Did you try substituting the @ symbol with %?

I remember FTP servers used to understand this character.

Thus:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

is the same as:

foo%example.com

Just my $0.02 pesos

On 12/7/05, Dave Loftis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
To answer your question:  the username is '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' and I am trying to connect to ' ftp.domain.com' and Nautilus is attempting to set the URI it is passing to gnome-vfs as [EMAIL PROTECTED]@ftp.domainname.com.

Theoretically, this should be correct, except it doesn't work.  As near as I can tell, looking at bugzilla, this might be a case of nautilus making the URI safe (changing the first @ to a character code), but then failing to transmit it as originally entered.

It looks like this is a bug somewhere in Nautilus or the Nautilus interface to gnome-keyring.  I suppose I am left with a venture through code so that I can 'fix' it.  Unless anyone else has any ideas.

Thanks for the help, y'all.
-dave


On 12/7/05, Amaya < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dave Loftis wrote:
> Specifics:
> I am trying to connect to a server with address:
>    ftp://ftp.domainname.com
> Using the username:
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I cannot get Nautilus to allow me to do this.  It keeps trying to set my
> username as [EMAIL PROTECTED]@ ftp.domainname.com.

Dumb question... what is the username again?
"username" or "[EMAIL PROTECTED] "?

If you provide " [EMAIL PROTECTED]" as a login, nautilus is doing
the right thing when doing the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]@ ftp.domainname.com"

Or maybe I didn't drink enough coffee yet, and didn't really get what
you are trying to do.

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