xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/tftp/tftp.1 (revision 1e413cf93298b5b97441a21d9a50fdcd0ee9945e)
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32.\"     @(#)tftp.1	8.2 (Berkeley) 4/18/94
33.\" $FreeBSD$
34.\"
35.Dd October 1, 2003
36.Dt TFTP 1
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm tftp
40.Nd "trivial file transfer program"
41.Sh SYNOPSIS
42.Nm
43.Op Ar host Op Ar port
44.Sh DESCRIPTION
45The
46.Nm
47utility is the user interface to the Internet
48.Tn TFTP
49(Trivial File Transfer Protocol),
50which allows users to transfer files to and from a remote machine.
51The remote
52.Ar host
53may be specified on the command line, in which case
54.Nm
55uses
56.Ar host
57as the default host for future transfers (see the
58.Ic connect
59command below).
60.Sh COMMANDS
61Once
62.Nm
63is running, it issues the prompt
64.Dq Li "tftp> "
65and recognizes the following commands:
66.Pp
67.Bl -tag -width ".Ic verbose" -compact
68.It Ic \&? Ar command-name ...
69Print help information.
70.Pp
71.It Ic ascii
72Shorthand for
73.Ic mode Cm ascii .
74.Pp
75.It Ic binary
76Shorthand for
77.Ic mode Cm binary .
78.Pp
79.It Ic connect Ar host Op Ar port
80Set the
81.Ar host
82(and optionally
83.Ar port )
84for transfers.
85Note that the
86.Tn TFTP
87protocol, unlike the
88.Tn FTP
89protocol,
90does not maintain connections between transfers; thus, the
91.Ic connect
92command does not actually create a connection,
93but merely remembers what host is to be used for transfers.
94You do not have to use the
95.Ic connect
96command; the remote host can be specified as part of the
97.Ic get
98or
99.Ic put
100commands.
101.Pp
102.It Ic get Oo Ar host : Oc Ns Ar file Op Ar localname
103.It Ic get Xo
104.Oo Ar host1 : Oc Ns Ar file1
105.Oo Ar host2 : Oc Ns Ar file2 ...
106.Oo Ar hostN : Oc Ns Ar fileN
107.Xc
108Get one or more files from the remote host.
109When using the
110.Ar host
111argument, the
112.Ar host
113will be used as default host for future transfers.
114If
115.Ar localname
116is specified, the file is stored locally as
117.Ar localname ,
118otherwise the original filename is used.
119Note that it is not possible to download two files at a time, only
120one, three, or more than three files, at a time.
121.Pp
122To specify an IPv6 numeric address for a host, wrap it using square
123brackets like
124.Dq Li [3ffe:2900:e00c:ffee::1234] : Ns Ar file
125to disambiguate the
126colons used in the IPv6 address from the colon separating the host and
127the filename.
128.Pp
129.It Ic mode Ar transfer-mode
130Set the mode for transfers;
131.Ar transfer-mode
132may be one of
133.Cm ascii
134or
135.Cm binary .
136The default is
137.Cm ascii .
138.Pp
139.It Ic put Ar file Op Oo Ar host : Oc Ns Ar remotename
140.It Ic put Ar file1 file2 ... fileN Op Oo Ar host : Oc Ns Ar remote-directory
141Put a file or set of files to the remote host.
142When
143.Ar remotename
144is specified, the file is stored remotely as
145.Ar remotename ,
146otherwise the original filename is used.
147If the
148.Ar remote-directory
149argument is used, the remote host is assumed to be a
150.Ux
151machine.
152To specify an IPv6 numeric address for a
153.Ar host ,
154see the example under the
155.Ic get
156command.
157.Pp
158.It Ic quit
159Exit
160.Nm .
161An end of file also exits.
162.Pp
163.It Ic rexmt Ar retransmission-timeout
164Set the per-packet retransmission timeout, in seconds.
165.Pp
166.It Ic status
167Show current status.
168.Pp
169.It Ic timeout Ar total-transmission-timeout
170Set the total transmission timeout, in seconds.
171.Pp
172.It Ic trace
173Toggle packet tracing.
174.Pp
175.It Ic verbose
176Toggle verbose mode.
177.El
178.Sh HISTORY
179The
180.Nm
181command appeared in
182.Bx 4.3 .
183.Sh BUGS
184Because there is no user-login or validation within
185the
186.Tn TFTP
187protocol, the remote site will probably have some
188sort of file-access restrictions in place.
189The
190exact methods are specific to each site and therefore
191difficult to document here.
192.Pp
193Files larger than 33488896 octets (65535 blocks) cannot be transferred
194without client and server supporting blocksize negotiation (RFC1783).
195