01-Fundamentals Command Reference

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03-FTP and TFTP Commands
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FTP configuration commands

FTP server configuration commands

display ftp-server

Syntax

display ftp-server [ | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ]

View

Any view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

|: Filters command output by specifying a regular expression. For more information about regular expressions, see Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

begin: Displays the first line that matches the specified regular expression and all lines that follow.

exclude: Displays all lines that do not match the specified regular expression.

include: Displays all lines that match the specified regular expression.

regular-expression: Specifies a regular expression, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 256 characters.

Description

Use the display ftp-server command to display the FTP server configuration.

After configuring FTP server parameters, you may verify them with this command.

Related commands: ftp server enable, ftp timeout, and ftp update.

Examples

# Display the FTP server configuration.

<Sysname> display ftp-server

   FTP server is running

   Max user number:              1

   User count:                   1

   Timeout value(in minute):     30

   Put Method:                   fast

Table 1 Output description

Field

Description

Max user number

Maximum number of concurrent login users.

User count

Number of the current login users.

Timeout value (in minute)

Allowed idle time of an FTP connection. If there is no packet exchange between the FTP server and client during this period, the FTP connection will be disconnected.

Put Method

Put method, fast or normal.

 

display ftp-user

Syntax

display ftp-user [ | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ]

View

Any view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

|: Filters command output by specifying a regular expression. For more information about regular expressions, see Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

begin: Displays the first line that matches the specified regular expression and all lines that follow.

exclude: Displays all lines that do not match the specified regular expression.

include: Displays all lines that match the specified regular expression.

regular-expression: Specifies a regular expression, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 256 characters.

Description

Use the display ftp-user command to display the detailed information of current FTP users.

Examples

# Display the detailed information of FTP users.

<Sysname> display ftp-user

  UserName             HostIP    Port    Idle              HomeDir

       ftp       192.168.1.54    1190       0               flash:

# If the name of the logged-in user exceeds 10 characters, the exceeded characters will be displayed in the next line and right justified, for example, if the logged-in user name is administrator, the information is displayed as follows:

<Sysname> display ftp-user

  UserName             HostIP    Port    Idle              HomeDir

administra

       tor      192.168.0.152    1031       0               flash:

Table 2 Output description

Field

Description

UserName

Name of the currently logged-in user

HostIP

IP address of the currently logged-in user

Port

Port which the currently logged-in user is using

Idle

Duration time of the current FTP connection, in minutes

HomeDir

Authorized path of the present logged-in user

 

free ftp user

Syntax

free ftp user username

View

User view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

username: Username. You can use the display ftp-user command to view FTP login user information.

Description

Use the free ftp user command to manually release the FTP connection established by the specified user.

This command releases the FTP connection established by the specified user no matter whether the user is transmitting a file.

Examples

# Manually release the FTP connection established with username ftpuser.

<Sysname> free ftp user ftpuser

Are you sure to free FTP user ftpuser? [Y/N]:y

<Sysname>

ftp server acl

Syntax

ftp server acl acl-number

undo ftp server acl

View

System view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

acl-number: Basic access control list (ACL) number, in the range of 2000 to 2999.

Description

Use the ftp server acl command to control FTP clients’ access to the FTP server by using an ACL.

Use the undo ftp server acl command to restore the default.

By default, no ACL is used to control FTP clients’ access to the FTP server.

An ACL can enable the FTP server to deny the FTP requests of some FTP clients and permit the access of clients allowed. This configuration only filters the FTP connections to be established, and has no effect on the established FTP connections and operations. If you execute the command multiple times, the last specified ACL takes effect.

Examples

# Associate the FTP service with ACL 2001 to allow only the client 1.1.1.1 to access the FTP server through FTP.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl number 2001

[Sysname-acl-basic-2001] rule 0 permit source 1.1.1.1 0

[Sysname-acl-basic-2001] rule 1 deny source any

[Sysname-acl-basic-2001] quit

[Sysname] ftp server acl 2001

ftp server enable

Syntax

ftp server enable

undo ftp server

View

System view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the ftp server enable command to enable the FTP server and allow the login of FTP users.

Use the undo ftp server command to disable the FTP server.

By default, the FTP server is disabled.

Examples

# Enable the FTP server.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ftp server enable

ftp timeout

Syntax

ftp timeout minute

undo ftp timeout

View

System view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

minute: Idle-timeout time in minutes, in the range of 1 to 35791.

Description

Use the ftp timeout command to set the idle-timeout time.

Use the undo ftp timeout command to restore the default.

