lftp(1) | General Commands Manual | lftp(1) |
lftp - Sophisticated file transfer program
lftp [-d] [-e cmd] [-p
port] [-u user[,pass]] [site]
lftp -f script_file
lftp -c commands
lftp --version
lftp --help
This man page documents lftp version 4.8.1.
lftp is a file transfer program that allows sophisticated FTP, HTTP and other connections to other hosts. If site is specified then lftp will connect to that site otherwise a connection has to be established with the open command.
lftp can handle several file access methods - FTP, FTPS, HTTP, HTTPS, HFTP, FISH, SFTP and file (HTTPS and FTPS are only available when lftp is compiled with GNU TLS or OpenSSL library). You can specify the method to use in `open URL' command, e.g. `open http://www.us.kernel.org/pub/linux'. HFTP is ftp-over-http-proxy protocol. It can be used automatically instead of FTP if ftp:proxy is set to `http://proxy[:port]'. Fish is a protocol working over an ssh connection to a unix account. SFtp is a protocol implemented in SSH2 as SFTP subsystem.
Besides FTP-like protocols, lftp has support for BitTorrent protocol as `torrent' command. Seeding is also supported.
Every operation in lftp is reliable, that is any non-fatal error is handled properly and the operation is repeated. So if downloading breaks, it will be restarted from the point automatically. Even if FTP server does not support the REST command, lftp will try to retrieve the file from the very beginning until the file is transferred completely.
lftp has shell-like command syntax allowing you to launch several commands in parallel in background (&). It is also possible to group commands within () and execute them in background. All background jobs are executed in the same single process. You can bring a foreground job to background with ^Z (c-z) and back with command `wait' (or `fg' which is alias to `wait'). To list running jobs, use command `jobs'. Some commands allow redirecting their output (cat, ls, ...) to file or via pipe to external command. Commands can be executed conditionally based on termination status of previous command (&&, ||).
If you exit lftp before all jobs are not finished yet, lftp will move itself to nohup mode in background. The same thing happens with a real modem hangup or when you close an xterm.
lftp has built-in mirror which can download or update a whole directory tree. There is also reverse mirror (mirror -R) which uploads or updates a directory tree on server. Mirror can also synchronize directories between two remote servers, using FXP if available.
There is command `at' to launch a job at specified time in current context, command `queue' to queue commands for sequential execution for current server, and much more.
On startup, lftp executes /etc/lftp.conf and then ~/.lftprc and ~/.lftp/rc (or ~/.config/lftp/rc if ~/.lftp does not exist). You can place aliases and `set' commands there. Some people prefer to see full protocol debug, use `debug' to turn the debug on. Use `debug 3' to see only greeting messages and error messages.
lftp has a number of settable variables. You can use `set -a' to see all variables and their values or `set -d' to see list of defaults. Variable names can be abbreviated and prefix can be omitted unless the rest becomes ambiguous.
If lftp was compiled with OpenSSL (configure --with-openssl) it includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)
! shell command
Launch shell or shell command.
!ls
To do a directory listing of the local host.
alias [name [value]]
Define or undefine alias name. If value is omitted, the alias is undefined, else it takes the value value. If no argument is given the current aliases are listed.
alias dir ls -lF alias less zmore
at time [ -- command ]
Wait until the given time and execute given (optional) command. See also at(1).
attach [PID]
Attach the terminal to specified backgrounded lftp process.
bookmark [subcommand]
The bookmark command controls bookmarks.
