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cadaver(1)                       User Manuals                       cadaver(1)

NAME

cadaver - A command-line WebDAV client for Unix.

SYNOPSIS

cadaver [-trp[-r file][-p host[:port]]][-V][-h] http://hostname[:port]/path

DESCRIPTION

cadaver supports file upload, download, on-screen display, namespace operations (move and copy), collection creation and deletion, and locking operations. Its operation is similar to the standard BSD ftp(1) client and the Samba Project's smbclient(1). A user familiar with these tools should be quite comfortable with cadaver. cadaver supports automatically logging in to servers requiring authentication via a .netrc file (similar to ftp(1) - see section "THE .netrc FILE" below).

OPTIONS

-t, --tolerant Allow cd/open into non-WebDAV enabled collection; use if the server or proxy server has WebDAV compliance problems. -r, --rcfile=file Use this rcfile rather than the default of ~/.cadaverrc -p, --proxy=host[:port] Connect using the proxy host "host" and optional proxy port "port". -V, --version Display version information and exit. -h, --help Display this help message and exit.

COMMAND REFERENCE

ls [path] List contents of current [or other] collection cd path Change to specified collection pwd Display name of current collection put local [remote] Upload local file get remote [local] Download remote resource mget remote... Download many remote resources mput local... Upload many local files edit resource Edit given resource less remote... Display remote resource through pager mkcol remote... Create remote collection(s) cat remote... Display remote resource(s) delete remote... Delete non-collection resource(s) rmcol remote... Delete remote collections and ALL contents copy source... dest Copy resource(s) from source to dest move source... dest Move resource(s) from source to dest lock resource Lock given resource unlock resource Unlock given resource discover resource Display lock information for resource steal resource Steal lock token for resource showlocks Display list of owned locks propnames res Names of properties defined on resource chexec [+|-] remote Change isexecutable property of resource propget res [propname] Retrieve properties of resource propset res propname value Set property on resource set [option] [value] Set an option, or display options open URL Open connection to given URL close Close current connection quit Exit program unset [option] [value] Unsets or clears value from option. lcd [directory] Change local working directory lls [options] Display local directory listing lpwd Print local working directory logout Logout of authentication session help [command] Display help message THE .netrc FILE The file ~/.netrc may be used to automatically login to a server requiring authentication. The following tokens (separated by spaces, tabs or newlines) may be used: machine host Identify a remote machine host which is compared with the hostname given on the command line or as an argument to the open command. Any subsequent tokens up to the end of file or the next machine or default token are associated with this entry. default This is equivalent to the machine token but matches any hostname. Only one default token may be used and it must be after all machine tokens. login username Specifies the username to use when logging in to the remote machine. password string passwd string Specifies the password to use when logging in to the remote machine. Any other tokens (as described in ftp(1)) are ignored.

EXAMPLES

cadaver http://dav.example.com/ Connects to the server myserver.example.com, opening the root collection. cadaver http://zope.example.com:8022/Users/fred/ Connects to the server zope.example.com using port 8022, opening the collection "/Users/fred/". cadaver https://secure.example.com/ Connects to a server called secure.example.com using SSL.

FILES

~/.cadaverrc Individual user settings that can override cadaver defaults and to script cadaver. Can be changed by the "--rcfile" option. ~/.netrc Login and initialization information used by the auto-login process. See section "THE .netrc FILE" for details.

AUTHOR

Joe Orton <cadaver@webdav.org>

SEE ALSO

ftp(1), smbclient(1) Unix January 2002 cadaver(1)

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