- Table of Contents
-
- 05-Network
- 01-VRF
- 02-Interface
- 03-Interface pairs
- 04-Interface collaboration
- 05-4G
- 06-Security zones
- 07-VLAN
- 08-MAC
- 09-DNS
- 10-ARP
- 11-ND
- 12-GRE
- 13-IPsec
- 14-ADVPN
- 15-L2TP
- 16-SSL VPN
- 17-Routing table
- 18-Static routing
- 19-Policy-based routing
- 20-OSPF
- 21-BGP
- 22-RIP
- 23-IP multicast routing
- 24-PIM
- 25-IGMP
- 26-DHCP
- 27-HTTP
- 28-SSH
- 29-NTP
- 30-FTP
- 31-Telnet
- 32-IP authentication
- 33-IPv4 whitelist
- 34-IPv6 whitelist
- 35-MAC access advanced settings
- 36-MAC authentication
- 37-MAC access silent MAC info
- 38-MAC address whitelist
- 39-Wireless
- Related Documents
-
30-FTP
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
30-FTP | 13.95 KB |
Introduction
File Transfer Protocol (FTP) is an application layer protocol for transferring files from one host to another over an IP network. It uses TCP port 20 to transfer data and TCP port 21 to transfer control commands.
FTP uses the client/server model. The device can act as the FTP server.