Site names can be used in the open command directly as-is or in any command that accepts input URLs using the bm:site/path format.
add <name> [<loc>] | add current place or given location to bookmarks and bind to given name |
del <name> | remove bookmark with name |
edit | start editor on bookmarks file |
import <type> | import foreign bookmarks |
list | list bookmarks (default) |
cache [subcommand]
The cache command controls local memory cache. The following subcommands are recognized:
stat | print cache status (default) |
on|off | turn on/off caching |
flush | flush cache |
size lim | set memory limit, -1 means unlimited |
expire Nx | set cache expiration time to N seconds (x=s) minutes (x=m) hours (x=h) or days (x=d) |
cat files
cat outputs the remote file(s) to stdout. (See also more, zcat and zmore)
cd rdir
Change current remote directory. The previous remote directory is stored as `-'. You can do `cd -' to change the directory back. The previous directory for each site is also stored on disk, so you can do `open site; cd -' even after lftp restart.
chmod [OPTS] mode files...
Change permission mask on remote files. The mode can be an octal number or a symbolic mode (see chmod(1)).
-c, | --changes | like verbose but report only when a change is made |
-f, | --quiet | suppress most error messages |
-v, | --verbose | output a diagnostic for every file processed |
-R, | --recursive | change files and directories recursively |
close [-a]
Close idle connections. By default only with the current server, use -a to close all idle connections.
cls [OPTS] files...
`cls' tries to retrieve information about specified files or directories and outputs the information according to format options. The difference between `ls' and `cls' is that `ls' requests the server to format file listing, and `cls' formats it itself, after retrieving all the needed information.
-1 | single-column output | |
-a, | --all | show dot files |
-B, | --basename | show basename of files only |
--block-size=SIZ | use SIZ-byte blocks | |
-d, | --directory | list directory entries instead of contents |
-F, | --classify | append indicator (one of /@) to entries |
-h, | --human-readable | print sizes in human readable format (e.g., 1K) |
--si | likewise, but use powers of 1000 not 1024 | |
-k, | --kilobytes | like --block-size=1024 |
-l, | --long | use a long listing format |
-q, | --quiet | don't show status |
-s, | --size | print size of each file |
--filesize | if printing size, only print size for files | |
-i, | --nocase | case-insensitive pattern matching |
-I, | --sortnocase | sort names case-insensitively |
-D, | --dirsfirst | list directories first |
--sort=OPT | "name", "size", "date" | |
-S | sort by file size | |
--user, --group, | ||
--perms, --date, | ||
--linkcount, --links | show individual fields | |
--time-style=STYLE | use specified time format |
command cmd args...
execute given command ignoring aliases.
debug [OPTS] level|off
Switch debugging to level or turn it off. Options:
-T | truncate output file |
-o <file> | redirect debug output to the file |
-c | show message context |
-p | show PID |
-t | show timestamps |
du [OPTS] path...
Summarize disk usage. Options:
-a, | --all | write counts for all files, not just directories |
--block-size=SIZ | use SIZ-byte blocks | |
-b, | --bytes | print size in bytes |
-c, | --total | produce a grand total |
-d, | --max-depth=N | print the total for a directory (or file, with --all) only if it is N or fewer levels below the command line argument; --max-depth=0 is the same as --summarize |
-F, | --files | print number of files instead of sizes |
-h, | --human-readable | print sizes in human readable format (e.g., 1K 234M 2G) |
-H, | --si | likewise, but use powers of 1000 not 1024 |
-k, | --kilobytes | like --block-size=1024 |
-m, | --megabytes | like --block-size=1048576 |
-S, | --separate-dirs | do not include size of subdirectories |
-s, | --summarize | display only a total for each argument |
--exclude=PAT | exclude files that match PAT |
echo [-n] string
Prints (echos) the given string to the display.
edit [OPTS] file
Retrieve remote file to a temporary location, run a local editor on it and upload the file back if changed. Options:
-k | keep the temporary file |
-o <temp> | explicit temporary file location |
eval [-f format ] args...
without -f it executes given arguments as a command. With -f, arguments are transformed into a new command. The format can contain plain text and placeholders $0...$9 and $@, corresponding to the arguments.
exit [bg] [top] [parent] [kill] [code]
exit will exit from lftp or move to background if there are active jobs. If no job is active, code is passed to operating system as lftp's termination status. If code is omitted, the exit code of last command is used.
