ftplib
--- FTP protocol clientSource code: Lib/ftplib.py
[UNKNOWN NODE transition]This module defines the class FTP
and a few related items. The
FTP
class implements the client side of the FTP protocol. You can use
this to write Python programs that perform a variety of automated FTP jobs, such
as mirroring other FTP servers. It is also used by the module urllib
to
handle URLs that use FTP. For more information on FTP (File Transfer Protocol),
see Internet RFC 959.
Here's a sample session using the ftplib
module:
>>> from ftplib import FTP
>>> ftp = FTP('ftp.debian.org') # connect to host, default port
>>> ftp.login() # user anonymous, passwd anonymous@
'230 Login successful.'
>>> ftp.cwd('debian') # change into "debian" directory
>>> ftp.retrlines('LIST') # list directory contents
-rw-rw-r-- 1 1176 1176 1063 Jun 15 10:18 README
...
drwxr-sr-x 5 1176 1176 4096 Dec 19 2000 pool
drwxr-sr-x 4 1176 1176 4096 Nov 17 2008 project
drwxr-xr-x 3 1176 1176 4096 Oct 10 2012 tools
'226 Directory send OK.'
>>> ftp.retrbinary('RETR README', open('README', 'wb').write)
'226 Transfer complete.'
>>> ftp.quit()
The module defines the following items:
class ftplib.FTP([host[, user[, passwd[, acct[, timeout]]]]])[source]
Return a new instance of the FTP
class. When host is given, the
method call connect(host)
is made. When user is given, additionally
the method call login(user, passwd, acct)
is made (where passwd and
acct default to the empty string when not given). The optional timeout
parameter specifies a timeout in seconds for blocking operations like the
connection attempt (if is not specified, the global default timeout setting
will be used).
Changed in version 2.6: timeout was added.
class ftplib.FTP_TLS([host[, user[, passwd[, acct[, keyfile[, certfile[, context[, timeout]]]]]]]])[source]
A FTP
subclass which adds TLS support to FTP as described in
RFC 4217.
Connect as usual to port 21 implicitly securing the FTP control connection
before authenticating. Securing the data connection requires the user to
explicitly ask for it by calling the prot_p()
method. context
is a ssl.SSLContext
object which allows bundling SSL configuration
options, certificates and private keys into a single (potentially
long-lived) structure. Please read Security considerations for best practices.
keyfile and certfile are a legacy alternative to context -- they can point to PEM-formatted private key and certificate chain files (respectively) for the SSL connection.
New in version 2.7.
Changed in version 2.7.10: The context parameter was added.
Here's a sample session using the FTP_TLS
class:
exception ftplib.error_reply[source]
Exception raised when an unexpected reply is received from the server.
exception ftplib.error_temp[source]
Exception raised when an error code signifying a temporary error (response codes in the range 400--499) is received.
exception ftplib.error_perm[source]
Exception raised when an error code signifying a permanent error (response codes in the range 500--599) is received.
exception ftplib.error_proto[source]
Exception raised when a reply is received from the server that does not fit the response specifications of the File Transfer Protocol, i.e. begin with a digit in the range 1--5.
ftplib.all_errors
The set of all exceptions (as a tuple) that methods of FTP
instances may raise as a result of problems with the FTP connection (as
opposed to programming errors made by the caller). This set includes the
four exceptions listed above as well as socket.error
and
IOError
.
See also
- Module
netrc
- Parser for the
.netrc
file format. The file.netrc
is typically used by FTP clients to load user authentication information before prompting the user.
The file Tools/scripts/ftpmirror.py
in the Python source distribution is
a script that can mirror FTP sites, or portions thereof, using the ftplib
module. It can be used as an extended example that applies this module.
Several methods are available in two flavors: one for handling text files and
another for binary files. These are named for the command which is used
followed by lines
for the text version or binary
for the binary version.
FTP
instances have the following methods:
FTP.set_debuglevel(level)[source]
Set the instance's debugging level. This controls the amount of debugging
output printed. The default, 0
, produces no debugging output. A value of
1
produces a moderate amount of debugging output, generally a single line
per request. A value of 2
or higher produces the maximum amount of
debugging output, logging each line sent and received on the control connection.
FTP.connect(host[, port[, timeout]])[source]
Connect to the given host and port. The default port number is 21
, as
specified by the FTP protocol specification. It is rarely needed to specify a
different port number. This function should be called only once for each
instance; it should not be called at all if a host was given when the instance
was created. All other methods can only be used after a connection has been
made.
The optional timeout parameter specifies a timeout in seconds for the connection attempt. If no timeout is passed, the global default timeout setting will be used.
Changed in version 2.6: timeout was added.
FTP.getwelcome()[source]
Return the welcome message sent by the server in reply to the initial connection. (This message sometimes contains disclaimers or help information that may be relevant to the user.)
FTP.login([user[, passwd[, acct]]])[source]
Log in as the given user. The passwd and acct parameters are optional and
default to the empty string. If no user is specified, it defaults to
'anonymous'
. If user is 'anonymous'
, the default passwd is
'anonymous@'
. This function should be called only once for each instance,
after a connection has been established; it should not be called at all if a
host and user were given when the instance was created. Most FTP commands are
only allowed after the client has logged in. The acct parameter supplies
"accounting information"; few systems implement this.
FTP.abort()[source]
Abort a file transfer that is in progress. Using this does not always work, but it's worth a try.
FTP.sendcmd(command)[source]
Send a simple command string to the server and return the response string.
FTP.voidcmd(command)[source]
Send a simple command string to the server and handle the response. Return
nothing if a response code corresponding to success (codes in the range
200--299) is received. Raise error_reply
otherwise.
