On Thu, 2011-09-29 at 08:37 -0500, Michael B. Brutman wrote: > I have made a large round of improvements to the FTP server in mTCP and > I am looking for a little testing help with it. If you have a few spare > moments over the next day or two just try to connect to it and browse > the file structure. Using a few different clients will help me shake > out any new bugs. Upload some relevant files if you are adventurous.
Uploads to incoming doesn't quite work for me. Here's the transcript of my session: $ ftp -n -p 96.42.66.188 2021 Connected to 96.42.66.188 (96.42.66.188). 220 mTCP FTP Server ftp> user anonymous 331 Anonymous ok, send your email addr as the password Password: 230-Welcome to Mike's PCjr running the mTCP FTP server! This machine 230-was released by IBM in 1983 and features a 4.77Mhz Nec V20 CPU (an 230-upgrade from the standard 8088), an XT-IDE modified for the PCjr, a 230-Western Digital 8003 Ethernet card, and a 20GB Maxtor hard drive. 230-It is running DOS 3.3 so most of the hard drive is not being used. 230-Please poke around, test things out, report any problems you might 230-have, and enjoy! Incoming files may be deposited at /incoming, and 230-you can create subdirectories there if needed. -Mike 230 User logged in ftp> put alex_was_here local: alex_was_here remote: alex_was_here 227 Entering Passive Mode (96,42,66,188,11,76) 550 You need to be in the /INCOMING directory to upload ftp> cd incoming 250 CWD command successful ftp> put alex_was_here local: alex_was_here remote: alex_was_here 227 Entering Passive Mode (96,42,66,188,8,221) 550 Bad path ftp> dir 425 Transfer already in progress Passive mode refused. ftp> ls 425 Transfer already in progress Passive mode refused. ftp> bye 221 Server closing connection Hope this helps -- Tactical Nuclear Kittens ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1 _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user