By default, the FTP idle time is 30 minutes.

If the idle time of an FTP connection exceeds the FTP timeout value, the FTP server breaks the connection to save resources.

Examples

# Set the idle-timeout timer to 36 minutes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ftp timeout 36

ftp update

Syntax

ftp update { fast | normal }

undo ftp update

View

System view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

fast: Fast update.

normal: Normal update.

Description

Use the ftp update command to set the file update mode that the FTP server uses while receiving data.

Use the undo ftp update command to restore the default.

By default, the file update mode is normal.

Examples

# Set the FTP update mode to normal.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ftp update normal

FTP client configuration commands

 

 

NOTE:

·       You must use the ftp command to enter FTP client view before making client configurations. For more information, see “ftp.”

·       Before executing FTP client configuration commands, make sure you have made proper authority configurations for users on the FTP server, for example, view the files under the current directory, read/download specified files, create directory/upload files, and rename/remove files).

·       The prompt information in the examples of this section varies with FTP server types.

 

ascii

Syntax

ascii

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the ascii command to set the file transfer mode to ASCII.

By default, the file transfer mode is ASCII.

The carriage return characters vary with operating systems. For example, to indicate the end of a line and transfer to the next line, H3C and Windows use characters /r/n, and Linux uses characters /n. The rules of the specified file transfer mode must be followed by the two communicating systems that use different carriage return characters so that they can correctly resolve received files.

FTP transfers files in two modes:

·           Binary modefor program file or picture transmission.

·           ASCII modefor text file transmission.

Related commands: binary.

Examples

# Set the file transfer mode to ASCII.

[ftp] ascii

200 Type set to A.

binary

Syntax

binary

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the binary command to set the file transfer mode to binary (also called flow mode).

By default, the transfer mode is ASCII mode.

Related commands: ascii.

Examples

# Set the file transfer mode to binary.

[ftp] binary

200 Type set to I.

bye

Syntax

bye

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the bye command to disconnect from the remote FTP server and return to user view. If the router establishes no connection with the remote FTP server, you will return to user view directly.

Related commands: close, disconnect, and quit.

Examples

# Terminate the connection with the remote FTP server and return to user view.

[ftp] bye

221 Server closing.

cd

Syntax

cd { directory | .. | / }

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

directory: Name of the target directory, in the format of [drive:/][/]path. The drive argument specifies the name of the storage medium. If no drive information is provided, the argument represents a folder or subfolder under the current directory.

..: Returns to an upper directory. If the current working directory is the root directory, or no upper directory exists, the current working directory does not change when the cd .. command is executed. This argument does not support command online help.

/: Returns to the root directory of the storage medium. The keyword does not support command line online help.

Description

Use the cd command to change the current working directory on the remote FTP server, or to access another authorized directory.

Related commands: pwd.

Examples

# Change the working directory to the sub-directory logfile of the current directory.

[ftp] cd logfile

250 CWD command successful.

# Change the working directory to the sub-directory folder of the authorized directory.

[ftp] cd /folder

250 CWD command successful.

cdup

Syntax

cdup

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the cdup command to exit the current directory and enter the upper directory of the FTP server.

This command does not change the working directory if the current directory is work-directory.

Related commands: cd and pwd.

Examples

# Change the current working directory path to the upper directory.

[ftp] pwd

257 "/ftp/subdir" is current directory.

[ftp] cdup

200 CDUP command successful.

[ftp] pwd

257 "/ftp" is current directory

close

Syntax

close

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the close command to terminate the connection to the FTP server, but remain in FTP client view.

This command is equal to the disconnect command.

Examples

# Terminate the connection to the FTP server and remain in FTP client view.

[ftp] close

221 Server closing.

[ftp]

debugging

Syntax

debugging

undo debugging

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the debugging command to enable FTP client debugging.

Use the undo debugging command to disable FTP client debugging.

By default, FTP client debugging is disabled.

Examples

# The router serves as the FTP client. Enable FTP client debugging and use the active mode to download file sample.file from the current directory of the FTP server.

<Sysname> terminal monitor

<Sysname> terminal debugging

<Sysname> ftp 192.168.1.46

Trying 192.168.1.46 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 192.168.1.46.

220 FTP service ready.

User(192.168.1.46:(none)):ftp

331 Password required for ftp.

Password:

230 User logged in.

 

[ftp] undo passive

FTP: passive is off

 

[ftp] debugging

FTP: debugging switch is on

 

[ftp] get sample.file

 

---> PORT 192,168,1,44,4,21

200 Port command okay.

 The parsed reply is 200

---> RETR sample.file

150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /sample.file.

