Reputation: 16685
The following code is intended to retrieve a file via FTP. However, I'm getting an error with it.
serverPath = "ftp://x.x.x.x/tmp/myfile.txt";
FtpWebRequest request = (FtpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(serverPath);
request.KeepAlive = true;
request.UsePassive = true;
request.UseBinary = true;
request.Method = WebRequestMethods.Ftp.DownloadFile;
request.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(username, password);
// Read the file from the server & write to destination
using (FtpWebResponse response = (FtpWebResponse)request.GetResponse()) // Error here
using (Stream responseStream = response.GetResponseStream())
using (StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(responseStream))
using (StreamWriter destination = new StreamWriter(destinationFile))
{
destination.Write(reader.ReadToEnd());
destination.Flush();
}
The error is:
The remote server returned an error: (550) File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access)
The file definitely does exist on the remote machine and I am able to perform this ftp manually (i.e. I have permissions). Can anyone tell me why I might be getting this error?
Upvotes: 44
Views: 174013
Reputation: 202088
The most trivial way to download a binary file from an FTP server using .NET framework is using WebClient.DownloadFile
:
WebClient client = new WebClient();
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("username", "password");
client.DownloadFile(
"ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip", @"C:\local\path\file.zip");
Use FtpWebRequest
, only if you need a greater control, that WebClient
does not offer (like TLS/SSL encryption, progress monitoring, ascii/text transfer mode, resuming transfers, etc). Easy way is to just copy an FTP response stream to FileStream
using Stream.CopyTo
:
FtpWebRequest request =
(FtpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip");
request.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("username", "password");
request.Method = WebRequestMethods.Ftp.DownloadFile;
using (Stream ftpStream = request.GetResponse().GetResponseStream())
using (Stream fileStream = File.Create(@"C:\local\path\file.zip"))
{
ftpStream.CopyTo(fileStream);
}
If you need to monitor a download progress, you have to copy the contents by chunks yourself:
FtpWebRequest request =
(FtpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip");
request.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("username", "password");
request.Method = WebRequestMethods.Ftp.DownloadFile;
using (Stream ftpStream = request.GetResponse().GetResponseStream())
using (Stream fileStream = File.Create(@"C:\local\path\file.zip"))
{
byte[] buffer = new byte[10240];
int read;
while ((read = ftpStream.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length)) > 0)
{
fileStream.Write(buffer, 0, read);
Console.WriteLine("Downloaded {0} bytes", fileStream.Position);
}
}
For GUI progress (WinForms ProgressBar
), see:
FtpWebRequest FTP download with ProgressBar
If you want to download all files from a remote folder, see
C# Download all files and subdirectories through FTP.
Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 1449
FYI, Microsoft recommends not using FtpWebRequest for new development:
We don't recommend that you use the FtpWebRequest class for new development. For more information and alternatives to FtpWebRequest, see WebRequest shouldn't be used on GitHub.
The GitHub link directs to this SO page which contains a list of third-party FTP libraries, such as FluentFTP.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 147
public void download(string remoteFile, string localFile)
{
private string host = "yourhost";
private string user = "username";
private string pass = "passwd";
private FtpWebRequest ftpRequest = null;
private FtpWebResponse ftpResponse = null;
private Stream ftpStream = null;
private int bufferSize = 2048;
try
{
ftpRequest = (FtpWebRequest)FtpWebRequest.Create(host + "/" + remoteFile);
ftpRequest.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(user, pass);
ftpRequest.UseBinary = true;
ftpRequest.UsePassive = true;
ftpRequest.KeepAlive = true;
ftpRequest.Method = WebRequestMethods.Ftp.DownloadFile;
ftpResponse = (FtpWebResponse)ftpRequest.GetResponse();
ftpStream = ftpResponse.GetResponseStream();
FileStream localFileStream = new FileStream(localFile, FileMode.Create);
byte[] byteBuffer = new byte[bufferSize];
int bytesRead = ftpStream.Read(byteBuffer, 0, bufferSize);
try
{
while (bytesRead > 0)
{
localFileStream.Write(byteBuffer, 0, bytesRead);
bytesRead = ftpStream.Read(byteBuffer, 0, bufferSize);
}
}
catch (Exception) { }
localFileStream.Close();
ftpStream.Close();
ftpResponse.Close();
ftpRequest = null;
}
catch (Exception) { }
return;
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 31
private static DataTable ReadFTP_CSV()
{
String ftpserver = "ftp://servername/ImportData/xxxx.csv";
FtpWebRequest reqFTP = (FtpWebRequest)FtpWebRequest.Create(new Uri(ftpserver));
reqFTP.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(ftpUserID, ftpPassword);
FtpWebResponse response = (FtpWebResponse)reqFTP.GetResponse();
Stream responseStream = response.GetResponseStream();
// use the stream to read file from FTP
StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(responseStream);
DataTable dt_csvFile = new DataTable();
#region Code
//Add Code Here To Loop txt or CSV file
#endregion
return dt_csvFile;
}
I hope it can help you.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 5832
I know this is an old Post but I am adding here for future reference. Here is a solution that I found:
private void DownloadFileFTP()
{
string inputfilepath = @"C:\Temp\FileName.exe";
string ftphost = "xxx.xx.x.xxx";
string ftpfilepath = "/Updater/Dir1/FileName.exe";
string ftpfullpath = "ftp://" + ftphost + ftpfilepath;
using (WebClient request = new WebClient())
{
request.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("UserName", "P@55w0rd");
byte[] fileData = request.DownloadData(ftpfullpath);
using (FileStream file = File.Create(inputfilepath))
{
file.Write(fileData, 0, fileData.Length);
file.Close();
}
MessageBox.Show("Download Complete");
}
}
Updated based upon excellent suggestion by Ilya Kogan
Upvotes: 57
Reputation: 9
FtpWebRequest request = (FtpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(serverPath);
After this you may use the below line to avoid error..(access denied etc.)
request.Proxy = null;
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 141
I had the same issue!
My solution was to insert the public_html
folder into the download URL.
Real file location on the server:
myhost.com/public_html/myimages/image.png
Web URL:
www.myhost.com/myimages/image.png
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 25166
This paragraph from the FptWebRequest class reference might be of interest to you:
The URI may be relative or absolute. If the URI is of the form "ftp://contoso.com/%2fpath" (%2f is an escaped '/'), then the URI is absolute, and the current directory is /path. If, however, the URI is of the form "ftp://contoso.com/path", first the .NET Framework logs into the FTP server (using the user name and password set by the Credentials property), then the current directory is set to /path.
Upvotes: 26