it's not the first time filezilla bundled malware. they were one of the voluntary partners of sourceforge's bundled installer before they pushed it on everyone and then got rid of it after they got bought out.
Use WinSCP! It's truly free and open source.
I would give up on windows explorer, I have. I would look into the two applications everything and directory opus. They will both make windows easier to use. If anything I would get "everything" since it's free and will solve the problem with the search.
Not sure if you have access to his computer, but it might be worth to check if he setup some ssh keys for remote access (ssh (user@)server_ip)...
from windows if he was using winscp, he might have saved the password, if it's the case you can activate logging and "sensitive" data that will store the password in plain: https://winscp.net/eng/docs/faq_password
good luck and sorry for your loss
I have an automated task using WinSCP. Rather than install the app on the server we're running from, I pull in the executable and one DLL file needed for the process (WinSCP.exe and WinSCPNet.dll).
Here are their documents on scripting: https://winscp.net/eng/docs/scripting
Deluxe Paint was revolutionary.
So was Digi View and Digi Paint.
ImageFX (Hi Kermit!) was incredibly powerful.
Directory Opus exists for Windows and I use it every day. Respect to Jon and Greg.
The Video Toaster and Lightwave 3D changed the world. Mad respect to Allen (remember Videoscape) , Stuart (Modeler) , Brad Carvey and all the NewTek mad scientists.
Anybody ever use World Construction Set?
If you use curl on the command line, it works like that too - an @ symbol indicates a file to be uploaded.
From man curl: >If you start the data with the letter @, the rest should be a file name to read the data from, or - if you want curl to read the data from stdin.
It's also in the actual documentation in PHP, both in the description and the examples.
WinSCP has what you need. You can tell it to keep your remote directory up to date and it will watch your local directory for changes and update the remote directory with those changes. You can also specify whether or not it should delete remote files when you delete them locally, which I tend not to do in case I accidentally delete something.
You can get it here - https://winscp.net/ (it's free)
Cyberduck is really good but lacks a linux version. The ability to connect to cloud storages stands out in particular.
But WinSCP is really the most consistent multiplatform FTP software for oldschool webmasters.
ES Explorer got bought out and started getting bundled with advertisements and superfluous "features". Basically they started abusing the notifications to peddle junk and advertising. I doubt they do that (as much) anymore, but that was a pretty huge red flag for their future intentions.
I recommend mixplorer (as replied above).
No, from http://curl.haxx.se/docs/faq.html#What_is_cURL
>cURL is the name of the project. The name is a play on 'Client for URLs', originally with URL spelled in uppercase to make it obvious it deals with URLs. The fact it can also be pronounced 'see URL' also helped, it works as an abbreviation for "Client URL Request Library" or why not the recursive version: "Curl URL Request Library".
Theres a good reason why it was removed. There are few shady chinese app gians in play store that you should never trust with your data (*cough* cheetah mobile *cough*)
I'd recommend using MiXplorer: https://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1523691
It's the best fucking app I have ever used and the developer is one fucking amazing guy (Just look at the thread & how he replies)
It has almost everything that ES had and more, the problem is it can be a bit of a learning curve.
Nope,
> curl is a command line tool for transferring data with URL syntax, supporting DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, Gopher, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP, LDAPS, POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMTP...
For those wondering, MiXplorer is a file explorer with all the functions you'd expect, and does great for those who hate what ES has become. Does all the usual cloud stuff, SMB, FTP, WEBDAV, maybe NFS, root access, tabs, themes, and a whole lot more. Link for the lazy.
I don't use K9, but it's open source and is generally the first option people turn to if they're trying to go open source and/or ditch Google.
Total Commander can do this - and soooo many other things (OOTB and through plugins) https://www.ghisler.com/index.htm
Can’t live without it on any Windows machine and still miss it on my macs.
See all features here: https://www.ghisler.com/featurel.htm
I gotta be honest, I'm really skeptical of someone who is apparently skilled enough to teach students, yet doesn't know the answer to this question.
At any rate, Reddit has a REST API. So you simply need to use one of the many HTTP libraries for C, such as libcurl. From there, it's just a matter of making the right HTTP calls and interpreting the responses. See the examples on the libcurl site.
Experience with HTTP is a prerequisite.
