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321 lines
10 KiB
321 lines
10 KiB
=head1 NAME
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libnetFAQ - libnet Frequently Asked Questions
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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=head2 Where to get this document
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This document is distributed with the libnet disribution, and is also
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avaliable on the libnet web page at
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http://www.pobox.com/~gbarr/libnet/
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=head2 How to contribute to this document
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You may mail corrections, additions, and suggestions to me
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[email protected].
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=head1 Author and Copyright Information
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Copyright (c) 1997-1998 Graham Barr. All rights reserved.
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This document is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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under the terms of the Artistic Licence.
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=head2 Disclaimer
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This information is offered in good faith and in the hope that it may
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be of use, but is not guaranteed to be correct, up to date, or suitable
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for any particular purpose whatsoever. The authors accept no liability
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in respect of this information or its use.
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=head1 Obtaining and installing libnet
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=over 4
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=head2 What is libnet ?
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libnet is a collection of perl5 modules which all related to network
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programming. The majority of the modules avaliable provided the
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client side of popular server-client protocols that are used in
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the internet community.
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=head2 Which version of perl do I need ?
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libnet has been know to work with versions of perl from 5.002 onwards. However
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if your release of perl is prior to perl5.004 then you will need to
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obtain and install the IO distribution from CPAN. If you have perl5.004
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or later then you will have the IO modules in your installation already,
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but CPAN may contain updates.
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=head2 What other modules do I need ?
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The only modules you will need installed are the modules from the IO
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distribution. If you have perl5.004 or later you will already have
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these modules.
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=head2 What machines support libnet ?
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libnet itself is an entirly perl-code distribution so it should work
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on any machine that perl runs on. However IO may not work
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with some machines and earlier releases of perl. But this
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should not be the case with perl version 5.004 or later.
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=head2 Where can I get the latest libnet release
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The latest libnet release is always on CPAN, you will find it
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in
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http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/Net/
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The latest release and information is also avaliable on the libnet web page
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at
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http://www.pobox.com/~gbarr/libnet/
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=back
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=head1 Using Net::FTP
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=over
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=head2 How do I download files from a FTP server ?
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An example taken from an article posted to comp.lang.perl.misc
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#!/your/path/to/perl
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# a module making life easier
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use Net::FTP;
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# for debuging: $ftp = Net::FTP->new('site','Debug',10);
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# open a connection and log in!
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$ftp = Net::FTP->new('target_site.somewhere.xxx');
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$ftp->login('username','password');
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# set transfer mode to binary
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$ftp->binary();
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# change the directory on the ftp site
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$ftp->cwd('/some/path/to/somewhere/');
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foreach $name ('file1', 'file2', 'file3') {
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# get's arguments are in the following order:
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# ftp server's filename
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# filename to save the transfer to on the local machine
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# can be simply used as get($name) if you want the same name
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$ftp->get($name,$name);
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}
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# ftp done!
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$ftp->quit;
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=head2 How do I transfer files in binary mode ?
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To transfer files without <LF><CR> translation Net::FTP provides
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the C<binary> method
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$ftp->binary;
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=head2 How can I get the size of a file on a remote FTP server ?
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=head2 How can I get the modification time of a file on a remote FTP server ?
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=head2 How can I change the permissions of a file on a remote server ?
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The FTP protocol does not have a command for changing the permissions
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of a file on the remote server. But some ftp servers may allow a chmod
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command to be issued via a SITE command, eg
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$ftp->quot('site chmod 0777',$filename);
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But this is not guaranteed to work.
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=head2 Can I do a reget operation like the ftp command ?
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=head2 How do I get a directory listing from a FTP server ?
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=head2 Changeing directory to "" does not fail ?
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Passing an argument of "" to ->cwd() has the same affect of calling ->cwd()
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without any arguments. Turn on Debug (I<See below>) and you will see what is
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happening
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$ftp = Net::FTP->new($host, Debug => 1);
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$ftp->login;
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$ftp->cwd("");
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gives
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x82196d8)>>> CWD /
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x82196d8)<<< 250 CWD command successful.
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=head2 I am behind a SOCKS firewall, but the Firewall option does not work ?
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The Firewall option is only for support of one type of firewall. The type
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supported is a ftp proxy.
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To use Net::FTP, or any other module in the libnet distribution,
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through a SOCKS firewall you must create a socks-ified perl executable
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by compiling perl with the socks library.
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=head2 I am behind a FTP proxy firewall, but cannot access machines outside ?