 The parsed reply is 150

FTPC: File transfer started with the signal light turned on.

FTPC: File transfer completed with the signal light turned off.

.226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 3304 byte(s) received in 4.889 second(s), 675.00 byte(s)/sec.

 

[ftp]

Table 3 Output description

Field

Description

---> PORT

Give an FTP order, with data port numbers being…

The parsed reply is

The received reply code, which is defined in RFC 959.

---> RETR

Download the file.

FTPC: File transfer started with the signal light turned on.

File transfer starts, and the signal light is turned on.

FTPC: File transfer completed with the signal light turned off.

File transfer is completed, and the signal light is turned off.

 

delete

Syntax

delete remotefile

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

remotefile: File name.

Description

Use the delete command to permanently delete a specified file on the remote FTP server.

To perform this operation, you must have delete permission on the FTP server.

Examples

# Delete file temp.c.

[ftp] delete temp.c

250 DELE command successful.

dir

Syntax

dir [ remotefile [ localfile ] ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

remotefile: Name of the file or directory on the remote FTP server.

localfile: Name of the local file to save the displayed information.

Description

Use the dir command to view the detailed information of the files and subdirectories in the current directory on the remote FTP server.

Use the dir remotefile command to display the detailed information of the specified file or directory on the remote FTP server.

Use the dir remotefile localfile command to display the detailed information of the specified file or directory on the remote FTP server, and save the displayed information into a local file specified by the localfile argument.

 

 

NOTE:

The ls command displays only the names of directories and files, whereas the dir command can display other related information of the files and directories, such as the size, and the date they were created.

 

Examples

# View the detailed information of the files and subdirectories under the current directory on the remote FTP server.

[ftp] dir

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,46,5,68).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /*.

drwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup         0 Aug 08  2006 logfile

-rwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup  20471748 May 11 10:21 test.app

-rwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup      4001 Dec 08  2007 config.cfg

-rwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup      3608 Jun 13  2007 startup.cfg

drwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup         0 Dec 03  2007 test

-rwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup       299 Oct 15  2007 key.pub

226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 394 byte(s) received in 0.189 second(s), 2.00K byte(s)/sec.

 

[ftp]

# View the information of the file ar-router.cfg, and save the result to aa.txt.

[ftp] dir ar-router.cfg aa.txt

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,50,17,158).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /ar-router.cfg.

....226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 67 byte(s) received in 4.600 second(s), 14.00 byte(s)/sec.

# View the content of aa.txt.

[ftp] quit

<Sysname> more aa.txt

-rwxrwxrwx   1 noone    nogroup      3077 Jun 20 15:34 ar-router.cfg

disconnect

Syntax

disconnect

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the disconnect command to disconnect from the remote FTP server but remain in FTP client view.

This command is equal to the close command.

Examples

# Disconnect from the remote FTP server but remain in FTP client view.

[ftp] disconnect

221 Server closing.

display ftp client configuration

Syntax

display ftp client configuration [ | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ]

View

Any view

Default level

1: Monitor level

Parameters

|: Filters command output by specifying a regular expression. For more information about regular expressions, see Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

begin: Displays the first line that matches the specified regular expression and all lines that follow.

exclude: Displays all lines that do not match the specified regular expression.

include: Displays all lines that match the specified regular expression.

regular-expression: Specifies a regular expression, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 256 characters.

Description

Use the display ftp client configuration command to display the source IP address configuration of the FTP client.

Related commands: ftp client source.

Examples

# Display the source IP address configuration of the FTP client.

<Sysname> display ftp client configuration

The source IP address is 192.168.0.123

 

 

NOTE:

The display ftp client configuration command displays the source IP address configuration of the FTP client. If the specified source IP address is active, this command displays the source IP address. If the specified source interface is active, this command displays the source interface.

 

ftp

Syntax

ftp [ server-address [ service-port ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ source { interface interface-type interface-number | ip source-ip-address } ] ]

View

User view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

server-address: IP address or host name (a string of 1 to 20 characters) of a remote FTP server.

service-port: TCP port number of the remote FTP server, in the range of 0 to 65535. The default value is 21.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies the MPLS L3VPN that the FTP server belongs to. The vpn-instance-name argument is a case sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If the FTP server is on the public network, do not specify this option.

source { interface interface-type interface-number | ip source-ip-address } ]: Specifies the source address used to establish an FTP connection.