As a programmer I find Directory Opus essential, since I can have two vertical side-by-side Explorers which also support tabs.
Also Everything is amazing, it can instantly find any file on the disk and can do wildcard searches. Where did I put that test XML I got yesterday? Is it in the Skype for Business "Received Files" folder or somewhere on OneDrive? I'll just search by *.xml and sort by Date Modified.
True, but that's behavior that the PHP wrapper of libcurl is imitating, not behavior inherent to libcurl. And the behavior in the command-line is somewhat more sane, since:
--data
arguments, you'll only run into issues if the first field name begins with @ (and if that's the case you already should be manually URL encoding it anyway)--data-urlencode
and --form-string
arguments exist if you have to deal with arbitrary valuesFor PHP it's idiotic, because the only way to send a field value in a multipart form that begins with @ is to write it to a temporary file on disk. The actual libcurl API is much richer and requires behavior like reading from a file to be explicitly set rather than having certain magic values.
Dude I have excellent news for you, Total Commander e still in use si up to date, ghisler inca baga la el
>Total Commander 3.11 final for Android released!
>
>October 30, 2020: Total Commander 3.11 final for Android is now available. The Android version is freeware! It supports about the same functions as the Windows Mobile version. This version mainly fixes bugs.
For others, here is the thread for MiXplorer
You used to need XDA Labs for updates, but it auto-updates itself now
I'd recommend not using one of those languages unless you have to. This could be more easily done with a higher level language.
At any rate, libcurl is probably the most commonly used library for making an HTTP request. It'll work for C and C++.
Do not try to do this with assembly unless you like torturing yourself (in fact, don't try and program anything meaningful in assembly).
If you want to recover the already added games via FTP it's not complicated:
-Install WinSCP or any other FTP client
-Turn on your SNESC
-Open hakchi2
-Go to Tools and check "FTP server..."
-Go to Tools again and click "Open FTP client", it should ask for what to use for FTP, select WinSCP (or just manually add in your FTP client adress: 127.0.0.1, port: 1021, login: root and password: clover)
-On the left panel (= your PC) go to your \hakchi2\games_snes directory (create it if it doesnt exist), on the right panel (= your SNESC) go to /usr/share/games/
-Ignore the folders CLV-P-XXXXX (original SNES games) and CLV-S-XXXXX (folder settings) and select every other CLV-something (U=SNES, H=NES and G=Genesis), if there's none go to /usr/share/games/001/
-Once selected just right click and click "Download" to transfer the games to your PC
-Do to same for /usr/share/games/002/, /003/, etc.
-Close hakchi2 and open it again, you should now see all the added games now, to check them all easily select the 1st unchecked game, hold shift then select the last unchecked game, now check one box and it should check every other boxes, games are ready to be uploaded again! :)
> It was only ever adequate
And then there was Total Commander (once called Windows Commander) which was a godsend for those of us who lived through Norton Commander but had switched to Windows...
Curl?
edit: a little confusion over my response, so allow me to clarify
Edit2: There might be a project closer to 20, then curl but it was the first project that spang to mind that is close to 20!
Fast and easy, and my preferred Windows solution is to install raidrive. Very easy to set up and map to a drive letter (like Z:) and there is tour go, your Google drive as a driver on yours Windows pc ready to load with you contents and point of plex to. https://www.raidrive.com/
Try accessing GoogleDrive via Cyberduck -- it's an open-source FTP client, but works well to access GDrive and can get around the stupid zip file issue. I only recently discovered this method while searching for a workaround for my MacMini M1, since Google still hasn't released an official M1 client that supports FileStream.
edits: grammar and typos
I use WinSCP quite often when dealing with GUI. It's only for SFTP tho. For FTPS I use FileZilla.
Could you use WinSCP DLL - probably but you would need to spend time automating around it - meaning probably a lot more code than 4 lines of code to upload a file to the SFTP server from PowerShell using Transferetto. It's up to you which one do you prefer - I just create tools and share them :)
Here's winscp code: https://winscp.net/eng/docs/library_powershell
The device doesn't have to know the correct code. When the "key" is created, only a part of it is stored on the device. You put in the passcode to tell the phone how to create the key, but the "part" that's your passcode is not stored on the device itself. When you put the passcode in, it combines it with the part that's stored on the device and forms the actual "key" that unlocks the phone. Each part separately is useless until they are used together.
