Un-ignored: the dev drive is the ground truth the restoration and emulator work constantly reference (DPL3/LIBDPL + VRENDER i860 renderer source, BT/RP live+dev game trees, VGL_LABS pod boot, scene/audio content). Kept in-repo for the pod-owner community. Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
383 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
383 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
{help}
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The following commands are available in FTP mode:
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ascii, batch, binary, cd, dir, list, get, hash, help, ls, mget, mkdir
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mput, nlst, quit, rmdir, put, type, verbose, view, pager.
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To get more help on any of these commands type 'help <command>'
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{ascii}
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ASCII
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USAGE
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ASCII
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DESCRIPTION
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This command selects ASCII file transfer mode - it is equivalent to
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typing 'TYPE ASCII'.
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EXAMPLES
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ASCII (Select Ascii file transfer format)
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{batch}
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BATCH
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USAGE
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BATCH [ON|OFF]
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DESCRIPTION
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This command will set or display the command batching flag.
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EXAMPLES
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BATCH ON (Sets the batching flag)
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BATCH (Displays the batching flag)
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{binary}
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BINARY
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USAGE
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BINARY
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DESCRIPTION
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This command selects BINARY file transfer mode - it is equivalent to
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typing 'TYPE BINARY', or 'TYPE IMAGE'
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EXAMPLES
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BINARY (Select Binary file transfer format)
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{cd}
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CD
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USAGE
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CD <pathname>
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DESCRIPTION
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This command changes the current directory on the FTP server.
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Use UNIX type path descriptions, eg pub/msdos, rather than MSDOS
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path descriptions, eg pub\msdos. Also note that CD is normally
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case sensitive, unlike MSDOS which is case insensitive - ie MSDos
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is NOT the same as msdos.
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EXAMPLES
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CD pub (Change to the pub subdirectory of the current directory)
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CD .. (Move one level out of the directory tree)
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CD pub/gif (Change to the gif subdirectory of the pub directory).
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{dir}
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DIR
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USAGE
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DIR [<pathname> [<localfile>]]
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DESCRIPTION
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DIR will display the directory listing of a specified path. You can
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also specify a filename mask to search for. If you don't specify a
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path, the current directory will be displayed. If you don't specify
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a filename mask, '*' will be used. Note, paths and filenames are
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often case sensitive.
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If you specify a second parameter, DIR will save the directory listing
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in a file on your local disk.
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DIR is synonymous with LIST.
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EXAMPLES
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DIR (display all the files in the current directory)
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DIR *.zip (display all the files in the current directory which
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end with '.zip')
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DIR pub (display all the files in the pub subdirectory of the
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current directory)
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DIR * dirlist (store a directory listing of all the files in the
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current directory in a file 'dirlist' on your
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local disk)
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{list}
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LIST
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USAGE
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LIST [<pathname> [<localfile>]]
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DESCRIPTION
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LIST will display the directory listing of a specified path. You can
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also specify a filename mask to search for. If you don't specify a
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path, the current directory will be displayed. If you don't specify
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a filename mask, '*' will be used. Note, paths and filenames are
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often case sensitive.
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If you specify a second parameter, LIST will save the directory listing
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in a file on your local disk.
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LIST is synonymous with DIR.
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EXAMPLES
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LIST (display all the files in the current directory)
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LIST *.zip (display all the files in the current directory which
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end with '.zip')
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LIST pub (display all the files in the pub subdirectory of the
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current directory)
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LIST * dirlist (store a directory listing of all the files in the
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current directory in a file 'dirlist' on your
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local disk)
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{get}
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GET
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USAGE
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GET <remote file> [<local file>]
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DESCRIPTION
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Get retrieves a file from the remote system, and stores it on your
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disk. If the 'local file' parameter isn't given then the file will
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be stored using the remote filename. Otherwise the file will
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be stored using the specified local filename.
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Path specifications can be given in either of the remote or local
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file names, but should match either the remote or local file name
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requirements (eg '/' and case sensitivity).
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EXAMPLES
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GET readme (retrieve the file 'readme' from the current directory
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on the remote system, and save it to 'readme' in the
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current directory on the local system).
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GET pub/index ftpdir/index1 (retrieve the index file from the 'pub'
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subdirectory on the remote system, and store it as
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'index1' in the 'ftpdir' subdirectory on the local
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system).
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{hash}
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HASH
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USAGE
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HASH
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DESCRIPTION
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HASH is a synonym for 'VERBOSE 3'. This will display all memesages
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resulting from communication between the local and remote systems,
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and will display a hash mark ('#') for every 1000 bytes which are
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sent or received
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USAGE
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HASH
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{ls}
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LS
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USAGE
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LS [<pathname> [<localfile>]]
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DESCRIPTION
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LS will display the directory listing of a specified path. You can
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also specify a filename mask to search for. If you don't specify a
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path, the current directory will be displayed. If you don't specify
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a filename mask, '*' will be used. Note, paths and filenames are
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often case sensitive.
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If you specify a second parameter, LS will save the directory listing
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in a file on your local disk.
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LS is similar to DIR, but it only displays the file names, without
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all the supplementary data.
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LS is synonymous with NLST.
