From: Marshall M. <mjm...@co...> - 2003-06-06 17:23:08
Attachments:
ifp_cp
|
Greetings all, I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory structure over to the ifp device. This recursive approach would be a lot better if it was integrated into the actual program rather than run as bash script, but as I am not that yet familiar with C, I will work on that later. It is attached below if anyone wants to give it a shot. Any suggestions, improvements, or integration into the main program are definitely appreciated. Thanks! -- Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> |
From: Yamashiro, J. <ya...@of...> - 2003-06-07 00:36:52
|
Hi, Marshall. I wrote recursive upload(and new functions) patch for ifp-line-0.1.1 . that patch archived at Kir's website(http://kir.vtx.ru/ifp/). On 06 Jun 2003 10:13:46 -0700 Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> wrote: > I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a > very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory > structure over to the ifp device. |
From: Marshall M. <mjm...@co...> - 2003-06-08 20:57:19
|
Hello Jun, I am confused how this works -- or maybe I am not using it correctly. If I have a directory /home/public with a subdirectory /home/public/mp3 that I want to copy over to my IFP, I go into the /home/public directory and type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" and it does not do anything. Do I need to already have an "mp3" directory on the ifp to copy it to, or should I type "ifp upload mp3 /mp3" ?? Thanks for any advice. On Fri, 2003-06-06 at 17:35, Yamashiro, Jun wrote: > Hi, Marshall. > > I wrote recursive upload(and new functions) patch for ifp-line-0.1.1 . > that patch archived at Kir's website(http://kir.vtx.ru/ifp/). > > On 06 Jun 2003 10:13:46 -0700 > Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> wrote: > > > I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a > > very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory > > structure over to the ifp device. > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best > thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features > you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. > _______________________________________________ > Ifp-driver-common mailing list > Ifp...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ifp-driver-common -- Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> |
From: Marshall M. <mjm...@co...> - 2003-06-08 20:59:41
|
OK, figured it out. It appears that it does not work unless the destination directory already exists on the IFP. so I just did a "ifp mkdir mp3" then did the upload and it worked fine. On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 13:47, Marshall McMullen wrote: > Hello Jun, > > I am confused how this works -- or maybe I am not using it correctly. > If I have a directory /home/public with a subdirectory /home/public/mp3 > that I want to copy over to my IFP, I go into the /home/public directory > and type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" and it does not do anything. Do I need to > already have an "mp3" directory on the ifp to copy it to, or should I > type "ifp upload mp3 /mp3" ?? > > Thanks for any advice. > > On Fri, 2003-06-06 at 17:35, Yamashiro, Jun wrote: > > Hi, Marshall. > > > > I wrote recursive upload(and new functions) patch for ifp-line-0.1.1 . > > that patch archived at Kir's website(http://kir.vtx.ru/ifp/). > > > > On 06 Jun 2003 10:13:46 -0700 > > Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> wrote: > > > > > I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a > > > very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory > > > structure over to the ifp device. > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best > > thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features > > you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. > > _______________________________________________ > > Ifp-driver-common mailing list > > Ifp...@li... > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ifp-driver-common -- Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> |
From: Marshall M. <mjm...@co...> - 2003-06-08 21:11:56
|
Oh, one more interesting note. If the destination directory does not exist, it does not do anything. For example, if I type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" and the /mp3 directory does not exist on the IFP, then it does nothing. Should I perhaps have typed "ifp upload mp3 /" ? However, if I create the destination directory, then run it, it proceeds to copy everything, but interestingly enough, creates _another_ subdirectory underneath it. For example, if I have /home/public/mp3 and want to copy all of its contents to the IFP, then I type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" (assuming the mp3 directory exists) it will then create /mp3/mp3 on the ifp device. On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 13:49, Marshall McMullen wrote: > OK, figured it out. It appears that it does not work unless the > destination directory already exists on the IFP. so I just did a "ifp > mkdir mp3" then did the upload and it worked fine. > > On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 13:47, Marshall McMullen wrote: > > Hello Jun, > > > > I am confused how this works -- or maybe I am not using it correctly. > > If I have a directory /home/public with a subdirectory /home/public/mp3 > > that I want to copy over to my IFP, I go into the /home/public directory > > and type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" and it does not do anything. Do I need to > > already have an "mp3" directory on the ifp to copy it to, or should I > > type "ifp upload mp3 /mp3" ?? > > > > Thanks for any advice. > > > > On Fri, 2003-06-06 at 17:35, Yamashiro, Jun wrote: > > > Hi, Marshall. > > > > > > I wrote recursive upload(and new functions) patch for ifp-line-0.1.1 . > > > that patch archived at Kir's website(http://kir.vtx.ru/ifp/). > > > > > > On 06 Jun 2003 10:13:46 -0700 > > > Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> wrote: > > > > > > > I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a > > > > very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory > > > > structure over to the ifp device. > > > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best > > > thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features > > > you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. > > > _______________________________________________ > > > Ifp-driver-common mailing list > > > Ifp...@li... > > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ifp-driver-common -- Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> |
From: Marshall M. <mjm...@co...> - 2003-06-08 21:16:27
|
OK, one final note -- I tried "ifp upload mp3 /" and all is well. It copies the mp3 directory to the / directory of the ifp device. So everything is fine, I guess I just didn't understand why it wasn't working. So the morale here is if the destination directory does not exist on the IFP, it does not create it, but simply does nothing. On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 14:02, Marshall McMullen wrote: > Oh, one more interesting note. If the destination directory does not > exist, it does not do anything. For example, if I type "ifp upload mp3 > mp3" and the /mp3 directory does not exist on the IFP, then it does > nothing. Should I perhaps have typed "ifp upload mp3 /" ? > > However, if I create the destination directory, then run it, it proceeds > to copy everything, but interestingly enough, creates _another_ > subdirectory underneath it. For example, if I have /home/public/mp3 and > want to copy all of its contents to the IFP, then I type "ifp upload mp3 > mp3" (assuming the mp3 directory exists) it will then create /mp3/mp3 on > the ifp device. > > On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 13:49, Marshall McMullen wrote: > > OK, figured it out. It appears that it does not work unless the > > destination directory already exists on the IFP. so I just did a "ifp > > mkdir mp3" then did the upload and it worked fine. > > > > On Sun, 2003-06-08 at 13:47, Marshall McMullen wrote: > > > Hello Jun, > > > > > > I am confused how this works -- or maybe I am not using it correctly. > > > If I have a directory /home/public with a subdirectory /home/public/mp3 > > > that I want to copy over to my IFP, I go into the /home/public directory > > > and type "ifp upload mp3 mp3" and it does not do anything. Do I need to > > > already have an "mp3" directory on the ifp to copy it to, or should I > > > type "ifp upload mp3 /mp3" ?? > > > > > > Thanks for any advice. > > > > > > On Fri, 2003-06-06 at 17:35, Yamashiro, Jun wrote: > > > > Hi, Marshall. > > > > > > > > I wrote recursive upload(and new functions) patch for ifp-line-0.1.1 . > > > > that patch archived at Kir's website(http://kir.vtx.ru/ifp/). > > > > > > > > On 06 Jun 2003 10:13:46 -0700 > > > > Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> wrote: > > > > > > > > > I did not see any ability to upload multiple files, so I have written a > > > > > very simple recursive bash script which can copy an entire directory > > > > > structure over to the ifp device. > > > > > > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > > > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best > > > > thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features > > > > you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > > Ifp-driver-common mailing list > > > > Ifp...@li... > > > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ifp-driver-common -- Marshall McMullen <mjm...@co...> |