"Dan Harkless" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I think the most straightforward mapping would also be the most attractive:
ftp/site/dir/file
http/site/dir/file
Don't forget the port, if you aim for completeness.
Wget should certainly have an option to make it behave this way. In
First of all. Please wrap your lines at column 72 !!!
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am trying to set up an automated mirroring of a small part of the NAI ftp server.
The small part is just the directory of the antivirus updates.
I tried to download the directory by automated ftp scripts
Clayton Vernon wrote:
Hack-
While it now "seems" to parse correctly, and while it displays "TYPE A" in
its download dialog, it does NOT actually download the file in ASCII format,
but in binary.
Clayton
I have been testing this against MS so called "FTP Server". And I to get
the same
"Paul Bludov" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Is it possible to limit the download rate? IMHO, it was already
implemented by TCP/IP stack. And all that it is need to add is a
small delay when the rate exceeds some limit.
This has been debated several times. The sentiment seems to be that,
while
Hrvoje Niksic [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
"Dan Harkless" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I think the most straightforward mapping would also be the most attractive:
ftp/site/dir/file
http/site/dir/file
Don't forget the port, if you aim for completeness.
Yeah, you've probably seen
Hack-
I'm not sure it's the server's fault per se; I get errors with wget I don't
get it with NCFTP on the same server.
Not trying to sound simplistic or anything, but the actual FTP command is
"ascii", not "type=a". Can you see if providing this doesn't work instead?
Clayton
-Original
"Clayton Vernon" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Not trying to sound simplistic or anything, but the actual FTP
command is "ascii", not "type=a". Can you see if providing this
doesn't work instead?
`ascii' is the command in the command-line FTP client that causes the
client to issue a certain
Hrvoje Niksic [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
"Dan Harkless" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Well, it wouldn't be very tough for them to adjust their archives by
moving the hostname directories into "ftp" or "http" directories.
Or else use the option that makes it leave off the protocol.
As long