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This describes the set of shell functions supplied with the source
distribution as an interface to the zftp
builtin command, allowing you
to perform FTP operations from the shell command line or within functions
or scripts. The interface is similar to a traditional FTP client (e.g. the
ftp
command itself, see ftp(1)), but as it is entirely done
within the shell all the familiar completion, editing and globbing features,
and so on, are present, and macros are particularly simple to write as they
are just ordinary shell functions.
The prerequisite is that the zftp
command, as described in
The zsh/zftp Module
, must be available in the
version of zsh
installed at your site. If the shell is configured to
load new commands at run time, it probably is: typing ‘zmodload zsh/zftp
’
will make sure (if that runs silently, it has worked). If this is not the
case, it is possible zftp
was linked into the shell anyway: to test
this, type ‘which zftp
’ and if zftp
is available you will get the
message ‘zftp: shell built-in command
’.
Commands given directly with zftp
builtin may be interspersed between
the functions in this suite; in a few cases, using zftp
directly may
cause some of the status information stored in shell parameters to become
invalid. Note in particular the description of the variables
$ZFTP_TMOUT
, $ZFTP_PREFS
and $ZFTP_VERBOSE
for zftp
.
25.2 Installation | ||
25.3 Functions | ||
25.4 Miscellaneous Features |
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You should make sure all the functions from the Functions/Zftp
directory of the source distribution are available; they all begin with the
two letters ‘zf
’. They may already have been installed on your system;
otherwise, you will need to find them and copy them. The directory should
appear as one of the elements of the $fpath
array (this should already
be the case if they were installed), and at least the function zfinit
should be autoloaded; it will autoload the rest. Finally, to initialize
the use of the system you need to call the zfinit
function. The
following code in your .zshrc
will arrange for this; assume the
functions are stored in the directory ~/myfns
:
fpath=(~/myfns $fpath) autoload -U zfinit zfinit
Note that zfinit
assumes you are using the zmodload
method to
load the zftp
command. If it is already built into the shell, change
zfinit
to zfinit -n
. It is helpful (though not essential) if the
call to zfinit
appears after any code to initialize the new completion
system, else unnecessary compctl
commands will be given.
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The sequence of operations in performing a file transfer is essentially the
same as that in a standard FTP client. Note that, due to a quirk of the
shell’s getopts
builtin, for those functions that handle options you
must use ‘-
-
’ rather than ‘-
’ to ensure the remaining arguments
are treated literally (a single ‘-
’ is treated as an argument).
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zfparams
[ host [ user [ password ... ] ] ]Set or show the parameters for a future zfopen
with no arguments. If
no arguments are given, the current parameters are displayed (the password
will be shown as a line of asterisks). If a host is given, and either the
user or password is not, they will be prompted for; also, any
parameter given as ‘?
’ will be prompted for, and if the ‘?
’ is
followed by a string, that will be used as the prompt. As zfopen
calls
zfparams
to store the parameters, this usually need not be called
directly.
A single argument ‘-
’ will delete the stored parameters. This will
also cause the memory of the last directory (and so on) on the other host
to be deleted.
zfopen
[ -1
] [ host [ user [ password [ account ] ] ] ]If host is present, open a connection to that host under username
user with password password (and, on the rare occasions when it
is necessary, account account). If a necessary parameter is missing or
given as ‘?
’ it will be prompted for. If host is not present, use
a previously stored set of parameters.
If the command was successful, and the terminal is compatible with
xterm
or is sun-cmd
, a summary will appear in the title bar,
giving the local host:directory
and the remote host:directory
;
this is handled by the function zftp_chpwd
, described below.
Normally, the host, user and password are internally
recorded for later re-opening, either by a zfopen
with no arguments, or
automatically (see below). With the option ‘-1
’, no information is
stored. Also, if an open command with arguments failed, the parameters
will not be retained (and any previous parameters will also be deleted).
A zfopen
on its own, or a zfopen -1
, never alters the stored
parameters.
Both zfopen
and zfanon
(but not zfparams
) understand URLs of
the form ftp://
host/path... as meaning to connect to the
host, then change directory to path (which must be a directory,
not a file). The ‘ftp://
’ can be omitted; the trailing ‘/
’ is enough
to trigger recognition of the path. Note prefixes other than
‘ftp:
’ are not recognized, and that all characters after the first
slash beyond host are significant in path.
zfanon
[ -1
] hostOpen a connection host for anonymous FTP. The username used is
‘anonymous
’. The password (which will be reported the first time) is
generated as user@
host; this is then stored in the shell
parameter $EMAIL_ADDR
which can alternatively be set manually to a
suitable string.
