Upload files with FTP using PowerShell

PowershellFtp

Powershell Problem Overview


I want to use PowerShell to transfer files with FTP to an anonymous FTP server. I would not use any extra packages. How?

Powershell Solutions


Solution 1 - Powershell

I am not sure you can 100% bullet proof the script from not hanging or crashing, as there are things outside your control (what if the server loses power mid-upload?) - but this should provide a solid foundation for getting you started:

# create the FtpWebRequest and configure it
$ftp = [System.Net.FtpWebRequest]::Create("ftp://localhost/me.png")
$ftp = [System.Net.FtpWebRequest]$ftp
$ftp.Method = [System.Net.WebRequestMethods+Ftp]::UploadFile
$ftp.Credentials = new-object System.Net.NetworkCredential("anonymous","anonymous@localhost")
$ftp.UseBinary = $true
$ftp.UsePassive = $true
# read in the file to upload as a byte array
$content = [System.IO.File]::ReadAllBytes("C:\me.png")
$ftp.ContentLength = $content.Length
# get the request stream, and write the bytes into it
$rs = $ftp.GetRequestStream()
$rs.Write($content, 0, $content.Length)
# be sure to clean up after ourselves
$rs.Close()
$rs.Dispose()

Solution 2 - Powershell

There are some other ways too. I have used the following script:

$File = "D:\Dev\somefilename.zip";
$ftp = "ftp://username:[email protected]/pub/incoming/somefilename.zip";

Write-Host -Object "ftp url: $ftp";

$webclient = New-Object -TypeName System.Net.WebClient;
$uri = New-Object -TypeName System.Uri -ArgumentList $ftp;

Write-Host -Object "Uploading $File...";

$webclient.UploadFile($uri, $File);

And you could run a script against the windows FTP command line utility using the following command

ftp -s:script.txt 

(Check out this article)

The following question on SO also answers this: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/936108/how-to-script-ftp-upload-and-download

Solution 3 - Powershell

I'm not gonna claim that this is more elegant than the highest-voted solution...but this is cool (well, at least in my mind LOL) in its own way:

$server = "ftp.lolcats.com"
$filelist = "file1.txt file2.txt"	

"open $server
user $user $password
binary	
cd $dir		
" +
($filelist.split(' ') | %{ "put ""$_""`n" }) | ftp -i -in

As you can see, it uses that dinky built-in windows FTP client. Much shorter and straightforward, too. Yes, I've actually used this and it works!

Solution 4 - Powershell

Easiest way

The most trivial way to upload a binary file to an FTP server using PowerShell is using WebClient.UploadFile:

$client = New-Object System.Net.WebClient
$client.Credentials =
    New-Object System.Net.NetworkCredential("username", "password")
$client.UploadFile(
    "ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip", "C:\local\path\file.zip")

Advanced options

If you need a greater control, that WebClient does not offer (like TLS/SSL encryption, etc), use FtpWebRequest. Easy way is to just copy a FileStream to FTP stream using Stream.CopyTo:

$request = [Net.WebRequest]::Create("ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip")
$request.Credentials =
    New-Object System.Net.NetworkCredential("username", "password")
$request.Method = [System.Net.WebRequestMethods+Ftp]::UploadFile 

$fileStream = [System.IO.File]::OpenRead("C:\local\path\file.zip")
$ftpStream = $request.GetRequestStream()

$fileStream.CopyTo($ftpStream)

$ftpStream.Dispose()
$fileStream.Dispose()

Progress monitoring

If you need to monitor an upload progress, you have to copy the contents by chunks yourself:

$request = [Net.WebRequest]::Create("ftp://ftp.example.com/remote/path/file.zip")
$request.Credentials =
    New-Object System.Net.NetworkCredential("username", "password")
$request.Method = [System.Net.WebRequestMethods+Ftp]::UploadFile 

$fileStream = [System.IO.File]::OpenRead("C:\local\path\file.zip")
$ftpStream = $request.GetRequestStream()