It's very similar to how SSH keyfile authentication works, you can read a brief overview here.
You need to ditch solid explorer and use mixplorer. Aside from being free, it is the most feature rich and streamlined explorer for android that I have ever used. I ditched Solid explorer for it and it has never disappointed me.
Do not use ES File Explorer. It's ad riddled crapware. Solid Explorer is good, FX is also good, or if you want a free file explorer with good features, there's MiXplorer over at Xda.
MiXplorer is in my opinion the best file manager out there, except for the fact it's not on the Play Store.
Free with no ads though, and an insane amount of features.
MiXplorer. It isn't on the play store, but I don't find it to be an issue. It has almost every functionality of Solid Explored but is free and, for me, more intuitive. I paid for Solid Explorer and still ditched it for MiXplorer. You can download the apk from XDA.
Don't use Clover. It was good back in the day, but ownership of the software has changed and it's likely compromising to install now.
I've tried all of the file explorer alternatives out there extensively, and Directory Opus is the best IMO.
This was the route I took about 10 years ago, and I haven't looked back even once. There's a fairly steep learning curve, but it's helped by a large and experienced community. Tabs are about 0.05% what you gain over the standard Windows (10) File Explorer, but they are great. https://www.ghisler.com/
You just need to POST the correct data.
Look for info about curl
. A Google search you might want to try curl post form
In essence,
curl --data "val1=value1&val2=value2" https://example.com/page.php
There's a curl extension for PHP. At the bottom of this page, you'll find an example, http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/php/examples/simplepost.html
If the list of names/emails are in a file, just read the file and execute the code above for it.
If it's just for spamming, you can create an email by appending something or increasing a value,
$email_pre = test; $email_post = 1; while(True) { $email = $email_pre . $email_post; //curl code //to post data $email_post++; }
Have fun.
WinSCP:
https://winscp.net/eng/download.php
Handy dandy. Along with PuTTY, about the most used utility in mixed-OS environments. No machine should be without them.
WinSCP can use the registry or a .INI file to store the configuration. If using shared storage, you can set the .INI file - or portions of the file - to be read only.
WinSCP has a powershell module that's been working great for SFTP etc. I remember I had to put the module files into the Powershell module directory and load from there. It would make all sorts of BS if I tried loading it from a custom folder for instance.
You could enable SSH by "systemctl start sshd" plus "systemctl enable sshd" and you could use WinSCP [1] afterwards to transfer files from Windows to your Linux machine. (SSH does not care if the remote machine is on the internet or on the local net, it just must be reachable on TCP port 22.)
I'm a big fan of Namecheap, personally. For both the domain and hosting. Inexpensive and great quality service.
First up, you need to order hosting.. but you need to make sure the hosting supports what you need. For example, if your friend wrote his website in ASP.NET, he's going to need to find a host that offers .NET hosting.
Once he orders hosting, he's going to need to get the DNS addresses from his hosting provider. These are often sent in one of the welcome emails when you purchase hosting. If not, search their website or google "hostingCompanyName DNS servers". You'll get a list 2-4 servers, like ns1.hostingCompanyName.com
, ns2.hostingCompanyName.com
, etc.
Log into your account where you purchased your domain, find the section to manage your domain, and plug in all of the nameserver addresses from your host. This process can take a while because of something called DNS propagation. Usually it's fairly fast these days.. within an hour or two.. but it can take a couple days. This is the process that formally connects your domain to your hosting account.
Next, he just needs to upload his code. Usually via FTP. His hosting provider should also give him an FTP address to log into. He will need to install an FTP client on his computer, I recommend WinSCP (free/open source): https://winscp.net/eng/docs/screenshots
Log into FTP server, transfer the files, and when you refresh the browser on YourDomain.com, the new website should appear. There are alternative ways to upload .. but FTP is pretty typical for a simple site.
The hosting provider will likely also give him access to a system that will allow him to tinker with more technical settings on the site.. the most common is cPanel, which looks something like this: http://i.imgur.com/DQEiXZD.jpg
That's not really a good suggestion, as ES File Explorer now has really obtrusive ads.
