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  3. what is more reliable than ftp?

what is more reliable than ftp?

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  • S Simon Lee Shugar

    Pigeon "Pigeon flies past broadband in data speed race" http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-11325452[^]

    Simon Lee Shugar (Software Developer) www.simonshugar.co.uk "If something goes by a false name, would it mean that thing is fake? False by nature?" By Gilbert Durandil

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    Mark AJA
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    Pigeon post is also less likely to crash than FTP/Broadband, because the pigeon knows that his life depends on not crashing. :confused:

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    • L Lost User

      Torrents. Resumable on a 16kb block level, built-in integrity checks, clients are designed for sudden loss of connection. If things go really wrong, a "piece" will fail its hash-check and will be redownloaded. They're meant for P2P, but they also work fine with 1 seed and 1 peer, essentially acting like 1 server and 1 client. If there are multiple clients, they can limit their upload capacity if they want to.

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      Jeremy David Thomson
      wrote on last edited by
      #33

      I would have thought torrents would be a good way of getting your internet connections revoked by your ISP? I haven't used torrents at all since anti-piracy three-strikes law came into effect here in NZ. Sure there might be legit reasons for P2P file sharing, but it must raise a red flag on the ISP servers. Have I been needlessly cautious?

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      • J Jeremy David Thomson

        I would have thought torrents would be a good way of getting your internet connections revoked by your ISP? I haven't used torrents at all since anti-piracy three-strikes law came into effect here in NZ. Sure there might be legit reasons for P2P file sharing, but it must raise a red flag on the ISP servers. Have I been needlessly cautious?

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #34

        Well I don't know, I'm not that familiar with how the system works in NZ. I'd hope they'd check the hash against a database of "files that are not supposed to be shared" (which would take quite some effort to maintain), but on the other hand I'd also expect a stupid automated system to be stupid.

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        • M MikeD 2

          Apologies if this is in the wrong place but I couldn't see that it fitted anywhere else either My clients regularly transfer largish files via ftp and everything generally works happily As they are in an expensive serviced office one client has transferred their internet connection over to a 4G solution to get much faster access without the corresponding bill and generally it works but.... as might be expected their ftp transfers now have many retries and failed transfers. Sometimes the transfer appears to be successful but the resulting file might be a small percentage of the correct file size Does anyone have any suggestions for alternatives to look at that might work better (more reliably) over the 4g network?

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          JohnLBevan
          wrote on last edited by
          #35

          If you're running Windows there's BITS: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/powershell/archive/2009/01/11/transferring-large-files-using-bits.aspx[^] That said, to use it on a phone you'd need to write your own client compatible with the phone's OS, which is probably more work than you're hoping for.

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          • B Brisingr Aerowing

            On the Torrent note, there is Bittorrent Sync[^], from the official Bittorrent Labs site. EDIT: Didn't read the message above mine! :-O

            What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?

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            rshep1
            wrote on last edited by
            #36

            I have used rsync for this and it works well. I have alsi used google drive, easy to setuop and has auto sync features betwwen windows, and mobile devices.

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            • M MikeD 2

              Sorry but I don't agree In my book if a program sets out to do something (in this case transfer a file) and the results are not achieved it isn't reliable. It doesn't matter to me or the customer why the program is failing just that it is I wasn't aware of the alternate modes in the ftp spec and after checking it appears that a lot of ftp programs available only implement stream mode and now I know I might have phrased the subject slightly differently but the idea of a subject is to convey what you are looking for in a few words

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              Thornik
              wrote on last edited by
              #37

              If you use good tool in a wrong environment, why you blame the tool?? 3G _is_ a wrong environment, supposed to be very unstable! So blame 3G, not a FTP. And it's not a problem of FTP that some lazy ass didn't implement "block" mode transfer. You're talking from side of "I wanna this result" (side of USER - man who doesn't know and don't want to know internals of protocol). But you _blame_ protocol like you KNOW internals! Don't you see you jumped to the side of your incompetency?? All what you can ask is: "We need to transfer files in unreliable 3G environment. Previously we use wrong tool FTP, can you please advice for tool which can do reliable transfer over unstable connection?".

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              • M Mark_Wallace

                Argonia wrote:

                I noticed that the most new things I learn everyday come from CP. Strange isn't it ?

                What, you mean you actually go to other web-sites? What a waste of bandwidth.

                I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

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                Argonia
                wrote on last edited by
                #38

                Yes of course I go to sites like dilbert everyday :D Its my stimulus to go to work :D

                Microsoft ... the only place where VARIANT_TRUE != true

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                • J Jeremy David Thomson

                  I would have thought torrents would be a good way of getting your internet connections revoked by your ISP? I haven't used torrents at all since anti-piracy three-strikes law came into effect here in NZ. Sure there might be legit reasons for P2P file sharing, but it must raise a red flag on the ISP servers. Have I been needlessly cautious?

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                  Nchek2000
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #39

                  I suppose for his case, he should his own (private) tracker and only give the .torrent file/magnet link to the customer or the other way around. The listing should not be public, the connection should be encrypted (MSE), and usually the government wouldn't know unless they enable deep-packet inspection on for each packet.

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                  • D DaveX86

                    I've had good luck with BitTorrent Sync[^]...it's peer to peer, works on all platforms and it's free. Updated: Fixed link :-O

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                    MikeD 2
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #40

                    Thank you very much for this suggestion I have now set this up (pretty straightforward) and it has just completed it's first successful transfer It took 69 hours to transfer 3.2GB over the 4g connection but it was a good transfer which is way more important I can also see a number of other benefits in using this as a replacement solution Cheers Mike

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                    • M MikeD 2

                      Thank you very much for this suggestion I have now set this up (pretty straightforward) and it has just completed it's first successful transfer It took 69 hours to transfer 3.2GB over the 4g connection but it was a good transfer which is way more important I can also see a number of other benefits in using this as a replacement solution Cheers Mike

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                      DaveX86
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #41

                      You're welcome, Mike...glad it's working out for you :)

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