`exit bg' forces moving to background when cmd:move-background is false. `exit top' makes top level `shell' (internal lftp command executor) terminate. `exit parent' terminates the parent shell when running a nested script. `exit kill' kills all numbered jobs before exiting. The options can be combined, e.g. `at 08:00 -- exit top kill &' kills all jobs and makes lftp exit at specified time.
fg
Alias for `wait'.
find [OPTS] directory...
List files in the directory (current directory by default) recursively. This can help with servers lacking ls -R support. You can redirect output of this command. Options:
-d MD, | --max-depth=MD | specify maximum scan depth |
-l, | --ls | use long listing format |
ftpcopy
Obsolete. Use one of the following instead:
get ftp://... -o ftp://... get -O ftp://... file1 file2... put ftp://... mput ftp://.../* mget -O ftp://... ftp://.../*
get [-E] [-a] [-c] [-e] [-P N] [-O base] rfile [-o lfile] ...
Retrieve the remote file rfile and store it as the local file lfile. If -o is omitted, the file is stored to local file named as base name of rfile. You can get multiple files by specifying multiple instances of rfile (and -o lfile). Does not expand wildcards, use mget for that.
-c | continue, reget |
-E | delete source files after successful transfer |
-e | delete target file before the transfer |
-a | use ascii mode (binary is the default) |
-P N | download N files in parallel |
-O <base> | specifies base directory or URL where files should be placed |
Examples:
get README get README -o debian.README get README README.mirrors get README -o debian.README README.mirrors -o debian.mirrors get README -o ftp://some.host.org/debian.README get README -o ftp://some.host.org/debian-dir/ (end slash is important)
get1 [OPTS] rfile
Transfer a single file. Options:
-o <lfile> | destination file name (default - basename of rfile) |
-c | continue, reget |
-E | delete source files after successful transfer |
-a | use ascii mode (binary is the default) |
-d | create the directory of the target file |
--source-region=<from-to> | transfer specified region of source file |
--target-position=<pos> | position in target file to write data at |
glob [OPTS] [command] patterns
Glob given patterns containing metacharacters and pass result to given command or return appropriate exit code.
-f | plain files (default) |
-d | directories |
-a | all types |
--exist | return zero exit code when the patterns expand to non-empty list |
--not-exist | return zero exit code when the patterns expand to an empty list |
Examples:
glob echo * glob --exist *.csv && echo "There are *.csv files"
help [cmd]
Print help for cmd or if no cmd was specified print a list of available commands.
history [OPTS] [cnt]
View or manipulate the command history. Optional argument cnt specifies the number of history lines to list, or "all" to list all entries. Options:
-w <file> | Write history to file. |
-r <file> | Read history from file; appends to current history. |
-c | Clear the history. |
-l | List the history (default). |
jobs [OPTS] [job_no...]
List running jobs. If job_no is specified, only list a job with that number. Options:
-v | verbose, several -v increase verbosity |
-r | list just one specified job without recursion |
kill all|job_no
Delete specified job with job_no or all jobs. (For job_no see jobs)
lcd ldir
Change current local directory ldir. The previous local directory is stored as `-'. You can do `lcd -' to change the directory back.
ln [-s] existing-file new-link
Make a hard/symbolic link to an existing file. Option -s selects creation of a symbolic link.
local command
Run specified command with local directory file:// session instead of remote session. Examples:
local pwd local ls local mirror /dir1 /dir2
lpwd
Print current working directory on local machine.
ls params
List remote files. You can redirect output of this command to file or via pipe to external command. By default, ls output is cached, to see new listing use rels or cache flush.
mget [-c] [-d] [-a] [-E] [-e] [-P N] [-O base] files
Gets selected files with expanded wildcards.