Mixplorer is a more fully featured file explorer app that's free and ad-free: https://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1523691
MiXplorer is my new favorite, or ES File Explorer 4.0.2.3 old version before it sold put does everything but Dropbox, but neither does the most recent PAID Es File Explorer Pro whatever, to show how little they have done to improve it.
Anyway MiXplorer does everything and its free, just not in the appstore
I use Directory Opus as a replacement to Windows Explorer. It has a lot of nice features and allows you to write scripts to perform some of the repetitive tasks (I know you can script it in PS or batch). Also, my favorite part about the software is the ability to have multiple tabs that are in different directories and even having side-by-side tabs open.
To me, it's a great tool and I love it. I have the light version that I got on sale a long time ago so it might not be worth the cost to you but it certainly was for me.
I use Directly Opus on Windows 10 and it'll bring up your last folder view after a reboot. (Just tested.) It also has a mode that replaces windows explorer and allows you to double-click your desktop to bring up the last view you closed.
This sentence is very misleading:
> Previously, OpenSSL was the sole widely used open source solution for encrypting traffic sent to and from Web pages on millions of servers.
OpenSSL is not the sole anything. There's GnuTLS -- created because OpenSSL is not GPL-compatible -- and PolarSSL to name two of the more popular options, and Wikipedia lists another dozen. While it's not commonly done, you can use e.g. GnuTLS with Apache through mod_gnutls. The popular library libcurl can be built against no less than nine different TLS libraries.
The recent forks are really only about having alternatives that are API and ABI compatible with OpenSSL, which is an important distinction, because it allows them to be used as direct replacements without having to modify the client code.
The CRL isn't checked automatically with curl/OpenSSL.
http://curl.haxx.se/docs/ssl-compared.html
> CRL: CRL means "Certificate Revocation List" and is used to check to see if any certificates in the server's chain have been revoked for some reason. If automatic, then the engine will automatically download a CRL and use it to evaluate the trust of the server's certificate chain when performing the TLS handshake. If manual, then the engine will not automatically use a CRL, but you can provide one that has been downloaded separately by using the CURLOPT_CRL option. If no, then the CURLOPT_CRL option will be ignored.
You could use VBS and a few commandline utilities, if you were so inclined.
Neat guide. I actually started a few days ago after getting my first Raspberry Pi. I rather enjoyed the process of figuring out how it all works. This video sums up the setup process fairly nicely. One large timesaver I would recommend to fellow new users is to transfer your ROM files via Wifi rather than a thumbdrive. It's quite easy to do with a SFTP client, such as Cyberduck. I followed this guide, which explains the steps well.
You might want to consider loading the WinSCP .NET Assembly straight into PowerShell. Then you can do everything inside of your script giving you better control and error handling.
We have gotten it to work with key based authentication, since they are using the standard OpenSSH install for Windows we followed the guide on the WinSCP homepage that references how to setup the authorized_keys file, a specific ACL is required on the file in Windows similar to the strict mode options in Linux
https://winscp.net/eng/docs/guide_windows_openssh_server
Edit: One other note, you can actually use a domain user with a private key, just make sure when entering the username to follow the DOMAIN\user format or the username@UPN format to login.
You should consider switching from es to something else. I know the article is old but the last time I've downloaded it to see if it has turned around it hasn't. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.androidpit.com/this-is-why-you-should-not-use-es-file-explorer%3famp=true
I use https://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1523691
Nova or Apex Launcher. Apex doesn't get enough love around here.
MiXplorer - from XDA. Best file manager and a lot more.
Reddit Is Fun - The Reddit app I always come back to.
aCalendar+ - I have tried most of the calendar apps including Business Calendar. aCal+ has the best widget, and he most functionality. Customizes up nice too.
Google Keep - Mostly because it has a desktop app. If anyone has anything equivalent or better I'm all ears.
MiXplorer: https://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1523691
Iinkme: Nova Launcher, Apex Launcher, Reddit Is Fun, aCalendar+, Google Keep
I would check out Directory Opus. It does great file searching (I think it can search in PDF) and so much more. Probably the best file management app out there. Cheap too for what it does.
