xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/fetch/fetch.1 (revision aa0a1e58)
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30.\" $FreeBSD$
31.\"
32.Dd December 14, 2008
33.Dt FETCH 1
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm fetch
37.Nd retrieve a file by Uniform Resource Locator
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.Nm
40.Op Fl 146AadFlMmnPpqRrsUv
41.Op Fl B Ar bytes
42.Op Fl i Ar file
43.Op Fl N Ar file
44.Op Fl o Ar file
45.Op Fl S Ar bytes
46.Op Fl T Ar seconds
47.Op Fl w Ar seconds
48.Ar URL ...
49.Nm
50.Op Fl 146AadFlMmnPpqRrsUv
51.Op Fl B Ar bytes
52.Op Fl i Ar file
53.Op Fl N Ar file
54.Op Fl o Ar file
55.Op Fl S Ar bytes
56.Op Fl T Ar seconds
57.Op Fl w Ar seconds
58.Fl h Ar host Fl f Ar file Oo Fl c Ar dir Oc
59.Sh DESCRIPTION
60The
61.Nm
62utility provides a command-line interface to the
63.Xr fetch 3
64library.
65Its purpose is to retrieve the file(s) pointed to by the URL(s) on the
66command line.
67.Pp
68The following options are available:
69.Bl -tag -width Fl
70.It Fl 1
71Stop and return exit code 0 at the first successfully retrieved file.
72.It Fl 4
73Forces
74.Nm
75to use IPv4 addresses only.
76.It Fl 6
77Forces
78.Nm
79to use IPv6 addresses only.
80.It Fl A
81Do not automatically follow ``temporary'' (302) redirects.
82Some broken Web sites will return a redirect instead of a not-found
83error when the requested object does not exist.
84.It Fl a
85Automatically retry the transfer upon soft failures.
86.It Fl B Ar bytes
87Specify the read buffer size in bytes.
88The default is 4096 bytes.
89Attempts to set a buffer size lower than this will be silently
90ignored.
91The number of reads actually performed is reported at verbosity level
92two or higher (see the
93.Fl v
94flag).
95.It Fl c Ar dir
96The file to retrieve is in directory
97.Ar dir
98on the remote host.
99This option is deprecated and is provided for backward compatibility
100only.
101.It Fl d
102Use a direct connection even if a proxy is configured.
103.It Fl F
104In combination with the
105.Fl r
106flag, forces a restart even if the local and remote files have
107different modification times.
108Implies
109.Fl R .
110.It Fl f Ar file
111The file to retrieve is named
112.Ar file
113on the remote host.
114This option is deprecated and is provided for backward compatibility
115only.
116.It Fl h Ar host
117The file to retrieve is located on the host
118.Ar host .
119This option is deprecated and is provided for backward compatibility
120only.
121.It Fl i Ar file
122If-Modified-Since mode: the remote file will only be retrieved if it
123is newer than
124.Ar file
125on the local host.
126(HTTP only)
127.It Fl l
128If the target is a file-scheme URL, make a symbolic link to the target
129rather than trying to copy it.
130.It Fl M
131.It Fl m
132Mirror mode: if the file already exists locally and has the same size
133and modification time as the remote file, it will not be fetched.
134Note that the
135.Fl m
136and
137.Fl r
138flags are mutually exclusive.
139.It Fl N Ar file
140Use
141.Ar file
142instead of
143.Pa ~/.netrc
144to look up login names and passwords for FTP sites.
145See
146.Xr ftp 1
147for a description of the file format.
148This feature is experimental.
149.It Fl n
150Do not preserve the modification time of the transferred file.
151.It Fl o Ar file
152Set the output file name to
153.Ar file .
154By default, a ``pathname'' is extracted from the specified URI, and
155its basename is used as the name of the output file.
156A
157.Ar file
158argument of
159.Sq Li \&-
160indicates that results are to be directed to the standard output.
161If the
162.Ar file
163argument is a directory, fetched file(s) will be placed within the
164directory, with name(s) selected as in the default behaviour.
165.It Fl P
166.It Fl p
167Use passive FTP.