-c | continue, reget. |
-d | create directories the same as file names and get the files into them instead of current directory. |
-E | delete source files after successful transfer |
-e | delete target file before the transfer |
-a | use ascii mode (binary is the default) |
-P N | download N files in parallel |
-O <base> | specifies base directory or URL where files should be placed |
mirror [OPTS] [source [target]]
Mirror specified source directory to the target directory.
By default the source is remote and the target is a local directory. When using -R, the source directory is local and the target is remote. If the target directory is omitted, base name of the source directory is used. If both directories are omitted, current local and remote directories are used.
The source and/or the target may be URLs pointing to directories.
If the target directory ends with a slash (except the root directory) then base name of the source directory is appended.
-c, | --continue | continue a mirror job if possible |
-e, | --delete | delete files not present at the source |
--delete-excluded | delete files excluded at the target | |
--delete-first | delete old files before transferring new ones | |
--depth-first | descend into subdirectories before transferring files | |
--scan-all-first | scan all directories recursively before transferring files | |
-s, | --allow-suid | set suid/sgid bits according to the source |
--allow-chown | try to set owner and group on files | |
--ascii | use ascii mode transfers (implies --ignore-size) | |
--ignore-time | ignore time when deciding whether to download | |
--ignore-size | ignore size when deciding whether to download | |
--only-missing | download only missing files | |
--only-existing | download only files already existing at target | |
-n, | --only-newer | download only newer files (-c won't work) |
--upload-older | upload even files older than the target ones | |
--transfer-all | transfer all files, even seemingly the same at the target site | |
--no-empty-dirs | don't create empty directories (implies --depth-first) | |
-r, | --no-recursion | don't go to subdirectories |
--recursion=MODE | go to subdirectories on a condition | |
--no-symlinks | don't create symbolic links | |
-p, | --no-perms | don't set file permissions |
--no-umask | don't apply umask to file modes | |
-R, | --reverse | reverse mirror (put files) |
-L, | --dereference | download symbolic links as files |
--overwrite | overwrite plain files without removing them first | |
--no-overwrite | remove and re-create plain files instead of overwriting | |
-N, | --newer-than=SPEC | download only files newer than specified time |
--older-than=SPEC | download only files older than specified time | |
--size-range=RANGE | download only files with size in specified range | |
-P, | --parallel[=N] | download N files in parallel |
--use-pget[-n=N] | use pget to transfer every single file | |
--on-change=CMD | execute the command if anything has been changed | |
--loop | repeat mirror until no changes found | |
-i RX, | --include=RX | include matching files |
-x RX, | --exclude=RX | exclude matching files |
-I GP, | --include-glob=GP | include matching files |
-X GP, | --exclude-glob=GP | exclude matching files |
--include-rx-from=FILE | ||
--exclude-rx-from=FILE | ||
--include-glob-from=FILE | ||
--exclude-glob-from=FILE | load include/exclude patterns from the file, one per line | |
-f FILE, | --file=FILE | mirror a single file or globbed group (e.g. /path/to/*.txt) |
-F DIR, | --directory=DIR | mirror a single directory or globbed group (e.g. /path/to/dir*) |
-O DIR, | --target-directory=DIR | target base path or URL |
-v, | --verbose[=level] | verbose operation |
--log=FILE | write lftp commands being executed to FILE | |
--script=FILE | write lftp commands to FILE, but don't execute them | |
--just-print, --dry-run | same as --script=- | |
--max-errors=N | stop after this number of errors | |
--skip-noaccess | don't try to transfer files with no read access. | |
--use-cache | use cached directory listings | |
--Remove-source-files | remove source files after transfer (use with caution) | |
--Remove-source-dirs | remove source files and directories after transfer (use with caution). Top level directory is not removed if it's name ends with a slash. | |
--Move | same as --Remove-source-dirs | |
-a | same as --allow-chown --allow-suid --no-umask |
GP is a glob pattern, e.g. `*.zip'.
