Linux and data storage?

Luke Davis ldavis at shellworld.net
Mon Sep 27 16:15:23 EDT 2004


Um, if you have FTP access on both, why would you need that tool?  Why not 
just telnet to Shellworld, from there FTP to your web server (sftp or scp 
or rsync would be better), and transfer the files directly?

  On Sun, 26 Sep 
2004, Karen Lewellen wrote:

> hmm,
> Let me be sure I follow you.
> This is a program that runs in windows, that would let me move the contents 
> of my shellworld workspace,  <i have ftp here too of course> to say the 
> storage on my website<where I also  have ftp,> and that is not located on 
> shellworld?
> if all this is true, where can i find this tool?
> Karen
>
> On Sun, 26 Sep 2004, Sina Bahram wrote:
>
>> If I may humbly suggest?
>> 
>> Fxp, or flash xp as I think it is...is a windows tool that allows someone 
>> to
>> connect to one ftp, then connect to the other ftp...and then say, FTP A,
>> copy stuff to FTP B....then all you have to do is sit back and let the 
>> data
>> packets flow...it doesn't go through your system at all: so you could
>> transfer information at any speed, only limited by the two ftp servers, 
>> not
>> by your own connection.
>> 
>> *shrug* is there a linux equivalent to this tool/protocall?
>> 
>> Take care,
>> Sina
>> 
>> No trees were destroyed in sending this message; however, a large number 
>> of
>> electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca 
>> [mailto:speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca]
>> On Behalf Of Chuck Hallenbeck
>> Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 8:51 PM
>> To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.
>> Subject: Re: Linux and data storage?
>> 
>> Karen,
>> 
>> You have two bottlenecks, seems to me. One is your connection speed, the
>> other is nettamer. You can use "tar" on your ISP's system to aggregate 
>> those
>> precious files into one archive, assuming you have the space, and then 
>> move
>> that archive somewhere. Nettamer could retrieve it with its ftp facility,
>> but it might take forever over a dialup link.
>> 
>> If you had a linux desktop, you could use an ftp client on your desktop,
>> call it "system A", to move files from "system B" to "system C", assuming
>> you had the necessary access permissions and such.
>> 
>> Also, you could email stuff to yourself with attachments, although 
>> nettamer
>> is a little weird about attachments, and then you have filesize limits.
>> 
>> Finally, if you had a Linux desktop and a high speed connection you would 
>> be
>> home free. Just grab all those files quickly with an FTP client, move 
>> them
>> to your desktop, and burn them to a CD if you need to.
>> 
>> My Linux system uses two 40 GB disks, one of which is used extensively to
>> backup stuff on the other. Not exactly a raid system, but heavily 
>> redundant.
>> I do use CD backups too once in a blue moon.
>> 
>> Your DOS desktop has limited HD storage. A Linux desktop would not. I 
>> have a
>> DOS partition of 500 MB on each of my two 40 GB hard discs, just in case,
>> but have not booted into DOS in several years. For my own situation, I
>> cannot imagine ever being able (psychologically) to return to DOS and
>> Nettamer.
>> 
>> Chuck
>> 
>> 
>> 
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>
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