this seems to be the standard way mirror works.  it
gets all the files in the directory that you want to
upload, it just doesn't do it in alphabetical order.  
as for multiple, try 'help pget' it should point you
in the right direction.
-Darren
--- Justin Piszcz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My question is: why is this so messy? My
> connection-limit it set to 1.
> If it isn't, during a period of queue mirror -R .
> sometimes it will
> startup multiple threads sending from multiple
> various directories from
> where I did the mirror -R ..  IE: Isn't it supposed
> to upload a single
> directory at a time, and not begin uploading one,
> get half way, and then
> start uploading another one (the next one down),
> etc?
> 
> This also happens if you do a queue mirror -c
> <DIRECTORY> with a lot of
> sub dire
> ctories and files in it.
> 
> Normally this doesn't bother me, but it's been quite
> a while now and I
> was wonde
> ring if anyone else had seen this problem, or if it
> bothered them :).
> 
> lftp [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/xxx> j
> [0] queue (ftp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:xxx)
>         Now executing: [1] mirror -R .
>  [1] mirror -R .
>   \mirror dir1
>    \mirror dir_inside_of_1
>   \mirror dir2
>    \mirror dir_inside_of_2
>   \mirror dir3
>   \mirror dir4
>   \mirror dir5
>    \mirror dir_inside_of_5
>   \mirror dir6
>    \mirror dir_inside_of_6
>   \mirror dir7
>   \mirror dir8
>    \transfer file_inside_of_8
>         `file2' at 0 (0%) [Connection limit reached]
>    \transfer file_inside_of_8
>         `file3' at 0 (0%) [Connection limit reached]
>    \transfer file_inside_of_8
>         `file4' at xxx (84%) 141.5K/s eta:29s
> [Sending data]
>   \mirror dir 9
>   \mirror dir 10
>         mkdir `/xxx/dir10' [Connection limit
> reached]
> lftp [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/xxx>
> 
> 


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