~ A super FTP/FTPS client library for Rust ~
Developed by veeso and Matt McCoy
Current version: 5.1.0 (02/03/2023)
- SuppaFTP
SuppaFTP is the main FTP/FTPS client library for Rust, with both support for sync/async programming and for all the FTP protocol features. It is a fork of the original ftp library "rust-ftp", but since the original library is currently unmaintained, I decided to keep working on this library by myself. Currently, I consider myself as the only maintainer of this project, indeed I've already added some features to the library and improved it with better error handling and test units.
- Replaced OpenSSL with native-tls or rustls as you prefer π
- Added methods to work with streams (e.g.
put_with_stream
) β¬οΈ - suppaftp supports Active mode
- Added
get_welcome_msg
method π - Supports for both sync/async rust π
- Supports for more commands π
- ABOR
- APPE
- REST
- EPSV
- EPRT
- Some extra features, such as the LIST command output parser
- Implementation of RFC 2428
- Removed deprecated statements β°οΈ
- Better error handling π
- Added test units keeping an eye on code coverage π
To get started, first add suppaftp to your dependencies:
suppaftp = "^5.1.0"
If you want to enable support for FTPS, you must enable the native-tls
or rustls
feature in your cargo dependencies, based on the TLS provider you prefer.
suppaftp = { version = "^5.1.0", features = ["native-tls"] }
# or
suppaftp = { version = "^5.1.0", features = ["rustls"] }
π‘ If you don't know what to choose,
native-tls
should be preferred for compatibility reasons.
β If you want to link libssl statically, enable featurenative-tls-vendored
If you want to enable async support, you must enable async
feature in your cargo dependencies.
suppaftp = { version = "^5.1.0", features = ["async"] }
β οΈ If you want to enable both native-tls and async you must use the async-native-tls featureβ οΈ
β οΈ If you want to enable both rustls and async you must use the async-rustls featureβ οΈ
β If you want to link libssl statically, enable featureasync-native-tls-vendored
If you want to enable deprecated methods of FTPS, please enable the deprecated
feature in your cargo dependencies.
This feature enables these methods:
connect_secure_implicit()
: used to connect via implicit FTPS
By default, the library will log if there is any log
crate consumer on the user implementation.
Logging can be if preferred, disabled via the no-log
feature.
use std::str;
use std::io::Cursor;
use suppaftp::FtpStream;
fn main() {
// Create a connection to an FTP server and authenticate to it.
let mut ftp_stream = FtpStream::connect("127.0.0.1:21").unwrap();
let _ = ftp_stream.login("username", "password").unwrap();
// Get the current directory that the client will be reading from and writing to.
println!("Current directory: {}", ftp_stream.pwd().unwrap());
// Change into a new directory, relative to the one we are currently in.
let _ = ftp_stream.cwd("test_data").unwrap();
// Retrieve (GET) a file from the FTP server in the current working directory.
let data = ftp_stream.retr_as_buffer("ftpext-charter.txt").unwrap();
println!("Read file with contents\n{}\n", str::from_utf8(&data.into_inner()).unwrap());
// Store (PUT) a file from the client to the current working directory of the server.
let mut reader = Cursor::new("Hello from the Rust \"ftp\" crate!".as_bytes());
let _ = ftp_stream.put("greeting.txt", &mut reader);
println!("Successfully wrote greeting.txt");
// Terminate the connection to the server.
let _ = ftp_stream.quit();
}
use suppaftp::{NativeTlsFtpStream, NativeTlsConnector};
use suppaftp::native_tls::{TlsConnector, TlsStream};
fn main() {
let ftp_stream = NativeTlsFtpStream::connect("test.rebex.net:21").unwrap();
// Switch to the secure mode
let mut ftp_stream = ftp_stream.into_secure(NativeTlsConnector::from(TlsConnector::new().unwrap()), "test.rebex.net").unwrap();
ftp_stream.login("demo", "password").unwrap();
// Do other secret stuff
assert!(ftp_stream.quit().is_ok());
}
use std::str;
use std::io::Cursor;
use std::sync::Arc;
use suppaftp::{RustlsFtpStream, RustlsConnector};
use suppaftp::rustls::ClientConfig;
fn main() {
let mut root_store = rustls::RootCertStore::empty();
root_store.add_server_trust_anchors(webpki_roots::TLS_SERVER_ROOTS.0.iter().map(|ta| {
rustls::OwnedTrustAnchor::from_subject_spki_name_constraints(
ta.subject,
ta.spki,
ta.name_constraints,
)
}));
let config = ClientConfig::builder()
.with_safe_defaults()
.with_root_certificates(root_store)
.with_no_client_auth();
// Create a connection to an FTP server and authenticate to it.
let config = Arc::new(rustls_config());
let mut ftp_stream = RustlsFtpStream::connect("test.rebex.net:21")
.unwrap()
.into_secure(RustlsConnector::from(Arc::clone(&config)), "test.rebex.net")
.unwrap();
// Terminate the connection to the server.
let _ = ftp_stream.quit();
}
use suppaftp::{AsyncFtpStream, AsyncNativeTlsConnector};
use suppaftp::async_native_tls::{TlsConnector, TlsStream};
let ftp_stream = AsyncFtpStream::connect("test.rebex.net:21").await.unwrap();
// Switch to the secure mode
let mut ftp_stream = ftp_stream.into_secure(AsyncNativeTlsConnector::from(TlsConnector::new()), "test.rebex.net").await.unwrap();
ftp_stream.login("demo", "password").await.unwrap();
// Do other secret stuff
assert!(ftp_stream.quit().await.is_ok());
SuppaFTP comes also with a built-in command-line FTP client. This CLI application provides all the commands to interact with a remote FTP server and supports FTPS too. You can also use it as a reference to implement your project. You can find it in the cli/
directory.
You can simply install as any other rust application via Cargo:
cargo install suppaftp-cli
suppaftp --version
If you like SuppaFTP, please consider a little donation π₯³
View Changelog here
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
If you want to contribute to this project, please read the Contributing guide first π.