cadaver - A command-line WebDAV client for Unix.
cadaver [-trp[-r file][-p host[:port]]][-V][-h]
http://hostname[:port]/path
cadaver supports file upload, download, on-screen display,
namespace operations (move and copy), collection creation and deletion, and
locking operations.
Its operation is similar to the standard BSD ftp(1) client
and the Samba Project's smbclient(1). A user familiar with these
tools should be quite comfortable with cadaver.
cadaver supports automatically logging in to servers
requiring authentication via a .netrc file (similar to ftp(1) - see
section "THE .netrc FILE" below).
- -t, --tolerant
- Allow cd/open into non-WebDAV enabled collection; use if the server or
proxy server has WebDAV compliance problems.
- -r, --rcfile=file
- Use this rcfile rather than the default of ~/.cadaverrc
- -p, --proxy=host[:port]
- Connect using the proxy host "host" and optional proxy port
"port".
- -V, --version
- Display version information and exit.
- -h, --help
- Display this help message and exit.
The file ~/.netrc may be used to automatically login to a
server requiring authentication. The following tokens (separated by spaces,
tabs or newlines) may be used:
machine host
Identify a remote machine host which is compared
with the hostname given on the command line or as an argument to the
open command. Any subsequent tokens up to the end of file or the next
machine or default token are associated with this entry.
default
This is equivalent to the machine token but
matches any hostname. Only one default token may be used and it must be
after all machine tokens.
login username
Specifies the username to use when logging in to the
remote machine.
password string
passwd string
Specifies the password to use when logging in to the
remote machine.
Any other tokens (as described in ftp(1)) are ignored.
- ~/.cadaverrc
- Individual user settings that can override cadaver defaults and to script
cadaver. Can be changed by the "--rcfile" option.
- ~/.netrc
- Login and initialization information used by the auto-login process. See
section "THE .netrc FILE" for details.
Joe Orton <https://github.com/notroj/cadaver>