Include and exclude options can be specified multiple times. It means that a file or directory would be mirrored if it matches an include and does not match to excludes after the include, or does not match anything and the first check is exclude. Directories are matched with a slash appended.
Note that symbolic links are not created when uploading to remote server, because FTP protocol cannot do it. To upload files the links refer to, use `mirror -RL' command (treat symbolic links as files).
For options --newer-than and --older-than you can either specify a file or time specification like that used by at(1) command, e.g. `now-7days' or `week ago'. If you specify a file, then modification time of that file will be used.
Verbosity level can be selected using --verbose=level option or by several -v options, e.g. -vvv. Levels are:
0 - no output (default) 1 - print actions 2 - +print not deleted file names (when -e is not specified) 3 - +print directory names which are mirrored
--only-newer turns off file size comparison and uploads/downloads only newer files even if size is different. By default older files are transferred and replace newer ones.
--upload-older allows replacing newer remote files with older ones (when the target side is remote). Some remote back-ends cannot preserve timestamps so the default is to keep newer files.
Recursion mode can be one of `always', `never', `missing', `newer'. With the option `newer' mirror compares timestamps of directories and enters a directory only if it is older or missing on the target side. Be aware that when a file changes the directory timestamp may stay the same, so mirror won't process that directory.
The options --file and --directory may be used multiple times and even mixed provided that base directories of the paths are the same.
You can mirror between two servers if you specify URLs instead of directories. FXP is automatically used for transfers between FTP servers, if possible.
Some FTP servers hide dot-files by default (e.g. .htaccess), and show them only when LIST command is used with -a option. In such case try to use `set ftp:list-options -a'.
The recursion modes `newer' and `missing' conflict with --scan-all-first, --depth-first, --no-empty-dirs and setting mirror:no-empty-dirs=true.
mkdir [-p] [-f] dir(s)
Make remote directories. If -p is used, make all components of paths. The -f option makes mkdir quiet and suppresses messages.
module module [ args ]
Load given module using dlopen(3) function. If module name does not contain a slash, it is searched in directories specified by module:path variable. Arguments are passed to module_init function. See README.modules for technical details.
more files
Same as `cat files | more'. if PAGER is set, it is used as filter. (See also cat, zcat and zmore)
mput [-c] [-d] [-a] [-E] [-e] [-P N] [-O base] files
Upload files with wildcard expansion. By default it uses the base name of local name as remote one. This can be changed by `-d' option.
-c | continue, reput |
-d | create directories the same as in file names and put the files into them instead of current directory |
-E | delete source files after successful transfer (dangerous) |
-e | delete target file before the transfer |
-a | use ascii mode (binary is the default) |
-P N | upload N files in parallel |
-O <base> | specifies base directory or URL where files should be placed |
mrm file(s)
Same as `glob rm'. Removes specified file(s) with wildcard expansion.
mmv [-O directory] file(s) directory
Move specified files to a target directory. The target directory can be specified after -O option or as the last argument.
-O <dir> | specifies the target directory where files should be placed |
mv file1 file2
Rename file1 to file2. No wildcard exmapsion is performed. If you give more than two arguments, or the last argument ends with a slash, then mmv command is executed instead.
nlist [args]
List remote file names
open [OPTS] site
Select a server by host name, URL or bookmark. When an URL or bookmark is given, automatically change the current working directory to the directory of the URL. Options:
-e cmd | execute the command just after selecting the server |
-u user[,pass] | use the user/password for authentication |
-p port | use the port for connection |
-s slot | assign the connection to this slot |
-d | enable debug |
-B | don't look up bookmarks |
--user user | use the user for authentication |
--password pass | use the password for authentication |
--env-password | take password from LFTP_PASSWORD environment variable |
site | host name, URL or bookmark name |
pget [OPTS] rfile [-o lfile]
Gets the specified file using several connections. This can speed up transfer, but loads the net and server heavily impacting other users. Use only if you really have to transfer the file ASAP. Options:
-c | continue transfer. Requires lfile.lftp-pget-status file. |
-n maxconn | set maximum number of connections (default is taken from pget:default-n setting) |
put [-E] [-a] [-c] [-e] [-P N] [-O base] lfile [-o rfile]
Upload lfile with remote name rfile. If -o omitted, the base name of lfile is used as remote name. Does not expand wildcards, use mput for that.