·           interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies the source interface by its type and number. The primary IP address configured on this interface is the source address of the transmitted FTP packets. If no primary IP address is configured on the source interface, the connection fails.

·           ip source-ip-address: The source IP address of the transmitted FTP packets. This source address must be the one that has been configured on the device.

Description

Use the ftp command to log in to the remote FTP server and enter FTP client view.

This command applies to IPv4 networks.

If you use this command without specifying any parameters, you will simply enter the FTP client view without logging in to the FTP server.

If you specify the parameters, you will be prompted to enter the username and password for accessing the FTP server.

The source IP address specified with the ftp command has higher priority than that specified with the ftp client source command and thus is preferably used.

Related commands: ftp client source.

Examples

# Log in from the current router Sysname1 to the router Sysname2 with the IP address of 192.168.0.211. The source IP address of the packets sent is 192.168.0.212.

<Sysname1> ftp 192.168.0.211 source ip 192.168.0.212

Trying 192.168.0.211 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 192.168.0.211.

220 FTP Server ready.

User(192.168.0.211:(none)):abc

331 Password required for abc

Password:

230 User logged in.

 

[ftp]

ftp client source

Syntax

ftp client source { interface interface-type interface-number | ip source-ip-address }

undo ftp client source

View

System view

Default level

2: System level

Parameters

interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies the source interface for establishing FTP connections. The primary IP address of the source interface is used as the source IP address of packets sent to an FTP server. If the source interface has no primary IP address specified, no FTP connection can be established.

ip source-ip-address: Specifies the source IP address of packets sent to an FTP server, which is one of the IP addresses of the device.

Description

Use the ftp client source command to specify the source IP address of packets sent to an FTP server.

Use the undo ftp client source command to restore the default.

By default, the source IP address is the IP address of the output interface of the route to the server is used as the source IP address.

If you use the ftp client source command to first configure a source interface and then a source IP address, the source IP address overwrites the source interface, and vice versa.

If you first use the ftp client source command to specify a source IP address and then use the ftp command to specify another source IP address, the latter is used.

The source IP address specified with the ftp client source command applies to all FTP connections while the one specified with the ftp command applies to the current FTP connection only.

Related commands: display ftp client configuration.

Examples

# Specify the source IP address of packets sent to an FTP server as 2.2.2.2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ftp client source ip 2.2.2.2

# Specify the IP address of interface GigabitEthernet 3/1/1 as the source IP address of packets sent to an FTP server.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ftp client source interface GigabitEthernet 3/1/1

ftp ipv6

Syntax

ftp ipv6 [ server-address [ service-port ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ source ipv6 source-ipv6-address ] [ -i interface-type interface-number ] ]

View

User view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

server-address: IP address or host name of the remote FTP server.

service-port: TCP port number of the FTP server, in the range of 0 to 65535. The default value is 21.

source ipv6 source-ipv6-address: Specifies a source IPv6 address for transmitted FTP packets. This address must be an IPv6 address that has been configured on the router.

-i interface-type interface-number: Specifies the type and number of the egress interface. This parameter can be used only in case that the FTP server address is a link local address and the specified egress interface must have a link local address. For the configuration of link local addresses, see Layer 3IP Services Configuration Guide.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies the MPLS L3VPN that the FTP server belongs to. The vpn-instance-name argument is a case sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If the FTP server is on the public network, do not specify this option.

Description

Use the ftp ipv6 command to log in to the FTP server and enter FTP client view.

This command applies to IPv6 networks.

If you use this command without specifying any parameters, you will simply enter the FTP client view without logging in to an FTP server.

If you specify the parameters, you will be asked to enter the username and password for accessing the FTP server.

Examples

# Log in to the FTP server with IPv6 address 3000::200.

<Sysname> ftp ipv6 3000::200

Trying 3000::200 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 3000::200.

220 Welcome!

User(3000::200:(none)): MY_NAME

331 Please specify the password.

Password:

230 Login successful.

[ftp]

# Log in to the FTP server with IPv6 address 3000::200 in VPN 1.

<Sysname> ftp ipv6 3000::200 vpn-instance vpn1

Trying 3000::200 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 3000::200.

220 Welcome!

User(3000::200:(none)): MY_NAME

331 Please specify the password.

Password:

230 Login successful.

[ftp]

get

Syntax

get remotefile [ localfile ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

remotefile: Name of the file on the remote FTP server.

localfile: File name saved locally. If this argument is not specified, the file is saved locally using the source file name to the current working directory, namely the directory where the user executes the ftp command.

