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4.1 Functions
ftp-connection?
ftp-establish-connection
ftp-close-connection
ftp-cd
ftp-directory-list
ftp-make-file-seconds
ftp-download-file
ftp-upload-file
ftp-delete-file
ftp-make-directory
ftp-delete-directory
ftp-rename-file
4.2 FTP Unit
ftp@
4.3 FTP Signature
ftp^

4 FTP: Client

Micah Flatt
and Chen Xiao <[email protected]>

 (require net/ftp) package: net-lib
The net/ftp library provides utilities for FTP client operations.

4.1 Functions

procedure

(ftp-connection? v)  boolean?

  v : any/c
Returns #t if v represents an FTP connection as returned by ftp-establish-connection, #f otherwise.

procedure

(ftp-establish-connection server    
  port-no    
  user    
  passwd)  ftp-connection?
  server : string?
  port-no : (integer-in 0 65535)
  user : string?
  passwd : string?
Establishes an FTP connection with the given server using the supplied username and password. The port-np argument usually should be 21.

procedure

(ftp-close-connection ftp-conn)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
Closes an FTP connection.

procedure

(ftp-cd ftp-conn new-dir)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  new-dir : string?
Changes the current directory on the FTP server to new-dir. The new-dir argument is not interpreted at all, but simply passed on to the server; it must not contain a newline.

procedure

(ftp-directory-list ftp-conn [path])

  
(listof (list/c (one-of/c "-" "d" "l")
                string?
                string?))
  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  path : (or/c false/c string?) = #f
Returns a list of files and directories in the current directory of the server, assuming that the server provides directory information in the quasi-standard Unix format. If a path argument is given, use it instead of the current directory.

Each file or directory is represented by a list of three or four strings. The first string is either "-", "d", or "l", depending on whether the items is a file, directory, or link, respectively. The second item is the file’s date; to convert this value to seconds consistent with file-seconds, pass the date string to ftp-make-file-seconds. The third string is the name of the file or directory. If the item is a file (the first string is "-"), and if the line that the server replied with has a size in the expected place, then a fourth string containing this size is included.

Warning: the FTP protocol has no specification for the reply format, so this information can be unreliable.

procedure

(ftp-make-file-seconds ftp-date)  exact-integer?

  ftp-date : string?
Takes a date string produced by ftp-directory-list and converts it to seconds (which can be used with seconds->date).

Warning: the FTP protocol has no specification for the reply format, so this information can be unreliable.

procedure

(ftp-download-file ftp-conn    
  local-dir    
  file    
  [#:progress progress-proc])  void?
  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  local-dir : path-string?
  file : string?
  progress-proc : 
(or/c #f
      (-> (-> (values exact-nonnegative-integer?
                      evt?))
          any))
   = #f
Downloads file from the server’s current directory and puts it in local-dir using the same name. If the file already exists in the local directory, it is replaced, but only after the transfer succeeds (i.e., the file is first downloaded to a temporary file in local-dir, then moved into place on success).

If progress-proc is not #f, then it is called with a function get-count that returns two values: the number of bytes transferred so far, and an event that becomes ready when the transferred-bye count changes. The get-count function can be called in any thread and any number of times. The progress-proc function should return immediately, perhaps starting a thread that periodically polls get-count. Do not poll too frequently, or else polling will slow the transfer; the second argument from get-count is intended to limit polling.

(ftp-download-file
 ftp-conn "." "testfile"
 #:progress
 (lambda (get-count)
   (thread
    (lambda ()
      (let loop ()
        (define-values (count changed-evt) (get-count))
        (printf "~a bytes downloaded\n" count)
        (sync changed-evt)
        (loop))))))

procedure

(ftp-upload-file ftp-conn    
  file-path    
  [#:progress progress-proc])  void?
  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  file-path : path-string?
  progress-proc : 
(or/c #f
      (-> (-> (values exact-nonnegative-integer?
                      evt?))
          any))
   = #f
Upload file-path to the server’s current directory using the same name. If the file already exists in the local directory, it is replaced. The progress-proc argument is used in the same way as in ftp-download-file, but to report uploaded bytes instead of downloaded bytes.

procedure

(ftp-delete-file ftp-conn file-path)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  file-path : path-string?
Delete the remote file use the file-path on the server.

procedure

(ftp-make-directory ftp-conn dir-name)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  dir-name : string?
Make remote directory use the dir-name.

procedure

(ftp-delete-directory ftp-conn dir-name)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  dir-name : string?
Delete remote directory use the dir-name.

procedure

(ftp-rename-file ftp-conn origin dest)  void?

  ftp-conn : ftp-connection?
  origin : string?
  dest : string?
Rename remote file name from origin to dest.

4.2 FTP Unit

ftp@ and ftp^ are deprecated. They exist for backward-compatibility and will likely be removed in the future. New code should use the net/ftp module.

 (require net/ftp-unit) package: compatibility-lib

value

ftp@ : unit?

Imports nothing, exports ftp^.

4.3 FTP Signature

 (require net/ftp-sig) package: compatibility-lib

signature

ftp^ : signature

Includes everything exported by the net/ftp module.