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EXAMPLES
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LS (display all the files in the current directory)
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LS * dirlist (store a directory listing of all the files in the
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current directory in a file 'dirlist' on your
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local disk)
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{mget}
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MGET
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USAGE
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MGET <file1> [<file> ....]
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DESCRIPTION
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MGET will get a collection of files from the remote system. File names
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may include wildcards which will be expanded into a list of files by
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the remote server.
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Files will be stored on the local system using the same names that
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they had on the server.
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EXAMPLES
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MGET readme index (Get the 'readme' and 'index' files from the
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remote system, storing them as 'readme' and
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'index' on the local system)
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MGET * (Get all files from the current directory on the
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remote system, storing them on the local system
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using the same names)
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{mkdir}
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MKDIR
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USAGE
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MKDIR <remote directory>
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DESCRIPTION
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MKDIR will create a new directory on the remote system. You need
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write access to the remote system to be able to do this.
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EXAMPLES
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MKDIR mydir (create a new subdirectory called 'mydir' on the
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remote system).
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{mput}
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MPUT
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USAGE
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MPUT <file1> [<file> ....]
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DESCRIPTION
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MPUT will send a collection of files to the remote system. File names
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may include wildcards which will be expanded into a list of files by
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the local system.
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Files will be stored on the remote system using the same names that
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they had locally.
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EXAMPLES
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MPUT readme index (Send the 'readme' and 'index' files to the
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remote system, storing them as 'readme' and
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'index' on the remote system)
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MPUT * (Get all files from the current directory on the
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local system, storing them on the remote server
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using the same names)
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{nlst}
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NLST
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USAGE
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NLST [<pathname> [<localfile>]]
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DESCRIPTION
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NLST will display the directory listing of a specified path. You can
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also specify a filename mask to search for. If you don't specify a
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path, the current directory will be displayed. If you don't specify
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a filename mask, '*' will be used. Note, paths and filenames are
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often case sensitive.
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If you specify a second parameter, NLST will save the directory
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listing in a file on your local disk.
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NLST is similar to DIR, but it only displays the file names, without
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all the supplementary data.
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NLST is synonymous with LS.
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EXAMPLES
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NLST (display all the files in the current directory)
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NLST * dirlist (store a directory listing of all the files in the
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current directory in a file 'dirlist' on your
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local disk)
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{quit}
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QUIT
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USAGE
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QUIT
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DESCRIPTION
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QUIT finishes the FTP server session.
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EXAMPLES
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QUIT
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{rmdir}
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RMDIR
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USAGE
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RMDIR
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DESCRIPTION
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RMDIR will delete a directory on the remote server. To use this
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command you need delete access to the remote system.
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EXAMPLES
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RMDIR mydir (this will delete the 'mydir' directory from the
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remote system).
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{put}
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PUT
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USAGE
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PUT <local file> [<remote file>]
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DESCRIPTION
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PUT will send a file from the local system to the remote server.
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If there are two parameters, the second parameter will specify the
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name on the remote system, otherwise it will be given the name of
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the first parameter.
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EXAMPLES
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PUT newfile (send the file 'newfile' to the remote system,
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storing it in the current directory with the name
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'newfile')
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PUT newfile thisfile (send the file 'newfile' to the remote system,
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storing it in the current directory with the
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name 'thisfile')
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{type}
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TYPE
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USAGE
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TYPE [a | i | b | l <bytesize>]
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DESCRIPTION
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TYPE tells both the remote and local systems the type of file that
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is to be transfered. The default is 'A' - 'ASCII' (or text file).
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TYPEs 'b' and 'i' are synonymous and mean 'Binary' or 'Image'.
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Image transfers should be used when transferring executable files,
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or compressed files.
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TYPE 'l' is for 'logical byte size' when exchanging binary files with
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remote servers that use a non-standard word size.
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EXAMPLES
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TYPE A (all future transfers are to use ASCII mode)
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TYPE (display the current transfer mode)
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{verbose}
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VERBOSE
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USAGE
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VERBOSE [0 | 1 | 2 | 3]
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DESCRIPTION
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Verbose sets or displays the level of message output during file
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transfers as follows:
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0 -Display error messages only,
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1 -Display error messages, plus a one line summary after transfers
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2 -Display error and summary messages plus progress messages generated
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by the server. (This is the default),
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3 -Display all messages - also display a '#' character for every 1000
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characters that are sent or received.
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EXAMPLES
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VERBOSE (display the current verbose setting)
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VERBOSE 0 (only display error messages)
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{view}
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VIEW
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USAGE
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VIEW <remote file>
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DESCRIPTION
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VIEW will allow you to view a text file which is on the remote system
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without downloading it first. This can be useful for 'readme' type
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files, where you want to read the file before carrying on with the
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ftp work.
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EXAMPLES
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VIEW readme.ftp (display the 'readme.ftp' file on the remote server)
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{pager}
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PAGER
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USAGE
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PAGER [on|off]
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DESCRIPTION
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PAGER will set or display the session page mode. When the page mode
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is on, all displays will be paused after 24 lines to let you view
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them before pressing a key to continue.
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EXAMPLES
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PAGER (display the current setting of the page mode)
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PAGER on (turn the page mode on for the current FTP session)
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