Are you sure you're router/modem didn't assign a new IP address to your fire TV? If I was you I'd check in the fire TV settings and see what the IP is. If that's not the problem Silk browser was released for gen3 want it? Just use it and download the apks. If you don't fancy that you could grab mixplorer for Android and start the ftp server built-in to it, and then grab Total Commander for fire TV, then use silk to grab the ftp plugin and install it, after that go into Total Commander and add a new server. Just don't forget to set password and login for ftp mixplorer server.
curl is the name of the library typically used to retrieve website data as text into a variable that you can then parse using server-side languages (PHP, Python, Ruby, Server-Side JavaScript). All of those languages have curl built into them in some way.
When building bots and scrapers, it is important to make sure that your software treats the website like a regular user. So don't try to load every page of the website you are scraping in half a second. 1 page every 5 seconds is probably OK, though every 10 seconds would be even better.
Nope. Quote:
> We pronounce curl with an initial k sound. It rhymes with words like girl and earl. This is a short WAV file to help you:
> In my opinion all libraries should be namespaced under the author name e.g. lenessia/foo-bar.
That’s … unusual. I can’t think of a library that gives author credit in a name component. How many authors contributed to a library like, e.g., curl? How many to libxml2? In fact, the relevance of individual contributors decreases as a library becomes popular and widely used. Adapting the namespace or prefix or URL on a server or whatever to reflect the current author situation would cause naming to fluctuate a lot. Not to mention that in the already ego-fueled OSS ecosphere[*], having the credit to figure that prominently gives rise to undesirable incentives like hogging projects and inflating one’s own contributions (even more) by posting trivial patches. I can’t imagine that this could positively affect the SNR of OSS development.
[*] Which I don’t think is bad per se, one just has to be aware of the consequences.
Something much more subtle is going on here. They're detecting the User-Agent and adjusting the HTML returned accordingly. If you grab the source with curl then the tracks are filled in correctly (or just use Curl as your User-Agent string). Try the following code. It worked for me just now.
public class Scraper { public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException { String url = "http://www.hiphopearly.com/tracks"; Document doc = Jsoup.connect(url).header("User-Agent", "curl").get(); Elements tracks = doc.select("div.track-listing div.track"); for (Element track : tracks) { System.out.println("Artist: " + track.select("span.artist").text()); System.out.println("Title: " + track.select("span.title").text()); System.out.println(); } } }
I agree with this approach. I don't use VSCode as my main file manager, so [even if I could make it work] why would I want to use it as my remote file manager?
On MacOS and [most distros of] Linux, you can do this with built in software, but I'd recommend SSHFS for a better setup.
There's also Mountain Duck if you want to add support for things like Google Drive.
You can always create an s3 sync command to backup a folder they want. Put versioning on the bucket and purge any multipart upload after x days.
Sync can run as a scheduled task. it can be a simple bat file. Once you create it. you should be set.
aws s3 sync /folder/directy s3://backupbucket/youcreated
Then give them cyberduck to let them manage their data as they please.
I know you said no CLI but its a pretty cheap method. Good luck
+1 for Cryptomator. Also if you don’t wanna sync Google Drive to your PC you can use Cyberduck to browse to it or use Mountain Duck to mount it to your local file system.
Did you look at cyberduck yet? They have a sync functionality for whole directories, it does retries, it works with sftp/s3/ftp/prettymucheverything.
You should donate, because you're a good man bdunbar, and you can probably expense it.
Have you tried using the the WinSCP assembly directly? In a previous role i utilized this method to do all SFTP/FTPS things. Sadly I don't have access to those scripts anymore so I cannot provide a direct example.
There are a few steps to get cron running under Cygwin.
Have you thought about using Task Scheduler and WinSCP? WinSCP is GPL licensed, and you have far less overhead with just one application than all the files Cygwin takes to work.
Okay. Before I get into this - I'm not trying to be "that guy" - but stop using WYSIWYG editors. Seriously. They do a lot of "magic" which means that ~~if~~ when something goes wrong, they give you some cryptic error message and nobody is any the wiser about what's wrong.
Now back on to your error message...
>I used filezille to strip everything off of my server then I attempted to upload the new site using Expression web and an error popped up stating "Failed to change directory to folder name: /folder name: No such file or directory (550).
Prelude: I would strongly suggest not using FileZilla. Here's why. Go check out WinSCP instead it's what I used to use at work (Software dev by trade).