-o <rfile> | specifies remote file name (default - basename of lfile) |
-c | continue, reput. It requires permission to overwrite remote files |
-E | delete source files after successful transfer (dangerous) |
-e | delete target file before the transfer |
-a | use ascii mode (binary is the default) |
-P N | upload N files in parallel |
-O <base> | specifies base directory or URL where files should be placed |
pwd [-p]
Print current remote URL. Use `-p' option to show password in the URL.
queue [-n num ] cmd
Add the given command to queue for sequential execution. Each site has its own queue. `-n' adds the command before the given item in the queue. Don't try to queue `cd' or `lcd' commands, it may confuse lftp. Instead do the cd/lcd before `queue' command, and it will remember the place in which the command is to be done. It is possible to queue up an already running job by `queue wait <jobno>', but the job will continue execution even if it is not the first in queue.
`queue stop' will stop the queue, it will not execute any new commands, but already running jobs will continue to run. You can use `queue stop' to create an empty stopped queue. `queue start' will resume queue execution. When you exit lftp, it will start all stopped queues automatically.
`queue' with no arguments will either create a stopped queue or print queue status.
queue --delete|-d [index or wildcard expression]
Delete one or more items from the queue. If no argument is given, the last entry in the queue is deleted.
queue --move|-m <index or wildcard expression> [index]
Move the given items before the given queue index, or to the end if no destination is given.
-q | Be quiet. |
-v | Be verbose. |
-Q | Output in a format that can be used to re-queue. Useful with --delete. |
Examples:
> get file & [1] get file > queue wait 1 > queue get another_file > cd a_directory > queue get yet_another_file
queue -d 3 | Delete the third item in the queue. |
queue -m 6 4 | Move the sixth item in the queue before the fourth. |
queue -m "get*zip" 1 | Move all commands matching "get*zip" to the beginning of the queue. (The order of the items is preserved.) |
queue -d "get*zip" | Delete all commands matching "get*zip". |
quote cmd
For FTP - send the command uninterpreted. Use with caution - it can lead to unknown remote state and thus will cause reconnect. You cannot be sure that any change of remote state because of quoted command is solid - it can be reset by reconnect at any time.
For HTTP - specific to HTTP action. Syntax: ``quote <command> [<args>]''. Command may be ``set-cookie'' or ``post''.
open http://www.site.net quote set-cookie "variable=value; othervar=othervalue" set http:post-content-type application/x-www-form-urlencoded quote post /cgi-bin/script.cgi "var=value&othervar=othervalue" > local_file
For FISH - send the command uninterpreted. This can be used to execute arbitrary commands on server. The command must not take input or print ### at new line beginning. If it does, the protocol will become out of sync.
open fish://server quote find -name \*.zip
reget rfile [-o lfile]
Same as `get -c'.
rels [args]
Same as `ls', but ignores the cache.
renlist [args]
Same as `nlist', but ignores the cache.
repeat [OPTS] [[-d] delay] [command]
Repeat specified command with a delay between iterations. Default delay is one second, default command is empty.