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zfcd
[ dir ]zfcd -
zfcd
old newChange the current directory on the remote server: this is implemented to
have many of the features of the shell builtin cd
.
In the first form with dir present, change to the directory dir.
The command ‘zfcd ..
’ is treated specially, so is guaranteed to work on
non-UNIX servers (note this is handled internally by zftp
). If dir
is omitted, has the effect of ‘zfcd ~
’.
The second form changes to the directory previously current.
The third form attempts to change the current directory by replacing the first occurrence of the string old with the string new in the current directory.
Note that in this command, and indeed anywhere a remote filename is
expected, the string which on the local host corresponds to ‘~
’ is
converted back to a ‘~
’ before being passed to the remote machine.
This is convenient because of the way expansion is performed on the command
line before zfcd
receives a string. For example, suppose the command
is ‘zfcd ~/foo
’. The shell will expand this to a full path such as
‘zfcd /home/user2/pws/foo
’. At this stage, zfcd
recognises the
initial path as corresponding to ‘~
’ and will send the directory to
the remote host as ~/foo
, so that the ‘~
’ will be expanded by the
server to the correct remote host directory. Other named directories of
the form ‘~name
’ are not treated in this fashion.
zfhere
Change directory on the remote server to the one corresponding to the
current local directory, with special handling of ‘~
’ as in zfcd
.
For example, if the current local directory is ~/foo/bar
, then
zfhere
performs the effect of ‘zfcd ~/foo/bar
’.
zfdir
[ -rfd
] [ -
] [ dir-options ] [ dir ]Produce a long directory listing. The arguments dir-options and
dir are passed directly to the server and their effect is
implementation dependent, but specifying a particular remote directory
dir is usually possible. The output is passed through a pager
given by the environment variable $PAGER
, or ‘more
’ if that is not
set.
The directory is usually cached for re-use. In fact, two caches are
maintained. One is for use when there is no dir-options or dir,
i.e. a full listing of the current remote directory; it is flushed
when the current remote directory changes. The other is
kept for repeated use of zfdir
with the same arguments; for example,
repeated use of ‘zfdir /pub/gnu
’ will only require the directory to be
retrieved on the first call. Alternatively, this cache can be re-viewed with
the -r
option. As relative directories will confuse
zfdir
, the -f
option can be used to force the cache to be flushed
before the directory is listed. The option -d
will delete both
caches without showing a directory listing; it will also delete the cache
of file names in the current remote directory, if any.
zfls
[ ls-options ] [ dir ]List files on the remote server. With no arguments, this will produce a simple list of file names for the current remote directory. Any arguments are passed directly to the server. No pager and no caching is used.
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zftype
[ type ]With no arguments, show the type of data to be transferred, usually ASCII
or binary. With an argument, change the type: the types ‘A
’ or
‘ASCII
’ for ASCII data and ‘B
’ or ‘BINARY
’, ‘I
’ or
‘IMAGE
’ for binary data are understood case-insensitively.
zfstat
[ -v
]Show the status of the current or last connection, as well as the status of
some of zftp
’s status variables. With the -v
option, a more
verbose listing is produced by querying the server for its version of
events, too.
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The commands for retrieving files all take at least two options. -G
suppresses remote filename expansion which would otherwise be performed
(see below for a more detailed description of that). -t
attempts
to set the modification time of the local file to that of the remote file:
see the description of the function zfrtime
below for more information.
zfget
[ -Gtc
] file1 ...Retrieve all the listed files file1 ... one at a time from the remote
server. If a file contains a ‘/
’, the full name is passed to the
remote server, but the file is stored locally under the name given by the
part after the final ‘/
’. The option -c
(cat) forces all files to
be sent as a single stream to standard output; in this case the -t
option has no effect.
zfuget
[ -Gvst
] file1 ...As zfget
, but only retrieve files where the version on the remote
server is newer (has a later modification time), or where the local file
does not exist. If the remote file is older but the files have different
sizes, or if the sizes are the same but the remote file is newer, the user
will usually be queried. With the option -s
, the command runs silently
and will always retrieve the file in either of those two cases. With the
option -v
, the command prints more information about the files while it
is working out whether or not to transfer them.
zfcget
[ -Gt
] file1 ...As zfget
, but if any of the local files exists, and is shorter than
the corresponding remote file, the command assumes that it is the result of
a partially completed transfer and attempts to transfer the rest of the
file. This is useful on a poor connection which keeps failing.