Now, on to the error message you got - a quick google search suggests that error 550 is from the FTP server (thanks for including the error code btw, that makes it much easier to search:) ). Basically what it's telling you is that you're trying to push stuff to a directory that no longer exists. Since you " used filezille to strip everything off of my server" I would hazard a guess that Expression Web is trying to put your website into ./public_html
which no longer exists. Try recreating that directory on your FTP server and see if that sorts things out.
For those without gold, you could setup a cron job on a Linux server that runs the following (after adding your SSH key to the router)
scp :/cf/conf/config.xml /path/to/folder/"date +%Y-%m-%d-%H:%M:%S
"-router.domain.com-config.xml
I've also adapted the PowerShell example and utilized WinSCP to pull backups from Windows too:
https://winscp.net/eng/docs/script_download_most_recent_file
Then, I backup the directory to NextCloud.
You can actually set this up on any version of Windows, I just did it on my Win 7 box, here is some documentation from WinSCP, which includes a link to the github repo where Microsoft is keeping their code.
https://winscp.net/eng/docs/guide_windows_openssh_server
MS OpenSSH Github repo:
What do you mean by pulling things of your seedbox? I assume you are talking about your torrents, since I think you don't have ssh access with that plan, am I right?
If so, why don't you use an FTP client like FileZilla? It's free, and you can connect to your seedbox using Explicit SSL (Auth TLS), which is secure.
If you do have SSH access, and you want to pull files from other areas of your server that you don't have FTP access to, you can always install WinSCP, and pull them using SFTP. Once again, WinSCP is free.
Regards.
What are you asking here?
A file-manager that can do network-paths, with bookmarks of sorts?
Have a look at Total Commander ( https://www.ghisler.com/ )
Its been my go-to-tool for rapid file-management (and much more)
Well for the specific case of WinSCP they clearly talk about it at https://winscp.net/eng/docs/microsoft_store#benefits Technically the difference is the update process which is supposed to be more convenient
I've been using Total Commander ever since I've been using computers. Commander-like file explorers will always be your best choice. I personally couldn't use the default Explorer for anything other than mundane.
The website that the Pushbullet site is taking you to is for an older version of cURL (with SSL), 7.44. Looks like the current version hosted on that site is 7.45, and they just deleted the old one, with no redirect. The Pushbullet devs probably would have been better served linking to the actual cURL download page, even if you'd have to poke around to find the third-party Windows binaries.
I emailed the Pushbullet devs about it, so hopefully they'll either update the link or point to a more static download.
Ok so it turns out my complained that with curl_easy the transfer is driven by curl is actually one of the reasons there is curl_multi that lets the application drive the transfer. It's actually the very first objective for multi http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/libcurl-multi.html
so I guess this should solve my problem.
I don't understand what you're trying to say. The kernel knows exactly which threads to unblock when using any synchronization primitive except for condition variables. Even with condition variables it's usually going to do the right thing. Even if we ignore the entire overhead of sockets (which is already going to be orders of magnitude higher than synchronization primitives because that's what going to be what the kernel uses underneath anyway), you're still looking at I/O which is going over a slow non-deterministic data-source and, in your case, over the internet which is also an unreliable transport to boot.
It really sounds more like you want is an event loop. You can use libuv or boost io_service for that (io_service is more limited I think). libuv can integrate with curl: http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/multi-uv.html.
I have 3 pieces of advice for you - up to you of course if you want to listen to me:
>curl -k, --insecure > (SSL) This option explicitly allows curl to perform "insecure" SSL connections and transfers. All SSL >connections are attempted to be made secure by using the CA certificate bundle > installed by default. This makes all connections considered "insecure" fail unless -k, --insecure is used. > See this online resource for further details: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
if you don't want to ignore the ssl certificate warnings, you should import the CA.cert into your OS
Nothing is "un-doable" in C that can be done in any other Turing-complete programming language. You could use libcurl to grab the HTML and libtidy to walk the DOM in search of relevant elements.
Of course, you could just as well forsake the prior work in this area and use raw sockets and string manipulation if you had the time and inclination.
> Example: curl 7.35 (I believe) was just released. Debian will probably have this in January of next year.
http://curl.haxx.se/ >The most recent stable version of curl is version 7.36.0, released on 26th of March 2014.
