How can I upload an entire folder via FTP Mac Terminal?
7 Answers
Do you have to use ftp
? I like to use scp
(secure copy) when the remote host supports ssh (as so many of them do).
scp -r mydirectory [email protected]:destdir
The -r
means "recursive" so it will recursively copy the entire directory. Replace username
with your username, etc., etc. destdir
is a relative path on the remote server (whatever directory you wind up in if you log in) as long as you don't use a leading slash /
-- then it will be an absolute path.
-
20Why offer this answer.. he asks for FTP! reasons to use FTP DO exists... no matter if I like scp better... which I actually do– kasthorNov 7, 2012 at 23:59
-
5@ksthor Good point, but this was the answer I was looking for when I googled "upload entire folder ssh" :) Apr 26, 2014 at 10:18
-
1Because it is a great resource for other people searching for solutions on similar matter. Yes, even in 2017, @kasthor. Oct 3, 2017 at 20:12
-
1The right answer is given by DEAD10CC and is to use ncftpput Jan 4, 2020 at 22:15
-
1It's good to revisit answers as times change. I don't think
homebrew
was around 6 years ago so it can be easier to obtain tools that don't come preinstalled likessh
/scp
. Regardless, I sure hope everyone has moved beyond using plaintext FTP across public AND private networks. Jan 10, 2020 at 19:26
terminal>ftp user@host
password:xXxXx
ftp>mkdir <remote dir>
ftp>cd <remote dir>
ftp>lcd <local dir>
ftp>mput *
ftp>close
This will
- connect
- create the remote directory (or folder)
- cd into that directory
- cd to the local directory (if you didn't start there
- copy multiple files (all)
- log out again
-
1Worked great for me! Thanks! The one thing I'd change is that I'd use
sftp
instead. Same commands, just where it saysftp
usesftp
. It's much more secure. Sep 23, 2012 at 5:07 -
-
ftp was removed from mac since high sierra. the above works, but FTP needs to be installed: petenetlive.com/KB/Article/0001364 Dec 5, 2018 at 8:41
mput is the right command for that task, but I think OS X' implementation of ftp command line client does not support recursive copy of directories via mput *.
So, a possible solution might be the use of an alternative ftp command line client like NcFTP that is shipped with many linux distributions and is also available for OS X. See NcFTP download page for details.
ncftpput -R -u user -p passwd <remote-host> <remote-dir> <local-dir>
The -R
is for recursive mode.
-
Thank you @Joker for the NcFTP recommendation. This worked perfectly for my needs. I was able to transfer an entire directory, and it's elegant to have a one-liner in script files. Feb 4, 2014 at 20:31
-
3To install ncftp on a mac these days, you can
brew install ncftp
(assuming you have homebrew, which you probably should) Aug 15, 2014 at 21:26 -
this is the best solution... should be the answer of the question as it does the job in one line of code. Jan 4, 2020 at 22:14
Same as you would upload an entire folder from any other command line:
- Make a zip or tar archive out of it, then put the archive.
- If you want to upload individual files, but do them all, use "mput".
have you tried mput? You can pass it A wildcard (*) to upload all the files...
-
I put in "put *foldername" and I get "foldername: not a plain file." Aug 13, 2009 at 18:08
There seems to be some question as to whether ftp through the mac is capable of handling recursive copy.
If you have ssh access to both machines, you could do this from the source computer:
tar -cf - directory | ssh user@hostB "cd target_dir; tar -xf -"
mput * should work fine for objects within the directory, but if you have subdirectories, it may have problems picking up the files.
Go - Connect To Server. Enter ftp://ip-address-of-other-box and appropriate credentials. Click + to add that server, then double-click on it to open it. You can now drag and drop folders and it will copy recursively.
-
This works great for me... but only read-only, for some reason. Won't let me upload anything. Aug 15, 2014 at 21:23
-
3