48:. The receiver of the email messages would later reassemble the original file and decode it. As the file was broken into smaller pieces, the chances of losing the transmission were much smaller. In case of loss of connectivity, the transmission could be restarted from that part. The process was slower but much more reliable. It also allowed people who accessed the Internet only through email using dial-up lines to download files that were located remotely. Unlike FTP, files could be transferred through FTPmail even if the user did not have an online Internet connection (for example, using BBSes or other specialized e-mail software).
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During the early years of the
Internet, Internet access was limited to a few locations. High-speed links were not available for most users, and online connectivity was rare and expensive. Downloading large files (then considered to be over a few megabytes) was nearly impossible due to bandwidth
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servers in response to email requests, returning the downloaded files as an email attachment. This service might be useful to users who cannot themselves initiate an FTP session—for example, because they are constrained by restrictions on their
Internet access.
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is sent to an FTPmail server with the command to be performed, inserted as the body of the message. The server then processes the request by logging on to the remote site, retrieving the file, encoding it, and returning the result via email.
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software. Access to these repositories via FTPmail was instrumental in allowing people from foreign countries to access these tools at a time when online connectivity was impossible from their location.
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limitations, as well as frequent errors and lost connections. The original FTP specification did not allow for a session to be resumed, and the transmission had to restart from the beginning.
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FTPmail gateways allowed people to retrieve such files. The file was broken into smaller pieces and encoded using a popular format such as
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FTPmail services were common in the early 1990s but dwindled in importance as more users gained direct internet access through
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internet protocols. FTP also has lost popularity in favor of other methods for file transfer, notably
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is the term used for the practice of using an FTPmail server to gain access to various files over the
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Size when file is split before sending, the max size is Kb|Mb.
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Get a file, the path to save can also be *mentioned.
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which is available to virtually all
Internet users.
239:. Electronic Frontier Foundation. Archived from
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27:which (asynchronously) connects to remote
51:Servers located at universities, such as
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196:Binary mode: archives, binary files.
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206:ASCII mode: nothing but ASCII text.
156:List the contents of the directory.
146:Change directory to path specified.
166:List the contents of the directory
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237:"Getting FTP Files via E-Mail"
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216:End of ftp-by-email message.
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23:. An FTPmail server is a
286:File Transfer Protocol
266:File Transfer Protocol
126:Returns a help file.
281:Servers (computing)
106:Basic commands used
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136:Connect to site.
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83:Dial-up access
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245:. Retrieved
241:the original
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81:, and other
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25:proxy server
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192:mode binary
275:Categories
223:References
202:mode ascii
65:and other
247:9 January
116:Function
93:Procedure
260:See also
182:size max
172:get file
113:Command
46:uuencode
21:Internet
142:cd path
132:open ]]
36:History
17:FTPmail
99:email
63:Linux
249:2010
212:quit
162:dir
122:help
87:HTTP
75:SLIP
56:and
152:ls
97:An
79:PPP
67:GNU
29:FTP
277::
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251:.
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