NAME
IO::Ftp - A simple interface to Net::FTP's socket level get/put
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Ftp;
my $out = IO::Ftp->new('>','//user:pwd@foo.bar.com/foo/bar/fu.bar', TYPE=>'a');
my $in = IO::Ftp->new('<','//foo.bar.com/foo/bar/fu.bar', TYPE=>'a'); #anon access example
while (<$in>) {
s/foo/bar/g;
print $out;
}
close $in;
close $out;
### for something along the lines of 'mget':
while (my $in = IO::Ftp->new('<<','//foo.bar.com/foo/bar/*.txt', TYPE=>'a') { print "processing ",$in->filename, "\n"; #... $in->close; $in->delete; }
DESCRIPTION
EXPORTS
None by default.
REQUIRES
Net::FTP File::Basename URI Symbol
CONSTRUCTOR
- new ( MODE, URI [,OPTIONS] )
-
MODE
indicates the FTP command to use, and is one of- < get
- > put
- >> append
- << get with wildcard match. This allows fetching a file when the name is not known, or is partially known. Wildcarding is as performed by Net::FTP::ls. If more than one file matches, the same one will always be returned. To process a number of files, they must be deleted or renamed to not match the wildcard.
URI
is an FTP format URI without the leading 'ftp:'.OPTIONS
are passed in hash format, and can be one or more of
METHODS
- rename_to (NEW_NAME) Renames the file.
- delete Deletes the file.
- size Returns the size of the file.
- mdtm Returns the modification time of the fiile.
size and mdtm cache their values before the socket is opened. After the socket is closed, they call the Net::FTP methods of the same name.
CREDITS
Graham Barr for his Net::FTP module, which does all the 'real work'.
tye at PerlMonks
COPYRIGHT
(c) 2003 Mike Blackwell. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
Mike Blackwell <mikeb@cpan.org>
SEE ALSO
Net::FTP perl(1).
1 POD Error
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 295:
=back doesn't take any parameters, but you said =back Note: These methods cannot be performed while the connection is open. rename_to and delete will fail and return undef if used before the socket is closed.