FTP.retrbinary(command, callback[, maxblocksize[, rest]])[source]
Retrieve a file in binary transfer mode. command should be an appropriate
RETR
command: 'RETR filename'
. The callback function is called for
each block of data received, with a single string argument giving the data
block. The optional maxblocksize argument specifies the maximum chunk size to
read on the low-level socket object created to do the actual transfer (which
will also be the largest size of the data blocks passed to callback). A
reasonable default is chosen. rest means the same thing as in the
transfercmd()
method.
FTP.retrlines(command[, callback])[source]
Retrieve a file or directory listing in ASCII transfer mode. command
should be an appropriate RETR
command (see retrbinary()
) or a
command such as LIST
, NLST
or MLSD
(usually just the string
'LIST'
). LIST
retrieves a list of files and information about those files.
NLST
retrieves a list of file names. On some servers, MLSD
retrieves
a machine readable list of files and information about those files. The callback
function is called for each line with a string argument containing the line with
the trailing CRLF stripped. The default callback prints the line to sys.stdout
.
FTP.set_pasv(val)[source]
Enable "passive" mode if val is true, otherwise disable passive mode. (In Python 2.0 and before, passive mode was off by default; in Python 2.1 and later, it is on by default.)
FTP.storbinary(command, fp[, blocksize, callback, rest])[source]
Store a file in binary transfer mode. command should be an appropriate
STOR
command: "STOR filename"
. fp is an open file object which is
read until EOF using its read()
method in blocks of size blocksize to
provide the data to be stored. The blocksize argument defaults to 8192.
callback is an optional single parameter callable that is called
on each block of data after it is sent. rest means the same thing as in
the transfercmd()
method.
Changed in version 2.1: default for blocksize added.
Changed in version 2.6: callback parameter added.
Changed in version 2.7: rest parameter added.
FTP.storlines(command, fp[, callback])[source]
Store a file in ASCII transfer mode. command should be an appropriate
STOR
command (see storbinary()
). Lines are read until EOF from the
open file object fp using its readline()
method to provide
the data to be stored. callback is an optional single parameter callable
that is called on each line after it is sent.
Changed in version 2.6: callback parameter added.
FTP.transfercmd(cmd[, rest])[source]
Initiate a transfer over the data connection. If the transfer is active, send an
EPRT
or PORT
command and the transfer command specified by cmd, and
accept the connection. If the server is passive, send an EPSV
or PASV
command, connect to it, and start the transfer command. Either way, return the
socket for the connection.
If optional rest is given, a REST
command is sent to the server, passing
rest as an argument. rest is usually a byte offset into the requested file,
telling the server to restart sending the file's bytes at the requested offset,
skipping over the initial bytes. Note however that RFC 959 requires only that
rest be a string containing characters in the printable range from ASCII code
33 to ASCII code 126. The transfercmd()
method, therefore, converts
rest to a string, but no check is performed on the string's contents. If the
server does not recognize the REST
command, an error_reply
exception
will be raised. If this happens, simply call transfercmd()
without a
rest argument.
FTP.ntransfercmd(cmd[, rest])[source]
Like transfercmd()
, but returns a tuple of the data connection and the
expected size of the data. If the expected size could not be computed, None
will be returned as the expected size. cmd and rest means the same thing as
in transfercmd()
.
FTP.nlst(argument[, ...])[source]
Return a list of file names as returned by the NLST
command. The
optional argument is a directory to list (default is the current server
directory). Multiple arguments can be used to pass non-standard options to
the NLST
command.
FTP.dir(argument[, ...])[source]
Produce a directory listing as returned by the LIST
command, printing it to
standard output. The optional argument is a directory to list (default is the
current server directory). Multiple arguments can be used to pass non-standard
options to the LIST
command. If the last argument is a function, it is used
as a callback function as for retrlines()
; the default prints to
sys.stdout
. This method returns None
.
FTP.rename(fromname, toname)[source]
Rename file fromname on the server to toname.
FTP.delete(filename)[source]
Remove the file named filename from the server. If successful, returns the
text of the response, otherwise raises error_perm
on permission errors or
error_reply
on other errors.
FTP.cwd(pathname)[source]
Set the current directory on the server.
FTP.mkd(pathname)[source]
Create a new directory on the server.
FTP.pwd()[source]
Return the pathname of the current directory on the server.
FTP.rmd(dirname)[source]
Remove the directory named dirname on the server.
FTP.size(filename)[source]
Request the size of the file named filename on the server. On success, the
size of the file is returned as an integer, otherwise None
is returned.
Note that the SIZE
command is not standardized, but is supported by many
common server implementations.
FTP.quit()[source]
Send a QUIT
command to the server and close the connection. This is the
"polite" way to close a connection, but it may raise an exception if the server
responds with an error to the QUIT
command. This implies a call to the
close()
method which renders the FTP
instance useless for
subsequent calls (see below).
FTP.close()[source]
Close the connection unilaterally. This should not be applied to an already
closed connection such as after a successful call to quit()
.
After this call the FTP
instance should not be used any more (after
a call to close()
or quit()
you cannot reopen the
connection by issuing another login()
method).
FTP_TLS
class inherits from FTP
, defining these additional objects:
FTP_TLS.ssl_version
The SSL version to use (defaults to ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23
).
FTP_TLS.auth()[source]
Set up secure control connection by using TLS or SSL, depending on what
specified in ssl_version()
attribute.
FTP_TLS.prot_p()[source]
Set up secure data connection.
FTP_TLS.prot_c()[source]
Set up clear text data connection.