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System status, or system help reply. 212: Directory status. 213: File status. 214: Help message. Explains how to use the server or the meaning of a particular non-standard command. This reply is useful only to the human user. 215: NAME system type. Where NAME is an official system name from the registry kept by IANA. 220: Service ready for new ...
Enter long passive mode. MDTM RFC 3659 Return the last-modified time of a specified file. MFCT The 'MFMT', 'MFCT', and 'MFF' Command Extensions for FTP: Modify the creation time of a file. MFF The 'MFMT', 'MFCT', and 'MFF' Command Extensions for FTP: Modify fact (the last modification time, creation time, UNIX group/owner/mode of a file). MFMT
Illustration of starting a passive connection using port 21. FTP may run in active or passive mode, which determines how the data connection is established. [9] (This sense of "mode" is different from that of the MODE command in the FTP protocol.) In active mode, the client starts listening for incoming data connections from the server on port M.
The advantage of using FXP over FTP is evident when a high-bandwidth server demands resources from another high-bandwidth server, but only a low-bandwidth client, such as a network administrator working away from location, has the authority to access the resources on both servers.
There also exists LftpFS for smart mirroring of FTP sites. In macOS, a read-only FTP file system is included that can be used either via the GUI (with ⌘ Command+K) or the command line (mount_ftp). The read-only limitation is noted in the man page for mount_ftp (on a macOS system, in Terminal.app, see "man mount_ftp"). However, the free ...
vsftpd (or very secure FTP daemon) [1] is an FTP server for Unix-like systems, including Linux. It is the default FTP server in the Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora, NimbleX, Slackware and RHEL Linux distributions. It is licensed under the GNU General Public License. It supports IPv6, TLS and FTPS (explicit since 2.0.0 and implicit since 2.1.0).
A kernel panic message from a Linux system An OpenSolaris kernel panic. ... the operating system stops in order to prevent further damage, which helps to facilitate ...
In most cases, the operating system removes the failing process from the execution queue, signals the user, and continues executing other processes. If, however, the operating system fails to catch the general protection fault, i.e. another protection violation occurs before the operating system returns from the previous GPF interrupt, the CPU ...