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promise-ftp
Advanced tools
promise-ftp is an FTP client module for node.js that provides an asynchronous interface for communicating with an FTP server.
This module is a wrapper around the node-ftp module, and provides some additional features as well as a convenient promise-based API.
This library is written primarily in CoffeeScript, but may be used just as easily in a Node app using Javascript or CoffeeScript. Promises in this module are provided by Bluebird.
Version 1.3.0 changes:
Version 1.2.0 changes:
FtpConnectionError
and FtpReconectError
classes have been moved to
their own module, in anticipation of creating a
semi-interchangeable API for promise-sftp. They are still exposed
on the main module as well.Version 1.1.0 adds:
autoReconnect
and preserveCwd
optionsFtpReconectError
error classreconnect()
and getConnectionStatus()
methodsSTATUSES
and ERROR_CODES
mapsVersion 1.0.0 provides a promise-based API that mirrors the node-ftp API almost identically, except with a promise interface, plus:
FtpConnectionError
error classnpm install promise-ftp
Get a directory listing of the current (remote) working directory:
var PromiseFtp = require('promise-ftp');
var ftp = new PromiseFtp();
ftp.connect({host: host, user: user, password: password})
.then(function (serverMessage) {
console.log('Server message: '+serverMessage);
return ftp.list('/');
}).then(function (list) {
console.log('Directory listing:');
console.dir(list);
return ftp.end();
});
Download remote file 'foo.txt' and save it to the local file system:
var PromiseFtp = require('promise-ftp');
var fs = require('fs');
var ftp = new PromiseFtp();
ftp.connect({host: host, user: user, password: password})
.then(function (serverMessage) {
return ftp.get('foo.txt');
}).then(function (stream) {
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
stream.once('close', resolve);
stream.once('error', reject);
stream.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('foo.local-copy.txt'));
});
}).then(function () {
return ftp.end();
});
Upload local file 'foo.txt' to the server:
var PromiseFtp = require('promise-ftp');
var fs = require('fs');
var ftp = new PromiseFtp();
ftp.connect({host: host, user: user, password: password})
.then(function (serverMessage) {
return ftp.put('foo.txt', 'foo.remote-copy.txt');
}).then(function () {
return ftp.end();
});
For the most part, this module's API mirrors node-ftp's API, except that it returns promises which resolve or reject, rather than emitting events or calling callbacks. However, there are some minor differences and some additional features. If you need access to the underlying events or callback-based methods, you can access the raw node-ftp client via rawClient property.
Errors generated by this module will be instances of one of the following:
FtpConnectionError: Indicates the connection status was not appropriate for the method called; e.g. connect() or reconnect() was called when the connection was not in a disconnected state, end() was called when the connection has already closed, etc.
FtpReconnectError: Only possible when the autoReconnect
option is set true, this indicates a reconnect was
attempted and failed. It includes information about both the original disconnect error (if any) as well as the error
while attempting to reconnect.
In addition, errors from the underlying node-ftp library may be rejected unchanged through method calls. In the case
of protocol-level errors, the rejected error will contain a code
property that references the related 3-digit FTP
response code. This code may be translated into a (generic) human-readable text explanation by referencing the map
PromiseFtp.ERROR_CODES
.
[constructor](): Creates and returns a new PromiseFtp client instance.
connect(config <object>): Connects to an FTP server; returned promise resolves to the server's greeting message. Valid config properties:
host <string>: The hostname or IP address of the FTP server. Default: 'localhost'
port <integer>: The port of the FTP server. Default: 21
secure <mixed>: Set to true for both control and data connection encryption, 'control' for control connection encryption only, or 'implicit' for implicitly encrypted control connection (this mode is deprecated in modern times, but usually uses port 990) Default: false
secureOptions <object>: Additional options to be passed to tls.connect()
. Default: (none)
user <string>: Username for authentication. Default: 'anonymous'
password <string>: Password for authentication. Default: 'anonymous@'
connTimeout <integer>: How long (in milliseconds) to wait for the control connection to be established. Default: 10000
pasvTimeout <integer>: How long (in milliseconds) to wait for a PASV data connection to be established. Default: 10000
keepalive <integer>: How often (in milliseconds) to send a 'dummy' (NOOP) command to keep the connection alive. Default: 10000
autoReconnect <boolean>: Whether to attempt to automatically reconnect using the existing config if the connection is unexpectedly closed. Auto-reconnection is lazy, and so will wait until a command needs to be issued before attempting to reconnect. Default: false
preserveCwd <boolean>: Whether to attempt to return to the prior current working directory after a successful
automatic reconnection. Only used if autoReconnect
is true. Default: false
reconnect(): Connects to an FTP server using the config from the most recent call to connect(). Returned promise resolves to the server's greeting message.
end(): Closes the connection to the server after any/all enqueued commands have been executed; returned promise resolves to any error associated with closing the connection, or true if there was an error but it wasn't captured.
destroy(): Closes the connection to the server immediately. Returns a boolean indicating whether the connection was connected prior to the call to destroy().
getConnectionStatus(): Returns a string describing the current connection state. Possible strings are
enumerated in PromiseFtp.