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Net::FTP implements the most popular ftp proxy firewall approach. The sceme
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implemented is that where you loginin to the firewall with C<user@hostname>
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I have heard of one other type of firewall which requires a login to the
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firewall with an accont, then a second login with C<user@hostname>. You can
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still use Net::FTP to traverse these firewalls, but a more manual approach
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must be taken, eg
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$ftp = Net::FTP->new($firewall) or die $@;
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$ftp->login($firewall_user, $firewall_passwd) or die $ftp->message;
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$ftp->login($ext_user . '@' . $ext_host, $ext_passwd) or die $ftp->message.
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=head2 My ftp proxy firewall does not listen on port 21
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FTP servers usually listen on the same port number, port 21, as any other
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FTP server. But there is no reason why thi has to be the case.
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If you pass a port number to Net::FTP then it assumes this is the port
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number of the final destination. By default Net::FTP will always try
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to connect to the firewall on port 21.
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Net::FTP uses IO::Socket to open the connection and IO::Socket allows
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the port number to be specified as part of the hostname. So this problem
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can be resolved by either passing a Firewall option like C<"hostname:1234">
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or by setting the C<ftp_firewall> option in Net::Config to be a string
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in in the same form.
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=head2 Is it possible to change the file permissions of a file on an FTP server ?
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The answer to this is "maybe". The FTP protocol does not specify a command to change
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file permissions on a remote host. However many servers do allow you to run the
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chmod command via the C<SITE> command. This can be done with
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$ftp->site('chmod','0775',$file);
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=head2 I have seen scripts call a method message, but cannot find it documented ?
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Net::FTP, like several other packages in libnet, inherits from Net::Cmd, so
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all the methods described in Net::Cmd are also avaliable on Net::FTP
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objects.
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=head2 Why does Net::FTP not implement mput and mget methods
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The quick answer is because they are easy to implement yourself. The long
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answer is that to write these in such a way that multiple platforms are
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supported correctly would just require too much code. Below are
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some examples how you can implement these yourself.
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sub mput {
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my($ftp,$pattern) = @_;
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foreach my $file (<$pattern>) {
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$ftp->put($file) or warn $ftp->message;
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}
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}
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sub mget {
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my($ftp,$pattern) = @_;
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foreach my $file ($ftp->ls($pattern)) {
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$ftp->get($file) or warn $ftp->message;
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}
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}
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=back
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=head1 Using Net::SMTP
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=over
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=head2 Why can't the part of an Email address after the @ be used as the hostname ?
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The part of an Email address which follows the @ is not necessarily a hostname,
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it is a mail domain. To find the name of a host to connect for a mail domain
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you need to do a DNS MX lookup
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=head2 Why does Net::SMTP not do DNS MX lookups ?
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Net::SMTP implements the SMTP protocol. The DNS MX lookup is not part
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of this protocol.
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=head2 The verify method always returns true ?
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Well it may seem thay way, but it does not. The verify method returns true
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if the command suceeded. If you pass verify an address which the
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server would normally have to forward to another machine the the command
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will suceed with something like
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252 Couldn't verify <someone@there> but will attempt delivery anyway
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This command will only fail if you pass it an address in a domain the
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the server directly delivers for, and that address does not exist.
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=back
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=head1 Debugging scripts
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=over
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=head2 How can I debug my scripts that use Net::* modules ?
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Most of the libnet client classes allow options to be passed to the
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constructor, in most cases one option is called C<Debug>. Passing
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this option with a non-zero value will turn on a protocol trace, which
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will be sent to STDERR. This trace can be useful to see what commands
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are being sent to the remote server and what responces are being
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received back.
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#!/your/path/to/perl
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use Net::FTP;
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my $ftp = new Net::FTP($host, Debug => 1);
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$ftp->login('gbarr','password');
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$ftp->quit;
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this script would output something like
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Net::FTP: Net::FTP(2.22)
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Net::FTP: Exporter
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Net::FTP: Net::Cmd(2.0801)
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Net::FTP: IO::Socket::INET
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Net::FTP: IO::Socket(1.1603)
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Net::FTP: IO::Handle(1.1504)
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)<<< 220 imagine FTP server (Version wu-2.4(5) Tue Jul 29 11:17:18 CDT 1997) ready.
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)>>> user gbarr
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)<<< 331 Password required for gbarr.
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)>>> PASS ....
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)<<< 230 User gbarr logged in. Access restrictions apply.
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)>>> QUIT
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Net::FTP=GLOB(0x8152974)<<< 221 Goodbye.
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The first few lines tell you the modules that Net::FTP uses and thier versions,
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this is usefule data to me when a user reports a bug. The last seven lines
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show the communication with the server. Each line has three parts. The first
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part is the object itself, this is useful for separating the output
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if you are using mutiple objects. The second part is either C<<<<<> to
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show data coming from the server or C<>>>>> to show data
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going to the server. The remainder of the line is the command
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being sent or responce being received.
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=back
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=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
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Copyright (c) 1997 Graham Barr.
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All rights reserved.
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