Description

Use the get command to download a file from a remote FTP server and save it.

Examples

# Download file testcfg.cfg and save it as aa.cfg.

[ftp] get testcfg.cfg aa.cfg

 

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,50,17,163).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /testcfg.cfg.

.....226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 5190 byte(s) received in 7.754 second(s), 669.00 byte(s)/sec.

lcd

Syntax

lcd

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the lcd command to display the local working directory of the FTP client.

Examples

# Display the local working directory.

[ftp] lcd

FTP: Local directory now flash:/ clienttemp.

The above information indicates that the working directory of the FTP client before execution of the ftp command is flash:/clienttemp.

ls

Syntax

ls [ remotefile [ localfile ] ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

remotefile: Filename or directory on the remote FTP server.

localfile: Name of a local file used to save the displayed information.

Description

Use the ls command to view the information of all the files and subdirectories under the current directory of the remote FTP server. The file names and subdirectory names are displayed.

Use the ls remotefile command to view the information of a specified file or subdirectory.

Use the ls remotefile localfile command to view the information of a specified file or subdirectory, and save the result to a local file specified by the localfile argument.

 

 

NOTE:

The ls command displays only the names of files and directories on the FTP server, whereas the dir command can display other related information of the files and directories, such as the size, and the date they were created.

 

Examples

# View the information of all files and subdirectories under the current directory of the FTP server.

[ftp] ls

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,50,17,165).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for *.

ar-router.cfg

logfile

mainar.bin

arbasicbtm.bin

ftp

test

bb.cfg

testcfg.cfg

226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 87 byte(s) received in 0.132 second(s) 659.00 byte(s)/sec.

# View the information of directory logfile, and save the result to file aa.txt.

[ftp] ls logfile aa.txt

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,46,4,3).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /logfile/*.

....226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 20 byte(s) received in 3.962 second(s), 5.00 byte(s)/sec

# View the content of file aa.txt.

[ftp] quit

<Sysname> more aa.txt

.

..

logfile.log

mkdir

Syntax

mkdir directory

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

directory: Name of the directory to be created.

Description

Use the mkdir command to create a subdirectory under the current directory on the remote FTP server.

To do this, you must be a user with the permission on the FTP server.

Examples

# Create subdirectory mytest on the current directory of the remote FTP server.

[ftp] mkdir mytest

257 "/mytest" new directory created.

open

Syntax

open server-address [ service-port ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

server-address: IP address or host name of a remote FTP server.

service-port: Port number of the remote FTP server, in the range of 0 to 65535, with the default value of 21.

Description

Use the open command to log in to the IPv4 FTP server under FTP client view.

At login, enter the username and password for accessing the FTP server. If your input is correct, the login succeeds.

If you have logged in to the IPv4 FTP server, you cannot use the open command to log in to another server. To do so, you must disconnect from the current server first.

Related commands: close.

Examples

# In FTP client view, log in to the FTP server with the IP address of 192.168.1.50.

<Sysname> ftp

[ftp] open 192.168.1.50

Trying 192.168.1.50 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 192.168.1.50.

220 FTP service ready.

User(192.168.1.50:(none)):aa

331 Password required for aa.

Password:

230 User logged in.

 

[ftp]

open ipv6

Syntax

open ipv6 server-address [ service-port ] [ -i interface-type interface-number ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

server-address: IP address or host name of the remote FTP server.

service-port: Port number of the remote FTP server, in the range of 0 to 65535. The default value is 21.

-i interface-type interface-number: Specifies the egress interface by its type and number. This parameter can be used only in case that the FTP server address is a link local address and the specified egress interface must have a link local address. For the configuration of link local addresses, see Layer 3—IP Services Configuration Guide.

Description

Use the open ipv6 command to log in to the IPv6 FTP server in FTP client view.

At login, you will be asked to enter the username and password for accessing the FTP server. If your input is correct, the login succeeds; otherwise, it fails.

Related commands: close.

Examples

# Log in to the FTP server (with IPv6 address 3000::200) in FTP client view.

<Sysname> ftp

[ftp] open ipv6 3000::200

Trying 3000::200 ...

Press CTRL+K to abort

Connected to 3000::200.

220 Welcome!

User(3000::200:(none)): MY_NAME

331 Please specify the password.

Password:

230 Login successful.

passive

Syntax

passive

undo passive

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the passive command to set the data transmission mode to passive.

Use the undo passive command to set the data transmission mode to active.

The default transmission mode is passive.