STATUSES, as well as below:
not yet connected
connecting
connected
logging out
disconnecting
disconnected
reconnecting
list([path <string>][, useCompression <boolean>]): Retrieves the directory listing of path
. path
defaults to the current working directory. useCompression
defaults to false. Returned promise resolves to an array
of objects with these properties:
* type <_string_>: A single character denoting the entry type: 'd' for directory, '-' for file (or 'l' for
symlink on **\*NIX only**).
* name <_string_>: The name of the entry.
* size <_string_>: The size of the entry in bytes.
* date <_Date_>: The last modified date of the entry.
* rights <_object_>: The various permissions for this entry **(*NIX only)**.
* user <_string_>: An empty string or any combination of 'r', 'w', 'x'.
* group <_string_>: An empty string or any combination of 'r', 'w', 'x'.
* other <_string_>: An empty string or any combination of 'r', 'w', 'x'.
* owner <_string_>: The user name or ID that this entry belongs to **(*NIX only)**.
* group <_string_>: The group name or ID that this entry belongs to **(*NIX only)**.
* target <_string_>: For symlink entries, this is the symlink's target **(*NIX only)**.
* sticky <_boolean_>: True if the sticky bit is set for this entry **(*NIX only)**.
get(path <string>[, useCompression <boolean>]): Retrieves a file at path
from the server.
useCompression
defaults to false. Returned promise resolves to a ReadableStream
.
put(input <mixed>, destPath <string>[, useCompression <boolean>]): Sends data to the server to be stored
as destPath
. input
can be a ReadableStream, a Buffer, or a path to a local file. useCompression
defaults to
false. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
append(input <mixed>, destPath <string>[, useCompression <boolean>]): Same as put(), except if
destPath
already exists, it will be appended to instead of overwritten.
rename(oldPath <string>, newPath <string>): Renames/moves oldPath
to newPath
on the server. Returned
promise resolves to undefined.
logout(): Logs the user out from the server. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
delete(path <string>): Deletes the file at path
. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
cwd(path <string>): Changes the current working directory to path
. Returned promise resolves to the new
current directory, if the server replies with it in the response text; otherwise resolves to undefined.
abort(): Aborts the current data transfer (e.g. from get(), put(), or list()). Returned promise resolves to undefined.
site(command <string>): Sends command
(e.g. 'CHMOD 755 foo', 'QUOTA') using SITE; returned promise resolves
to an object with the following attributes:
text <string>: responseText
code <integer>: responseCode.
status(): Retrieves human-readable information about the server's status. Returned promise resolves to the status string sent by the server.
ascii(): Sets the transfer data type to ASCII. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
binary(): Sets the transfer data type to binary (default at time of connection). Returned promise resolves to undefined.
mkdir(path <string>[, recursive <boolean>]): Creates a new directory, path
, on the server. recursive
is
for enabling a 'mkdir -p' algorithm and defaults to false. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
rmdir(path <string>[, includeContents <boolean>]): Removes a directory, path
, on the server. If
includeContents
is true, this call will delete the contents of the directory if it is not empty; note that this
currently only deletes files within the directory, not subdirectories (the command will fail if there are subdirectories
present). Returned promise resolves to undefined.
cdup(): Changes the working directory to the parent of the current directory. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
pwd(): Retrieves the current working directory. Returned promise resolves to the current working directory.
system(): Retrieves the server's operating system. Returned promise resolves to the OS string sent by the server.
listSafe([path <string>][, useCompression <boolean>]): Similar to list(), except the directory is
temporarily changed to path
to retrieve the directory listing. This is useful for servers that do not handle
characters like spaces and quotes in directory names well for the LIST command. This function is "optional" because it
relies on pwd() being available.
size(path <string>): Retrieves the size of path
. Returned promise resolves to number of bytes.
lastMod(path <string>): Retrieves the last modified date and time for path
. Returned promise resolves an
instance of Date
.
restart(byteOffset <integer>): Sets the file byte offset for the next file transfer action initiated via
get() or put() to byteOffset
. Returned promise resolves to undefined.
FAQs
a promise-based ftp client for node.js
The npm package promise-ftp receives a total of 68,263 weekly downloads. As such, promise-ftp popularity was classified as popular.
We found that promise-ftp demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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