIX style syntax. For example, the DCL-style DIRECTORY and UNIX style ls commands produce the same results o Quotation marks When you communicate with a non-OpenVMS host, you need to enclose the following with quotation marks: o UNIX path names o UNIX file names with slashes o Lowercase or mixed-case host names, user names, passwords, file names, and command lines In the following example, UNIX path names need quotation marks around them: FTP> put MY.DOC "/usr/users/evt/my.doc" 200 PORT command successful. 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /usr/users/evt/mydoc (130.180.4.8,1 789). 226 Transfer complete. local: WORK1$:[VANA]MY.DOC;2 remote: /usr/users/evt/my.doc 289 bytes sent in 00:00:00.01 seconds (20.15 Kbytes/s) FTP> o Wildcards You can use wildcards in the following FTP commands: DELETE, DIRECTORY, GET, PUT, MGET, MPUT, MDELETE, and MLS. The wildcard characters recognized by FTP are: o The percent sign (%) to represent an individual character o The question mark (?) to represent an individual character o The asterisk (*) to represent multiple characters If any of these characters are part of a file name (not used as a wildcard), you can disable recognition of these characters as wildcards by either enclosing the file name in quotation marks or using the DISABLE PARSE command. o Qualifiers In a DCL-style command line, you can place a command qualifier anywhere on the command line. It is a good practice to follow the OpenVMS recommendation to place the qualifier after the command name.
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