Data transmission modes fall into the passive mode and the active mode. The active mode specifies the server to initiate connection requests. The passive mode specifies the client to initiate connection requests. This command is mainly used in conjunction with a firewall to restrict FTP connections between private and public network users.

Examples

# Set the data transmission mode to passive.

[ftp] passive

FTP: passive is on

put

Syntax

put localfile [ remotefile ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

localfile: Name of the local file.

remotefile: File name saved on the remote FTP server.

Description

Use the put command to upload a local file to the remote FTP server.

By default, if no name is assigned to the file to be saved on the FTP server, the name of the source file is used.

After a file is uploaded, it will be saved under the user’s authorized directory, which can be set by issuing the authorization-attribute command on the remote server.

Examples

# Upload source file cc.txt to the remote FTP server and save it as dd.txt.

[ftp] put cc.txt dd.txt

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,50,17,169).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /dd.txt.

226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 9 byte(s) sent in 0.112 second(s), 80.00 byte(s)/sec.

pwd

Syntax

pwd

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the pwd command to display the currently accessed directory on the remote FTP server.

Examples

# Display the currently accessed directory on the remote FTP server.

[ftp] cd servertemp

[ftp] pwd

257 "/servertemp" is current directory.

The above information indicates that the servertemp folder under the root directory of the remote FTP server is being accessed by the user.

quit

Syntax

quit

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the quit command to disconnect the FTP client from the remote FTP server and exit to user view.

Examples

# Disconnect from the remote FTP server and exit to user view.

[ftp] quit

221 Server closing.

 

<Sysname>

remotehelp

Syntax

remotehelp [ protocol-command ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

protocol-command: FTP command.

Description

Use the remotehelp command to display the help information of FTP-related commands supported by the remote FTP server.

If no argument is specified, FTP-related commands supported by the remote FTP server are displayed.

Examples

# Display FTP commands supported by the remote FTP server.

[ftp] remotehelp

214-Here is a list of available ftp commands

    Those with '*' are not yet implemented.

   USER   PASS   ACCT*  CWD    CDUP   SMNT*  QUIT   REIN*

   PORT   PASV   TYPE   STRU*  MODE*  RETR   STOR   STOU*

   APPE*  ALLO*  REST*  RNFR*  RNTO*  ABOR*  DELE   RMD

   MKD    PWD    LIST   NLST   SITE*  SYST   STAT*  HELP

   NOOP*  XCUP   XCWD   XMKD   XPWD   XRMD

214 Direct comments to H3C company.

# Display the help information for the user command.

[ftp] remotehelp user

214 Syntax: USER <sp> <username>.

 

[ftp]

Table 4 Output description

Field

Description

214-Here is a list of available ftp commands

The following is an available FTP command list.

Those with '*' are not yet implemented.

Those commands with “*” are not yet implemented.

USER

Username.

PASS

Password.

CWD

Change the current working directory.

CDUP

Change to parent directory.

SMNT*

File structure setting.

QUIT

Quit.

REIN*

Re-initialization.

PORT

Port number.

PASV

Passive mode.

TYPE

Request type.

STRU*

File structure.

MODE*

Transmission mode.

RETR

Download a file.

STOR

Upload a file.

STOU*

Store unique.

APPE*

Appended file.

ALLO*

Allocation space.

REST*

Restart.

RNFR*

Rename the source.

RNTO*

Rename the destination.

ABOR*

Abort the transmission.

DELE

Delete a file.

RMD

Delete a folder.

MKD

Create a folder.

PWD

Print working directory.

LIST

List files.

NLST

List file description.

SITE*

Locate a parameter.

SYST

Display system parameters.

STAT*

State.

HELP

Help.

NOOP*

No operation.

XCUP

Extension command, the same meaning as CUP.

XCWD

Extension command, the same meaning as CWD.

XMKD

Extension command, the same meaning as MKD.

XPWD

Extension command, the same meaning as PWD.

XRMD

Extension command, the same meaning as RMD.

Syntax: USER <sp> <username>.

Syntax of the user command: user (keyword) + space + username.

 

rmdir

Syntax

rmdir directory

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

directory: Directory name on the remote FTP server.

Description

Use the rmdir command to remove a specified directory from the FTP server.

Only authorized users are allowed to use this command.

Delete all files and subdirectories under a directory before you delete the directory. For how to delete files, see the delete command.

After you execute the rmdir command, the files in the remote recycle bin under the directory will be automatically deleted.

