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added some text about PASV and PORT and stuff

This commit is contained in:
Daniel Stenberg 2002-03-19 08:55:05 +00:00
parent 974f314f57
commit 7ffb4660ec

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@ -869,6 +869,35 @@ Cookies Without Chocolate Chips
getting lost.
FTP Peculiarities We Need
FTP transfers use a second TCP/IP connection for the data transfer. This is
usually a fact you can forget and ignore but at times this fact will come
back to haunt you. libcurl offers several different ways to custom how the
second connection is being made.
libcurl can either connect to the server a second time or tell the server to
connect back to it. The first option is the default and it is also what works
best for all the people behind firewals, NATs or ip-masquarading setups.
libcurl then tells the server to open up a new port and wait for a second
connection. This is by default attempted with EPSV first, and if that doesn't
work it tries PASV instead. (EPSV is an extension to the original FTP spec
and does not exist nor work on all FTP servers.)
You can prevent libcurl from first trying the EPSV command by setting
CURLOPT_FTP_USE_EPSV to FALSE.
In some cases, you will perfer to have the server connect back to you for the
second connection. This might be when the server is perhaps behind a firewall
or something and only allows connections on a single port. libcurl then
informs the remote server which IP address and port number to connect to.
This is made with the CURLOPT_FTPPORT option. If you set it to "-", libcurl
will use your system's "default IP address". If you want to use a particular
IP, you can set the full IP address, a host name to resolve to an IP address
or even a local network interface name that libcurl will get the IP address
from.
Headers Equal Fun
Some protocols provide "headers", meta-data separated from the normal