# lsb_release -a No LSB modules are available. Distributor ID: Debian Description: Debian GNU/Linux unstable (sid) Release: unstable Codename: sid
# curl -V curl 7.36.0 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.36.0 OpenSSL/1.0.1g zlib/1.2.8 libidn/1.28 libssh2/1.4.3 librtmp/2.3
You are too prejudiced about Debian :)
It could be that your OS has never installed SSL certs, or it could be that they are outdated after we replaced ours, along with the entire internet, due to the heartbleed bug.
Try installing them:
sudo apt-get install ca-certificates
The command on your OS might be different. Perhaps:
sudo yum install ca-certificates
If nothing works, perhaps try downloading the bundle directly -- http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem, then adding this line specifying where the certs are.
For command line curl:
export CURL_CA_BUNDLE="/path/to/cacert.pem"
For php curl:
curl.cainfo=<path-to>cacert.pem
3L on the Low pay and a second rung city. 25L on the high pay in a first grade city. (I know 25L is middle income in MNCs today, but high outside).
It was an interesting experiment but you had to log in constantly for your profile to stay on top of their search results since they are by default ordered on last login. So I automated that using curl to login once every 40-50 mins and stayed on the first page mostly. These days however I think they use session cookies as well, haven't checked. That and the messages were streaming in. Chat requests, women writing to me "accidentally," apologizing on no reply saying a friend must have written in, and so on.
College gives you a load of free time. This ran for a month or so and I got fed up. Quite a bunch of nice chicks though. ;)
Also, if you are a girl and reading this, please, please, please don't send in pics with those huuge face eating glasses on. That's not a photo of you, that's a photo of your glasses.
Disclaimer: this experiment was not scientific and doesn't claim to be one. I was curious and I did not lead anyone on.
InfoSec pro-tip: preview unknown suspicious links with curl before following them in e-mail, or IM, clients. If you see obfuscated, heavily encoded javascript, there is probably some bad juju on there.
All linux machines come with a tool called "curl" that access the website ( in theory simulating a click) , and displays what ever the site returns.
If the output / resultant page is not needed to you, just pipe the output to /dev/null.
example : curl http://www.google.com >/dev/null
You can download curl for windows or any other OS here.
If you know all the links that you need to click, just put the whole link in a text file and write a batch file to have curl cycle through all of them.
check if curl works for you and let me know if you need help writing a script.
You can get around this with odrive. Files/directories can be shared without being set as shareable, and it obfuscates the source account. Only downside is that public users can't download directories, only individual files.
Yup! This is a fact of life for any sort of tech start uppers: there will always be a free, open source option for what you are doing, probably with more features too.
This doesn't mean you should pursue another idea! Because that idea also will have a free, open source option!
The good news is that free solutions tend to have less-than-stellar marketing to non-technical people. OSS projects tend to be very targeted towards technical people and no one else. Also, non-technical people don't realize their problem can be solved with software (disclaimer: this idea is taken from /u/patio11).
Looking at the homepage for https://cyberduck.io/, right off the bat the header is obviously geared towards technical people: "Libre FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, S3 & OpenStack Swift browser for Mac and Windows". I'm a programmer, but I still had to re-read that a couple of times to understand it.
The rest of the web page is also full of jargons that only technical people will understand.
If you can somehow position this as a solution for not-so-technically-savvy people who need to do what your software is doing, then I can see your product succeeding (because there is a clear demand for it!).
Along with continuing with your project, I suggest you working on your sales page that even your mom can understand. Or better yet, find the people that your software will be used by, and see what sort messaging they will respond to!
I don't think veeam natively supports sftp backup of a remote site.
You can automate the backup to a local folder with winscp, then veeam can back that folder up
If you have FTP access, may use a program like WinSCP to check the permissions of files (0644) and folders (0755) in wp-content/*
and fix those that aren't looking right. Also check for the group/owner to be properly set.
I believe if your source path is a file your destination path must also be a file. That might explain the error.
Edit: But there are great visual SCP UIs for transferring files. For example on windows I'd recommend WinSCP.
I just replaced Solarwinds SFTP server with straight up OpenSSH server for Windows since NSX-T backups refuse to work with the Solarwinds server.
https://winscp.net/eng/docs/guide_windows_openssh_server
This was using the actual OpenSSH package, not the Windows integrated one
I'm using WinSCP with a batch script that's run as a scheduled task.
