It seems like on Fri, Jun 02, 2000 at 11:53:45AM -0700, Ryan Denke scribbled: Orig Msg> I'm looking for a way to set up a cron job run a shell scriptto Orig Msg> automatically connect to another server, login with username and Orig Msg> password, and download the same file every day. Orig Msg> Orig Msg> I've read the man pages for FTP, but it just doesn't seem that you can Orig Msg> pass it username, password, and get commands and make it all work. Orig Msg> Anyone have any idea or suggestions? Orig Msg> Orig Msg> Orig Msg> Orig Msg> Orig Msg> _______________________________________________ Orig Msg> Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us Orig Msg> http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss GNU Wget Wget is a utility designed for retrieving binary documents across the Web, through the use of HTTP (Hyper Text Trans­ fer Protocol) and FTP (File Transfer Protocol), and saving them to disk. Wget is non-interactive, which means it can work in the background, while the user is not logged in, unlike most of web browsers (thus you may start the pro­ gram and log off, letting it do its work). Analyzing server responses, it distinguishes between correctly and incorrectly retrieved documents, and retries retrieving them as many times as necessary, or until a user-specified limit is reached. REST is used in FTP on hosts that sup­ port it. Proxy servers are supported to speed up the retrieval and lighten network load. Wget supports a full-featured recursion mechanism, through which you can retrieve large parts of the web, creating local copies of remote directory hierarchies. Of course, maximum level of recursion and other parameters can be specified. Infinite recursion loops are always avoided by hashing the retrieved data. All of this works for both HTTP and FTP. ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/wget/ ftp://gnjilux.cc.fer.hr/pub/unix/util/wget/ ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/wget/ JLF Sends... Behold, the Internet is the greatest sum of information at mankind's fingertips since the Library of Alexandria. Despite this vast storehouse of knowledge at our disposal, there are still those that will send urban legend and blatantly false information to mailing lists and newsgroups without making even the slightest effort to check their legitimacy. At every occurance this proves to me that every node,wire, and server I help connect to the Internet to widen its expanse for the benefit of the masses is a complete waste of time. ( J. Francois )