Note that this requires a commonly implemented, but non-standard, version of the FTP protocol, so is not guaranteed to work on all servers.
zfgcp
[ -Gt
] remote-file local-filezfgcp
[ -Gt
] rfile1 ... ldirThis retrieves files from the remote server with arguments behaving
similarly to the cp
command.
In the first form, copy remote-file from the server to the local file local-file.
In the second form, copy all the remote files rfile1 ... into the local directory ldir retaining the same basenames. This assumes UNIX directory semantics.
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zfput
[ -r
] file1 ...Send all the file1 ... given separately to the remote server. If a
filename contains a ‘/
’, the full filename is used locally to find the
file, but only the basename is used for the remote file name.
With the option -r
, if any of the files are directories they are
sent recursively with all their subdirectories, including files beginning
with ‘.
’. This requires that the remote machine understand UNIX file
semantics, since ‘/
’ is used as a directory separator.
zfuput
[ -vs
] file1 ...As zfput
, but only send files which are newer than their remote
equivalents, or if the remote file does not exist. The logic is the same
as for zfuget
, but reversed between local and remote files.
zfcput
file1 ...As zfput
, but if any remote file already exists and is shorter than the
local equivalent, assume it is the result of an incomplete transfer and
send the rest of the file to append to the existing part. As the FTP
append command is part of the standard set, this is in principle more
likely to work than zfcget
.
zfpcp
local-file remote-filezfpcp
lfile1 ... rdirThis sends files to the remote server with arguments behaving similarly to
the cp
command.
With two arguments, copy local-file to the server as remote-file.
With more than two arguments, copy all the local files lfile1 ... into the existing remote directory rdir retaining the same basenames. This assumes UNIX directory semantics.
A problem arises if you attempt to use zfpcp
lfile1 rdir,
i.e. the second form of copying but with two arguments, as the command has
no simple way of knowing if rdir corresponds to a directory or a
filename. It attempts to resolve this in various ways. First, if the
rdir argument is ‘.
’ or ‘..
’ or ends in a slash, it is assumed
to be a directory. Secondly, if the operation of copying to a remote file
in the first form failed, and the remote server sends back the expected
failure code 553 and a reply including the string ‘Is a directory
’,
then zfpcp
will retry using the second form.
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zfsession
[ -lvod
] [ sessname ]Allows you to manage multiple FTP sessions at once. By default,
connections take place in a session called ‘default
’; by giving the
command ‘zfsession
sessname’ you can change to a new or existing
session with a name of your choice. The new session remembers its own
connection, as well as associated shell parameters, and also the host/user
parameters set by zfparams
. Hence you can have different sessions set
up to connect to different hosts, each remembering the appropriate host,
user and password.
With no arguments, zfsession
prints the name of the current session;
with the option -l
it lists all sessions which currently exist, and
with the option -v
it gives a verbose list showing the host and
directory for each session, where the current session is marked with an
asterisk. With -o
, it will switch to the most recent previous session.
With -d
, the given session (or else the current one) is removed;
everything to do with it is completely forgotten. If it was the only
session, a new session called ‘default
’ is created and made current.
It is safest not to delete sessions while background commands using
zftp
are active.
zftransfer
sess1:
file1 sess2:
file2Transfer files between two sessions; no local copy is made. The file is read from the session sess1 as file1 and written to session sess2 as file file2; file1 and file2 may be relative to the current directories of the session. Either sess1 or sess2 may be omitted (though the colon should be retained if there is a possibility of a colon appearing in the file name) and defaults to the current session; file2 may be omitted or may end with a slash, in which case the basename of file1 will be added. The sessions sess1 and sess2 must be distinct.
The operation is performed using pipes, so it is required that the connections still be valid in a subshell, which is not the case under versions of some operating systems, presumably due to a system bug.
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The two functions zfmark
and zfgoto
allow you to ‘bookmark’ the
present location (host, user and directory) of the current FTP connection
for later use. The file to be used for storing and retrieving bookmarks is
given by the parameter $ZFTP_BMFILE
; if not set when one of the two
functions is called, it will be set to the file .zfbkmarks
in the
directory where your zsh startup files live (usually ~
).
zfmark
[ bookmark ]If given an argument, mark the current host, user and directory under the
name bookmark for later use by zfgoto
. If there is no connection
open, use the values for the last connection immediately before it was
closed; it is an error if there was none. Any existing bookmark
under the same name will be silently replaced.