-c <count> | maximum number of iterations |
-d <delay> | delay between iterations |
--while-ok | stop when command exits with non-zero code |
--until-ok | stop when command exits with zero code |
--weak | stop when lftp moves to background. |
Examples:
repeat at tomorrow -- mirror repeat 1d mirror
reput lfile [-o rfile]
Same as `put -c'.
rm [-r] [-f] files
Remove remote files. Does not expand wildcards, use mrm for that. -r is for recursive directory remove. Be careful, if something goes wrong you can lose files. -f suppress error messages.
rmdir dir(s)
Remove remote directories.
scache [session]
List cached sessions or switch to specified session.
set [var [val]]
Set variable to given value. If the value is omitted, unset the variable. Variable name has format ``name/closure'', where closure can specify exact application of the setting. See below for details. If set is called with no variable then only altered settings are listed. It can be changed by options:
-a | list all settings, including default values |
-d | list only default values, not necessary current ones |
site site_cmd
Execute site command site_cmd and output the result. You can redirect its output.
sleep interval
Sleep given time interval and exit. Interval is in seconds by default, but can be suffixed with 'm', 'h', 'd' for minutes, hours and days respectively. See also at.
slot [name]
Select specified slot or list all slots allocated. A slot is a connection to a server, somewhat like a virtual console. You can create multiple slots connected to different servers and switch between them. You can also use slot:name as a pseudo-URL evaluating to that slot location.
Default readline binding allows quick switching between slots named 0-9 using Meta-0 - Meta-9 keys (often you can use Alt instead of Meta).
source file
source -e command
Execute commands recorded in file file or returned by specified external command.
source ~/.lftp/rc source -e echo help
suspend
Stop lftp process. Note that transfers will be also stopped until you continue the process with shell's fg or bg commands.
torrent [OPTS] torrent-files...
Start BitTorrent process for the given torrent-files, which can be a local file, URL, magnet link or plain info_hash written in hex or base32. Local wildcards are expanded. Existing files are first validated unless --force-valid option is given. Missing pieces are downloaded. Files are stored in specified directory or current working directory by default. Seeding continues until ratio reaches torrent:stop-on-ratio setting or time of torrent:seed-max-time runs out.
Options:
-O <directory> | specifies base directory where files should be placed |
--force-valid | skip file validation (if you are sure they are ok). |
--only-new | stop if the metadata is known already or the torrent is complete. |
--only-incomplete | stop if the torrent is already complete. |
--dht-bootstrap=<node> | bootstrap DHT by sending a query to specified node. This option should be used just once to fill the local node cache. Port number may be given after colon, default is 6881. Here are some nodes for bootstrapping: dht.transmissionbt.com, router.utorrent.com, router.bittorrent.com. |
--share | share specified file or directory using BitTorrent protocol. Magnet link is printed when it's ready. |
user user [pass]
user URL [pass]
Use specified info for remote login. If you specify an URL with user name, the entered password will be cached so that future URL references can use it.
version
Print lftp version.
wait [jobno]
wait all
Wait for specified job to terminate. If jobno is omitted, wait for last backgrounded job.
`wait all' waits for all jobs to terminate.
zcat files
Same as cat, but filter each file through zcat. (See also cat, more and zmore)
zmore files
Same as more, but filter each file through zcat. (See also cat, zcat and more)
On startup, lftp executes ~/.lftprc and ~/.lftp/rc (or ~/.config/lftp/rc if ~/.lftp does not exist). You can place aliases and `set' commands there. Some people prefer to see full protocol debug, use `debug' to turn the debug on.
There is also a system-wide startup file in /etc/lftp.conf. It can be in different directory, see FILES section.
lftp has the following settable variables (you can also use `set -a' to see all variables and their values):
The following escapes are supported:
\a | bell |
\e | escape |
\n | new line |
\s | "lftp" |
\v | lftp version |
\T | the status string |
set cmd:verify-path/hftp://* false cd directory &
If you specify a closure, then rate limitation will be applied to sum of connections to a single matching host.
set sftp:connect-program rsh set sftp:server-program /usr/libexec/openssh/sftp-server
set ssl:priority "NORMAL:-SSL3.0:-TLS1.0:-TLS1.1:+TLS1.2"
The name of a variable can be abbreviated unless it becomes ambiguous. The prefix before `:' can be omitted too. You can set one variable several times for different closures, and thus you can get a particular settings for particular state. The closure is to be specified after variable name separated with slash `/'.
