FTPGETFILEARRAY         Get list of matching remote file(s)

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Syntax:

FTPGETFILEARRAY

filename  varname [ /options ]

Arguments:

filename

Variable or string defining a file or path name to look for; wildcard characters allowed; If not path is defined it searches the current directory for all files

 

varname

the array name to populate.

Options:

/subdirs

Search sub-folders for files matching the [ file name ] argument.

 

/skip_changing

Ignore any file if file size is not stable for one second.

 

/skip_changing_seconds=nn

Ignore any file if the size is not stable for the specified number of seconds. Values between 1 and 60 are allowed.

 

/timeout=nn

Time-out in seconds to wait for presence of the file, if the timeout elapses before the file is found $ERROR_WAIT_TIMED_OUT is returned. If this option is omitted Robo-FTP looks for the file and immediately returns $ERROR_NO_FILE_FOUND if no match is found.

 

If you need to download a file please see the Help page for the RCVFILE script command.

Note

Robo-FTP offers numerous commands for monitoring for files and iterating over directory structures on local and remote servers. There is significant overlap in capabilities between these commands, but there are also important differences that often make one command better suited to a particular task than the others. Please see the chapter Monitoring for Files and Iterating over Directory Structures for a description of these commands and recommendations for which commands to use in a particular situation.

 

This script command searches the current remote directory for the file specified in the [ file name ] argument. If any matching files are found, the full path to that file is added to the array arrayname[*].

 

The /skip_changing and /skip_changing_seconds options are useful when there is a chance that a file being processed by Robo-FTP is also being modified by some other process.

 

GETFILEARRAY returns $ERROR_NO_FILE_FOUND when no file matches the [ file name ] argument. The /timeout option can be used to wait for the existence of an expected file. This is accomplished by periodically polling the folder during the waiting period. If the file does not appear before the timeout expires $ERROR_WAIT_TIMED_OUT is returned.

 

Use the FTPCD command to change the current directory before calling FTPGETFILEARRAY if the file you want to find files not in the current directory or, alternatively, the /subdirs option may be used to find files in any subdirectory of the current directory.

 

This command is especially with directories containing very large numbers of files. Each call to GETSITEFILE or FTPGETTFILE with wildcards must iterate over previously checked files on each call. So for very large directories or directory trees it is much faster to do something like...

 

FTPGETFILEARRAY "*" var

SET counter = 0

SET size = var[*]

IFNUM= size 0 GOTO loop_done ;; skip loop if array is empty

:top_of_loop

GETSITEFILE var[counter]

IFERROR GOTO next

IFSTRCMP %sitefile "" GOTO dir

!DISPLAY %sitefile

!DISPLAY %sitefolder

!DISPLAY %sitepath

PAUSE /for=1

GOTO next

:dir

IFSTRCMP %sitefolder "" GOTO error

!DISPLAY %sitefile

!DISPLAY %sitefolder

!DISPLAY %sitepath

PAUSE /for=1

:next

SET counter = counter + 1

IFNUM< counter size GOTO top_of_loop

:loop_done

 

Important

This command returns $ERROR_NO_FILE_FOUND when no file matches the [ file name ] argument. This is not the same error as $ERROR_NO_FILES_FOUND. Please be sure to test for the correct error code.

 

 

Related command(s): GETSITEFILE, FILECOMPARETO, FILECOMPAREFROM

See also: Using the %sitefiledate, %sitefiledatetime, %sitefilesize, and %sitefiletime Variables, Using Wildcards, Using Arrays