If not given an argument, list the existing bookmarks and the points to
which they refer in the form user@
host:
directory;
this is the format in which they are stored, and the file may be edited
directly.
zfgoto
[ -n
] bookmarkReturn to the location given by bookmark, as previously set by
zfmark
. If the location has user ‘ftp
’ or ‘anonymous
’, open
the connection with zfanon
, so that no password is required. If the
user and host parameters match those stored for the current session, if
any, those will be used, and again no password is required. Otherwise a
password will be prompted for.
With the option -n
, the bookmark is taken to be a nickname stored by
the ncftp
program in its bookmark file, which is assumed to be
~/.ncftp/bookmarks
. The function works identically in other ways.
Note that there is no mechanism for adding or modifying ncftp
bookmarks
from the zftp functions.
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Mostly, these functions will not be called directly (apart from
zfinit
), but are described here for completeness. You may wish to
alter zftp_chpwd
and zftp_progress
, in particular.
zfinit
[ -n
]As described above, this is used to initialize the zftp function system.
The -n
option should be used if the zftp command is already built into
the shell.
zfautocheck
[ -dn
]This function is called to implement automatic reopening behaviour, as
described in more detail below. The options must appear in the first
argument; -n
prevents the command from changing to the old directory,
while -d
prevents it from setting the variable do_close
, which it
otherwise does as a flag for automatically closing the connection after a
transfer. The host and directory for the last session are stored in the
variable $zflastsession
, but the internal host/user/password parameters
must also be correctly set.
zfcd_match prefix suffix
This performs matching for completion of remote directory names. If the
remote server is UNIX, it will attempt to persuade the server to list the
remote directory with subdirectories marked, which usually works but is not
guaranteed. On other hosts it simply calls zfget_match
and hence
completes all files, not just directories. On some systems, directories
may not even look like filenames.
zfget_match prefix suffix
This performs matching for completion of remote filenames. It caches files
for the current directory (only) in the shell parameter $zftp_fcache
.
It is in the form to be called by the -K
option of compctl
, but
also works when called from a widget-style completion function with
prefix and suffix set appropriately.
zfrglob varname
Perform remote globbing, as describes in more detail below. varname is the name of a variable containing the pattern to be expanded; if there were any matches, the same variable will be set to the expanded set of filenames on return.
zfrtime
lfile rfile [ time ]Set the local file lfile to have the same modification time as the
remote file rfile, or the explicit time time in FTP format
CCYYMMDDhhmmSS
for the GMT timezone. This uses the shell’s
zsh/datetime
module to perform the conversion from
GMT to local time.
zftp_chpwd
This function is called every time a connection is opened, or closed, or
the remote directory changes. This version alters the title bar of an
xterm
-compatible or sun-cmd
terminal emulator to reflect the
local and remote hostnames and current directories. It works best when
combined with the function chpwd
. In particular, a function of
the form
chpwd() { if [[ -n $ZFTP_USER ]]; then zftp_chpwd else # usual chpwd e.g put host:directory in title bar fi }
fits in well.
zftp_progress
This function shows the status of the transfer. It will not write anything
unless the output is going to a terminal; however, if you transfer files in
the background, you should turn off progress reports by hand using
‘zstyle ':zftp:*' progress none
’. Note also that if you alter it, any
output must be to standard error, as standard output may be a file
being received. The form of the progress meter, or whether it is used at
all, can be configured without altering the function, as described in the
next section.
zffcache
This is used to implement caching of files in the current directory for
each session separately. It is used by zfget_match
and zfrglob
.
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Various styles are available using the standard shell style mechanism,
described in
The zsh/zutil Module. Briefly, the
command ‘zstyle ':zftp:*'
style value ...’.
defines the style to have value value; more than one value may be
given, although that is not useful in the cases described here. These
values will then be used throughout the zftp function system. For more
precise control, the first argument, which gives a pattern that matches contexts in which the
style applies, can be modified to include a particular function, as for
example ‘:zftp:zfget
’: the style will then have the given value only
in the zfget
function, and will override styles set under ‘:zftp:*
’.