Examples

# Delete the temp1 directory from the authorized directory on the FTP server.

[ftp] rmdir /temp1

200 RMD command successful.

user

Syntax

user username [ password ]

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

username: Login username.

password: Login password. You can input this argument a space after the username argument; or you can input this argument when the “Password:” prompt appears after you input the username and then press Enter.

Description

Use the user command to relog in to the currently accessed FTP server with another username.

Before using this command, you must configure the corresponding username and password on the FTP server; otherwise, your login fails and the FTP connection is closed.

Examples

# User ftp1 has logged in to the FTP server. Use username ftp2 to log in to the current FTP server. (Suppose username ftp2 and password 123123123123 have been configured on the FTP server).

·           Method 1:

[ftp] user ftp2

331 Password required for ftp2.

Password:

230 User logged in.

 

[ftp]

·           Method 2:

[ftp] user ftp2 123123123123

331 Password required for ftp.

230 User logged in.

 

[ftp]

verbose

Syntax

verbose

undo verbose

View

FTP client view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

None

Description

Use the verbose command to enable display of detailed prompt information received from the server.

Use the undo verbose command to disable display of detailed prompt information.

By default, the display of detailed prompt information is enabled.

Examples

# Enable display of detailed prompt information.

[ftp] verbose

FTP: verbose is on

# Disable display of detailed prompt information and perform a Get operation.

[ftp] undo verbose

FTP: verbose is off

 

[ftp] get startup.cfg bb.cfg

 

FTP: 3608 byte(s) received in 0.052 second(s), 69.00K byte(s)/sec.

 

[ftp]

# Enable display of detailed prompt information and perform a Get operation.

[ftp] verbose

FTP: verbose is on

 

[ftp] get startup.cfg aa.cfg

 

227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,1,46,5,85).

125 ASCII mode data connection already open, transfer starting for /startup.cfg.

226 Transfer complete.

FTP: 3608 byte(s) received in 0.193 second(s), 18.00K byte(s)/sec.

 


TFTP configuration commands

display tftp client configuration

Syntax

display tftp client configuration [ | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ]

View

Any view

Default level

1: Monitor level

Parameters

|: Filters command output by specifying a regular expression. For more information about regular expressions, see Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

begin: Displays the first line that matches the specified regular expression and all lines that follow.

exclude: Displays all lines that do not match the specified regular expression.

include: Displays all lines that match the specified regular expression.

regular-expression: Specifies a regular expression, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 256 characters.

Description

Use the display tftp client configuration command to display source IP address configuration of the TFTP client.

The display tftp client configuration command displays the source IP address configuration of the TFTP client. If the specified source IP address is active, this command displays the source IP address. If the specified source interface is active, this command displays the source interface.

Related commands: tftp client source.

Examples

# Display the source IP address configuration of the TFTP client.

<Sysname> display tftp client configuration

The source IP address is 192.168.0.123

tftp-server acl

Syntax

tftp-server [ ipv6 ] acl acl-number

undo tftp-server [ ipv6 ] acl

View

System view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

ipv6: References an IPv6 ACL. If it is not specified, an IPv4 ACL is referenced.

acl-number: Number of a basic ACL, in the range of 2000 to 2999.

Description

Use the tftp-server acl command to control the router’s access to a specific TFTP server using an ACL.

Use the undo tftp-server acl command to restore the default.

By default, no ACL is used to control the router’s access to TFTP servers.

You can use an ACL to deny or permit the device’s access to a specific TFTP server.

For more information about ACL, see ACL and QoS Configuration Guide.

Examples

# Allow the router to access the TFTP server with the IP address of 1.1.1.1 only (in IPv4 networking environment).

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl number 2000

[Sysname-acl-basic-2000] rule permit source 1.1.1.1 0

[Sysname-acl-basic-2000] quit

[Sysname] tftp-server acl 2000

# Allow the router to access the TFTP server with the IP address of 2001::1 only (in IPv6 networking environment).

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl ipv6 number 2001

[Sysname-acl6-basic-2001] rule permit source 2001::1/128

[Sysname-acl6-basic-2001] quit

[Sysname] tftp-server ipv6 acl 2001

tftp

Syntax

tftp server-address { get | put | sget } source-filename [ destination-filename ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ source { interface interface-type interface-number | ip source-ip-address } ]

View

User view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

server-address: IP address or host name of a TFTP server.

source-filename: Source file name.

destination-filename: Destination file name.

get: Downloads a file in normal mode.

put: Uploads a file.

sget: Downloads a file in secure mode.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies the MPLS L3VPN where the TFTP server belongs. The vpn-instance-name argument is a case sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If the TFTP server is on the public network, do not specify this option.

source: Configures parameters for source address binding.