Essentially this connects to a remote SFTP server, downloads a .tgz in my specified folder and renames it with the date / time once its downloaded, before moving it in to a different folder.
The script is probably pretty basic compared to what some of the wizards on here could create, however its been doing it's job for a couple of years now perfectly fine. I could depersonalise it if you want a copy.
I learned everything required to do this from here: https://winscp.net/eng/docs/scripting
If your pi is networked and the file is not too big, the easiest way would be just to connect to it via something like WinSCP and download it.
If you want Windows to be able to read the file from a SD card, you can create an additional Fat32 or NTFS partition on the card itself. Basically you squeeze your linux system partition a bit (see gparted), and create a new one for your files. Then you mount it on your pi on boot and save the files there (see mount, /etc/fstable).
When you plug in such SD card in a Windows machine, Windows will see and auto-mount the Fat32 (or NTFS) partition.
Firstly, if you want to skip the process using Dropbox, you could install SSH to your iPhone via Cydia and use an FTP client (such as WinSCP) on your computer to directly transfer files wirelessly to/from your device. I believe this doesn't require the AFC tweak.
As for ringtone, the correct format is .m4r specifically. However, I do not think simply renaming .ogg files to .m4r will work, as the two are entirely different audio formats. You will need to convert the .ogg file to a .m4* audio format (I recommend Audacity for this) and then transfer it to your phone.
A note about Audacity: it cannot convert to the .m4r format specifically, but it can convert to .m4a. After a file is converted to .m4a, you can change the extension to .m4r, and it will work in this case, since the two are of the same audio format ('r' indicates ringtone, 'a' indicates a simple audio file).
An important general note: I believe in iOS 8+ Apple decided to force the operating system to read a .plist file for ringtones, as opposed to scanning the ringtone directory, so you cannot simply drag-and-drop a .m4r file to your ringtones directory and have it appear in your sound settings (there is a tweak to fix this, I think, but I forget its name). However, once a file is in the .m4r format, you can drop it into iTunes like any old ringtone, and it will work (as long as it is <30 seconds). :)
tl;dr - convert from .ogg to .m4a, rename to .m4r, transfer via iTunes
Sorry about the wall of text; if you still can't figure it out, let me know.
probably the simplest way would be to copy them to a USB drive and move them that way.
If you have Windows on your main computer use winscp any OS X mac is actually Unix under the hood and will have an scp command
scp :/path/to/photos /path/to/local/dir
Install WinSCP connect with the same details you use for SSH in PuTTY and copy the folder. You will lose any permission bits and user/group ownership information though.
Take a look at Directory Opus. It's way, way more than just a dual-pane file manager. If your hobbies or job involve a ton of file management, it has tools to make it way easier and more convenient. Not just for basic file operations like moving or sorting, but also for looking at and operating on file metadata and operating on archives. Custom file metadata like star ratings, tags, and color coding (like Mac OS). It has built-in scripting support too. Basically, it combines the features of a bunch of normally-separate file management tools into one unified file manager.
https://www.gpsoft.com.au/help/opus12/index.html#!Documents/File_Collections.htm
https://www.gpsoft.com.au/help/opus11/index.html#!Documents/Labels1.htm
Directory Opus might be the one you're looking for.
That sucks. Looks amazing on all three screens I've used it on. I will admit I've seen graphical artifacts on it, so it's not perfect.
There are always alternative file managers. I've tried a couple but I always go back to the default one. My father got me started on third party file managers. He paid for Directory Opus on the Amiga. I don't know what he paid. It costs $90 now, though!
Directory Opus - Utility/file manager/Explorer replacement.
Cost is 49 Australian Dollars, so eh around 30 US Dollars I think.
Using it since it first came out on Amiga computers all them years ago, just can't do without it.
Viser indhold af to kataloger samtidigt da man jo tit kopier/flytter filer (src/dst). Det har katalog-historik og bookmarks, god søgefunktion og alle mulige andre gode ting. Jeg har brugt det i mindst 10 år.
Det er gratis at prøve (shareware)
This is also an option in the file manager program Total Commander. I'm not affiliated with them in any way, I've just been using the program for over 20 years and never shy about suggesting it to people. If the main program can't do it, there's probably a plugin that will add the ability.