Note that only the top level function name, as called by
the user, is used; calling of lower level functions is transparent to the
user. Hence modifications to the title bar in zftp_chpwd
use the
contexts :zftp:zfopen
, :zftp:zfcd
, etc., depending where it was
called from. The following styles are understood:
progress
Controls the way that zftp_progress
reports on the progress of a
transfer. If empty, unset, or ‘none
’, no progress report is made; if
‘bar
’ a growing bar of inverse video is shown; if ‘percent
’ (or any
other string, though this may change in future), the percentage of the file
transferred is shown. The bar meter requires that the width of the
terminal be available via the $COLUMNS
parameter (normally this is set
automatically). If the size of the file being transferred is not
available, bar
and percent
meters will simply show the number of
bytes transferred so far.
When zfinit
is run, if this style is not defined for the context
:zftp:*
, it will be set to ‘bar’.
update
Specifies the minimum time interval between updates of the progress meter
in seconds. No update is made unless new data has been received, so the
actual time interval is limited only by $ZFTP_TIMEOUT
.
As described for progress
, zfinit
will force this to default to 1.
remote-glob
If set to ‘1
’, ‘yes
’ or ‘true
’, filename generation (globbing) is
performed on the remote machine instead of by zsh itself; see below.
titlebar
If set to ‘1
’, ‘yes
’ or ‘true
’, zftp_chpwd
will put the remote host and
remote directory into the titlebar of terminal emulators such as xterm or
sun-cmd that allow this.
As described for progress
, zfinit
will force this to default to 1.
chpwd
If set to ‘1
’ ‘yes
’ or ‘true
’, zftp_chpwd
will call the function
chpwd
when a connection is closed. This is useful if the remote host
details were put into the terminal title bar by zftp_chpwd
and your
usual chpwd
also modifies the title bar.
When zfinit
is run, it will determine whether chpwd
exists and if
so it will set the default value for the style to 1 if none exists
already.
Note that there is also an associative array zfconfig
which contains
values used by the function system. This should not be modified or
overwritten.
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The commands for retrieving files usually perform filename generation
(globbing) on their arguments; this can be turned off by passing the option
-G
to each of the commands. Normally this operates by retrieving a
complete list of files for the directory in question, then matching these
locally against the pattern supplied. This has the advantage that the full
range of zsh patterns (respecting the setting of the option
EXTENDED_GLOB
) can be used. However, it means that the directory part
of a filename will not be expanded and must be given exactly. If the
remote server does not support the UNIX directory semantics, directory
handling is problematic and it is recommended that globbing only be used
within the current directory. The list of files in the current directory,
if retrieved, will be cached, so that subsequent globs in the same
directory without an intervening zfcd
are much faster.
If the remote-glob
style (see above) is set, globbing is instead
performed on the remote host: the server is asked for a list of matching
files. This is highly dependent on how the server is implemented, though
typically UNIX servers will provide support for basic glob patterns. This
may in some cases be faster, as it avoids retrieving the entire list of
directory contents.
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As described for the zfopen
command, a subsequent zfopen
with no
parameters will reopen the connection to the last host (this includes
connections made with the zfanon
command). Opened in this fashion, the
connection starts in the default remote directory and will remain open
until explicitly closed.
Automatic re-opening is also available. If a connection is not currently
open and a command requiring a connection is given, the last connection is
implicitly reopened. In this case the directory which was current when the
connection was closed again becomes the current directory (unless, of
course, the command given changes it). Automatic reopening will also take
place if the connection was close by the remote server for whatever reason
(e.g. a timeout). It is not available if the -1
option to zfopen
or zfanon
was used.
Furthermore, if the command issued is a file transfer, the connection will
be closed after the transfer is finished, hence providing a one-shot mode
for transfers. This does not apply to directory changing or listing
commands; for example a zfdir
may reopen a connection but will leave it
open. Also, automatic closure will only ever happen in the same command as
automatic opening, i.e a zfdir
directly followed by a zfget
will
never close the connection automatically.
Information about the previous connection is given by the zfstat
function. So, for example, if that reports:
Session: default Not connected. Last session: ftp.bar.com:/pub/textfiles
then the command zfget file.txt
will attempt to reopen a connection to
ftp.bar.com
, retrieve the file /pub/textfiles/file.txt
, and
immediately close the connection again. On the other hand, zfcd ..
will open the connection in the directory /pub
and leave it open.
Note that all the above is local to each session; if you return to a previous session, the connection for that session is the one which will be reopened.
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Completion of local and remote files, directories, sessions and bookmarks
is supported. The older, compctl
-style completion is defined when
zfinit
is called; support for the new widget-based completion system is
provided in the function Completion/Zsh/Command/_zftp
, which should be
installed with the other functions of the completion system and hence
should automatically be available.
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