·           interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies the source interface by its type and number. The primary IP address configured on the source interface is the source IP address of the packets sent by TFTP. If no primary IP address is configured on the source interface, the transmission fails.

·           ip source-ip-address: Specifies the source IP address for the current TFTP client to transmit packets. This source address must be an IP address that has been configured on the router.

Description

Use the tftp command to upload files from the local router to a TFTP server or download files from the TFTP server to the local router.

If no destination file name is specified, a file is saved using the same name as that on the remote TFTP server to the current working directory of the user (namely, the working directory where the tftp command is executed).

The source IP address specified with the tftp command has higher priority than that specified with the tftp client source command and thus is preferably used.

This command applies to IPv4 networks.

Related commands: tftp client source.

Examples

# Download the config.cfg file from the TFTP server with the IP address of 192.168.0.98 and save it as config.bak. Specify the source IP address to be 192.168.0.92.

<Sysname> tftp 192.168.0.98 get config.cfg config.bak source ip 192.168.0.92

  ...

  File will be transferred in binary mode

  Downloading file from remote TFTP server, please wait....

  TFTP:      372800 bytes received in 1 second(s)

  File downloaded successfully.

# Upload the config.cfg file from the local router to the default path of the TFTP server with the IP address of 192.168.0.98 and save it as config.bak. Specify the source IP interface to be GigabitEthernet 3/1/1.

<Sysname> tftp 192.168.0.98 put config.cfg config.bak source interface gigabitethernet 3/1/1

 

  File will be transferred in binary mode

  Sending file to remote TFTP server. Please wait...

  TFTP:        345600 bytes sent in 1 second(s).

  File uploaded successfully.

tftp client source

Syntax

tftp client source { interface interface-type interface-number | ip source-ip-address }

undo tftp client source

View

System view

Default level

2: System level

Parameters

interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies the source interface for establishing TFTP connections. The primary IP address of the source interface is used as the source IP address of packets sent to a TFTP server. If the source interface has no primary IP address specified, no TFTP connection can be established.

ip source-ip-address: Specifies the source IP address of packets sent to a TFTP server, which is one of the IP addresses configured on the device.

Description

Use the tftp client source command to specify the source IP address of packets sent to a TFTP server.

Use the undo tftp client source command to restore the default.

By default, the source IP address is the IP address of the output interface of the route to the server is used as the source IP address..

If you use the tftp client source command to first configure a source interface and then a source IP address, the source IP address overwrites the source interface, and vice versa.

If you first use the tftp client source command to specify a source IP address and then use the tftp command to specify another source IP address, the latter is used.

The source IP address specified with the tftp client source command applies to all TFTP connections while the one specified with the tftp command applies to the current TFTP connection only.

Related commands: display tftp client configuration.

Examples

# Specify the source IP address of packets sent a TFTP server as 2.2.2.2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] tftp client source ip 2.2.2.2

# Specify the IP address of interface GigabitEthernet 3/1/1 as the source IP address of packets sent to a TFTP server.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] tftp client source interface GigabitEthernet 3/1/1

tftp ipv6

Syntax

tftp ipv6 tftp-ipv6-server [ -i interface-type interface-number ] { get | put } source-filename [ destination-filename ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]

View

User view

Default level

3: Manage level

Parameters

tftp-ipv6-server: IPv6 address or host name (a string of 1 to 46 characters) of a TFTP server.

-i interface-type interface-number: Specifies the egress interface by its type and number. This parameter can be used only in case that the TFTP server address is a link local address and the specified egress interface must have a link local address. For the configuration of link local address, see Layer 3—IP Services Configuration Guide.

get: Downloads a file.

put: Uploads a file.

source-file: Source filename.

destination-file: Destination filename. If not specified, this filename is the same as the source filename.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies the MPLS L3VPN where the TFTP server belongs. The vpn-instance-name argument is a case sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If the TFTP server is on the public network, do not specify this option.

Description

Use the tftp ipv6 command to download a specified file from a TFTP server or upload a specified local file to a TFTP server.

This command applies to IPv6 networks.

Examples

# Download filetoget.txt from the TFTP server.

<Sysname> tftp ipv6 fe80::250:daff:fe91:e058 -i gigabitethernet 3/1/1 get filetoget.txt

  ...

  File will be transferred in binary mode

  Downloading file from remote TFTP server, please wait....

  TFTP:      411100 bytes received in 2 second(s)

  File downloaded successfully.

 

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