The FTP daemon has been around for some time now but did not have its own thread yet.
This program is the successor of FTPS and strives to be superior in every way.
It is configured by the means of two .ini files, there is ftpd.ini with the basic settings and users.ini which hold the FTP user accounts.
Any questions, bugs or feature request may be written here.
FTP daemon
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"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius -- and a lot of courage -- to move in the opposite direction." Albert Einstein
How the other programs get access to the demon? Through the INI or shared memory?
Всем чмоки в этом проекте! Засуньте эти 11 лет себе в жопу!
It's an FTP daemon, perhaps the words "FTP server" might sound more familiar to you.Mario_r4 wrote:How the other programs get access to the demon? Through the INI or shared memory?
By default, it will listen on TCP port 21 for connections. And that's how other programs, may it be on the local computer or a remote one, access it.
"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius -- and a lot of courage -- to move in the opposite direction." Albert Einstein
Thank you. Now, more understandable.
Всем чмоки в этом проекте! Засуньте эти 11 лет себе в жопу!
System: Vmware Player 3 (PCNET32 driver)
Loading kolibrios.ISO
1. Running FTPD, then FTPC ruins all system. Ping stops working or all system hang or ftpc hugs 100% for 5s then cant connect
2. Running FTPD. Connection from host Win32 FAR ftp client - files readed incomplete (first 256 bytes)
Loading kolibrios.ISO
1. Running FTPD, then FTPC ruins all system. Ping stops working or all system hang or ftpc hugs 100% for 5s then cant connect
2. Running FTPD. Connection from host Win32 FAR ftp client - files readed incomplete (first 256 bytes)
Confirmed but not yet fixed.
Thanks for the report, but please use bug-tracker in the future.
Thanks for the report, but please use bug-tracker in the future.
"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius -- and a lot of courage -- to move in the opposite direction." Albert Einstein
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