The closure for `dns:', `net:', `ftp:', `http:', `hftp:' domain variables is currently just the host name as you specify it in the `open' command (with some exceptions where closure is meaningless, e.g. dns:cache-size). For some `cmd:' domain variables the closure is current URL without path. For `log:' domain variables the closure is either `debug' or `xfer'. For other variables it is not currently used. See examples in the sample lftp.conf.
Certain commands and settings take a time interval parameter. It has the format Nx[Nx...], where N is time amount (floating point) and x is time unit: d - days, h - hours, m - minutes, s - seconds. Default unit is second. E.g. 5h30m or 5.5h. Also the interval can be `infinity', `inf', `never', `forever' - it means infinite interval. E.g. `sleep forever' or `set dns:cache-expire never'.
Boolean settings can be one of (true, on, yes, 1, +) for a True value or one of (false, off, no, 0, -) for a False value.
Tri-boolean settings have either a boolean value or `auto'.
Integer settings can have a suffix: k - kibi, m - mebi, g - gigi, etc. They can also have a prefix: 0 - octal, 0x - hexadecimal.
Lftp can speed up FTP operations by sending several commands at once and then checking all the responses. See ftp:sync-mode variable. Sometimes this does not work, thus synchronous mode is the default. You can try to turn synchronous mode off and see if it works for you. It is known that some network software dealing with address translation works incorrectly in the case of several FTP commands in one network packet.
RFC959 says: ``The user-process sending another command before the completion reply would be in violation of protocol; but server-FTP processes should queue any commands that arrive while a preceding command is in progress''. Also, RFC1123 says: ``Implementors MUST NOT assume any correspondence between READ boundaries on the control connection and the Telnet EOL sequences (CR LF).'' and ``a single READ from the control connection may include more than one FTP command''.
So it must be safe to send several commands at once, which speeds up operation a lot and seems to work with all Unix and VMS based ftp servers. Unfortunately, windows based servers often cannot handle several commands in one packet, and so cannot some broken routers.
The following environment variables are processed by lftp:
ftpd(8), ftp(1)
RFC854 (telnet), RFC959 (ftp), RFC1123, RFC1945 (http/1.0), RFC2052 (SRV RR),
RFC2228 (ftp security extensions), RFC2389 (ftp FEAT), RFC2428 (ftp/ipv6),
RFC2518 (WebDAV), RFC2616 (http/1.1), RFC2617 (http/1.1 authentication),
RFC2640 (ftp i18n), RFC3659 (ftp extensions), RFC4217 (ftp over ssl),
BEP0003 (BitTorrent Protocol), BEP0005 (DHT Protocol), BEP0006 (Fast
Extension), BEP0007 (IPv6 Tracker Extension), BEP0009 (Extension for Peers
to Send Metadata Files), BEP0010 (Extension Protocol), BEP0012 (Multitracker
Metadata Extension), BEP0023 (Tracker Returns Compact Peer Lists), BEP0032
(DHT Extensions for IPv6).
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-preston-ftpext-deflate-04 (ftp deflate
transmission mode),
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-dd-pret-00 (PRET command),
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-13 (sftp).
http://wiki.theory.org/BitTorrentSpecification
http://www.bittornado.com/docs/multitracker-spec.txt
http://www.rasterbar.com/products/libtorrent/dht_sec.html (DHT security
extension)
http://xbtt.sourceforge.net/udp_tracker_protocol.html (UDP tracker)
Alexander V. Lukyanov lav@yars.free.net
This manual page was originally written by Christoph Lameter <clameter@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. The page was improved and updated later by Nicolas Lichtmaier <nick@Feedback.com.ar>, James Troup <J.J.Troup@comp.brad.ac.uk> and Alexander V. Lukyanov <lav@yars.free.net>.
10 Aug 2017 |