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I have two unix servers in which I need to ftp some files. The directory structure is almost same except a slight difference, like:

server a                 server b
miabc/v11_0/a/b/c/*.c    miabc/v75_0/a/b/c/
miabc/v11_0/xy/*.h       miabc/v11_0/xy/

There are many modules:

miabc
mfabc

The directory structure inside them is same in both the servers except the 11_0 and 75_0. And directory structure in side different modules is different

How can I FTP all the files in all modules into the corresponding module in second server b by any of scripting languages like awk, Perl, shell, ksh using FTP?

6 Answers 6

1

I'd say if you want to go with Perl, you have to use Net::FTP.

Once, I needed a script that diffs a directory/file structure on an FTP server with a corresponding directory/file structure on a local harddisk, which lead me to write this script. I don't know if it is efficient or elegant, but you might find one or another idea in it.

hth / Rene

0

See you need to use correct path of directory where you want to send files. You can create small script with php . php provide good ftp functions.using php you can easily ftp your file. but before that, once check your ftp settings of IIS server or file zilla I have used following code for sending files on ftp this is in php :-

$conn_id = ftp_connect($FTP_HOST) or die("Couldn't connect to ".$FTP_HOST); 
    $login_result =ftp_login($conn_id, $FTP_USER, $FTP_PW);
    ftp_fput($conn_id, $from, $files, $mode)   // ths is the function to put files on ftp

This code is just for reference , go through php manual before using it.

-1

I'd use a combination of Expect, lftp and a recursive function to walk the directory structure.

-1

If the file system supports symlinking or hardlinking, I would use a simple wget to mirror the ftp server. in one of them when you're wgetting just hack the directory v11_0 to point to 75_0, wget won't know the difference.

server a:

  1. go to /project/servera
  2. wget the whole thing. (this should place them all in /project/servera/miabc/v11_0)

server b:

  1. go to /project/serverb
  2. create a directory /project/serverb/miabc/75_0, link it to /project/servera/v11_0:
    • ln -s /project/serverb/miabc/75_0 /project/servera/v11_0
  3. wget serverb, this will be followed when wget tries to cwd into in 75_0 it will find itself in /project/servera/v11_0

Don't make the project harder than it needs to be: read the docs on wget, and ln. If wget doesn't follow symbolic links, file a bug report, and use a hard link if your FS supports it.

-1

It sounds like you really want rsync instead. I'd try to avoid any programming in solving this problem.

2
  • Rysnc doesn't fundamentally solve the problem of merging /different/ directory structures. It is just a massively more efficient transport. Nov 20, 2009 at 1:43
  • 1
    It's not a different directory structure according to the question. They just have a different base directory. I use rsync in that situation all the time. Nov 20, 2009 at 1:49
-2

I suggest you could login on any of the server first and go to the appropraite path miabc/v75_0/a/b/c/ . From here you need to do a sftp to the other server.

  1. sftp user@servername
  2. Go to the appropraiate path which files needs to be transferred.
  3. write the command mget *
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  • @sachin...i know how to do ftp but the problem is there are 1000's of files in multiple directories.so its a very difficult task to go to every directory and doing mget.
    – Vijay
    Nov 19, 2009 at 10:06
  • I dont know the reason for downvoting me. Glad to know it. But if you have a list of absolute paths of all directories, then this approach will work inside a for loop iterates on ls count
    – Sachin
    Nov 19, 2009 at 13:22

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