168This is useful if you are behind a firewall which blocks incoming
169connections.
170Try this flag if
171.Nm
172seems to hang when retrieving FTP URLs.
173.It Fl q
174Quiet mode.
175.It Fl R
176The output files are precious, and should not be deleted under any
177circumstances, even if the transfer failed or was incomplete.
178.It Fl r
179Restart a previously interrupted transfer.
180Note that the
181.Fl m
182and
183.Fl r
184flags are mutually exclusive.
185.It Fl S Ar bytes
186Require the file size reported by the server to match the specified
187value.
188If it does not, a message is printed and the file is not fetched.
189If the server does not support reporting file sizes, this option is
190ignored and the file is fetched unconditionally.
191.It Fl s
192Print the size in bytes of each requested file, without fetching it.
193.It Fl T Ar seconds
194Set timeout value to
195.Ar seconds .
196Overrides the environment variables
197.Ev FTP_TIMEOUT
198for FTP transfers or
199.Ev HTTP_TIMEOUT
200for HTTP transfers if set.
201.It Fl U
202When using passive FTP, allocate the port for the data connection from
203the low (default) port range.
204See
205.Xr ip 4
206for details on how to specify which port range this corresponds to.
207.It Fl v
208Increase verbosity level.
209.It Fl w Ar seconds
210When the
211.Fl a
212flag is specified, wait this many seconds between successive retries.
213.El
214.Pp
215If
216.Nm
217receives a
218.Dv SIGINFO
219signal (see the
220.Cm status
221argument for
222.Xr stty 1 ) ,
223the current transfer rate statistics will be written to the
224standard error output, in the same format as the standard completion
225message.
226.Sh ENVIRONMENT
227.Bl -tag -width HTTP_TIMEOUT
228.It Ev FTP_TIMEOUT
229Maximum time, in seconds, to wait before aborting an FTP connection.
230.It Ev HTTP_TIMEOUT
231Maximum time, in seconds, to wait before aborting an HTTP connection.
232.El
233.Pp
234See
235.Xr fetch 3
236for a description of additional environment variables, including
237.Ev FETCH_BIND_ADDRESS ,
238.Ev FTP_LOGIN ,
239.Ev FTP_PASSIVE_MODE ,
240.Ev FTP_PASSWORD ,
241.Ev FTP_PROXY ,
242.Ev ftp_proxy ,
243.Ev HTTP_AUTH ,
244.Ev HTTP_PROXY ,
245.Ev http_proxy ,
246.Ev HTTP_PROXY_AUTH ,
247.Ev HTTP_REFERER ,
248.Ev HTTP_USER_AGENT ,
249.Ev NETRC ,
250.Ev NO_PROXY and
251.Ev no_proxy .
252.Sh EXIT STATUS
253The
254.Nm
255command returns zero on success, or one on failure.
256If multiple URLs are listed on the command line,
257.Nm
258will attempt to retrieve each one of them in turn, and will return
259zero only if they were all successfully retrieved.
260.Pp
261If the
262.Fl i
263argument is used and the remote file is not newer than the
264specified file then the command will still return success,
265although no file is transferred.
266.Sh SEE ALSO
267.Xr fetch 3
268.Sh HISTORY
269The
270.Nm
271command appeared in
272.Fx 2.1.5 .
273This implementation first appeared in
274.Fx 4.1 .
275.Sh AUTHORS
276.An -nosplit
277The original implementation of
278.Nm
279was done by
280.An Jean-Marc Zucconi Aq jmz@FreeBSD.org .
281It was extensively re-worked for
282.Fx 2.2
283by
284.An Garrett Wollman Aq wollman@FreeBSD.org ,
285and later completely rewritten to use the
286.Xr fetch 3
287library by
288.An Dag-Erling Sm\(/orgrav Aq des@FreeBSD.org .
289.Sh NOTES
290The
291.Fl b
292and
293.Fl t
294options are no longer supported and will generate warnings.
295They were workarounds for bugs in other OSes which this implementation
296does not trigger.
297.Pp
298One cannot both use the
299.Fl h ,
300.Fl c
301and
302.Fl f
303options and specify URLs on the command line.
304