I want to implement a FTP Client with Apache Commons Net only for uploading data. The Connection and Login to FTP-Server works fine. But the upload does not work right. The files are a little to big as the originals. And the files are damaged. I tried an image, a video and a textfile. Only the textfile is alright.
Now I see while debugging
boolean tmp=client.setFileTransferMode(FTPClient.BINARY_FILE_TYPE);
gives me false
. So it can not be set. Why?
(Maybe this is not the problem?)
Here a the rest of my code
client=new FTPClient();
try {
int reply;
client.connect(url, port);
reply = client.getReplyCode();
if (!FTPReply.isPositiveCompletion(reply))
{
client.disconnect();
System.err.println("FTP server refused connection.");
System.exit(1);
}
client.login(user, pw);
boolean xxx=client.setFileTransferMode(FTPClient.BINARY_FILE_TYPE);
client.setControlKeepAliveTimeout(300);
client.enterLocalPassiveMode();
if (client.isConnected())
{
try {
File file=new File(<FILE>);
FileInputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(file);
OutputStream outputStream = client.storeFileStream(file.getName());
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
int l;
while((l = inputStream.read(buffer))!=-1)
{
outputStream.write(buffer, 0, l);
}
inputStream.close();
outputStream.flush();
outputStream.close();}
Change the following:
boolean xxx=client.setFileTransferMode(FTPClient.BINARY_FILE_TYPE);
Should be:
boolean xxx=client.setFileType(FTP.BINARY_FILE_TYPE);
You have confused FileTransferModes with FileTypes.
The available FileTypes are:
The available FileTransferModes are:
I suppose if apache introduced enums for these constant types, then this kind of problem could be avoided, but then the library would not be available to pre-java-5 runtimes.
I wonder how much of an issue java 1.4 compatibility really is.