$buffer = New-Object Byte[] 10240
while (($read = $fileStream.Read($buffer, 0, $buffer.Length)) -gt 0)
{
    $ftpStream.Write($buffer, 0, $read)
    $pct = ($fileStream.Position / $fileStream.Length)
    Write-Progress `
        -Activity "Uploading" -Status ("{0:P0} complete:" -f $pct) `
        -PercentComplete ($pct * 100)
}

$ftpStream.Dispose()
$fileStream.Dispose()

Uploading folder

If you want to upload all files from a folder, see
https://stackoverflow.com/q/31791555/850848

Solution 5 - Powershell

I recently wrote for powershell several functions for communicating with FTP, see https://github.com/AstralisSomnium/PowerShell-No-Library-Just-Functions/blob/master/FTPModule.ps1. The second function below, you can send a whole local folder to FTP. In the module are even functions for removing / adding / reading folders and files recursively.

#Add-FtpFile -ftpFilePath "ftp://myHost.com/folder/somewhere/uploaded.txt" -localFile "C:\temp\file.txt" -userName "User" -password "pw"
function Add-FtpFile($ftpFilePath, $localFile, $username, $password) {
	$ftprequest = New-FtpRequest -sourceUri $ftpFilePath -method ([System.Net.WebRequestMethods+Ftp]::UploadFile) -username $username -password $password
	Write-Host "$($ftpRequest.Method) for '$($ftpRequest.RequestUri)' complete'"
	$content = $content = [System.IO.File]::ReadAllBytes($localFile)
	$ftprequest.ContentLength = $content.Length
	$requestStream = $ftprequest.GetRequestStream()
	$requestStream.Write($content, 0, $content.Length)
	$requestStream.Close()
	$requestStream.Dispose()
}

#Add-FtpFolderWithFiles -sourceFolder "C:\temp\" -destinationFolder "ftp://myHost.com/folder/somewhere/" -userName "User" -password "pw"
function Add-FtpFolderWithFiles($sourceFolder, $destinationFolder, $userName, $password) {
	Add-FtpDirectory $destinationFolder $userName $password
	$files = Get-ChildItem $sourceFolder -File
	foreach($file in $files) {
		$uploadUrl ="$destinationFolder/$($file.Name)"
		Add-FtpFile -ftpFilePath $uploadUrl -localFile $file.FullName -username $userName -password $password
	}
}

#Add-FtpFolderWithFilesRecursive -sourceFolder "C:\temp\" -destinationFolder "ftp://myHost.com/folder/" -userName "User" -password "pw"
function Add-FtpFolderWithFilesRecursive($sourceFolder, $destinationFolder, $userName, $password) {
	Add-FtpFolderWithFiles -sourceFolder $sourceFolder -destinationFolder $destinationFolder -userName $userName -password $password
	$subDirectories = Get-ChildItem $sourceFolder -Directory
	$fromUri = new-object System.Uri($sourceFolder)
	foreach($subDirectory in $subDirectories) {
		$toUri  = new-object System.Uri($subDirectory.FullName)
		$relativeUrl = $fromUri.MakeRelativeUri($toUri)
		$relativePath = [System.Uri]::UnescapeDataString($relativeUrl.ToString())
		$lastFolder = $relativePath.Substring($relativePath.LastIndexOf("/")+1)
		Add-FtpFolderWithFilesRecursive -sourceFolder $subDirectory.FullName -destinationFolder "$destinationFolder/$lastFolder" -userName $userName -password $password
	}
}

Solution 6 - Powershell

Here's my super cool version BECAUSE IT HAS A PROGRESS BAR :-)

Which is a completely useless feature, I know, but it still looks cool \m/ \m/

$webclient = New-Object System.Net.WebClient
Register-ObjectEvent -InputObject $webclient -EventName "UploadProgressChanged" -Action { Write-Progress -Activity "Upload progress..." -Status "Uploading" -PercentComplete $EventArgs.ProgressPercentage } > $null

$File = "filename.zip"
$ftp = "ftp://user:password@server/filename.zip"
$uri = New-Object System.Uri($ftp)
try{
	$webclient.UploadFileAsync($uri, $File)
}
catch  [Net.WebException]
{
	Write-Host $_.Exception.ToString() -foregroundcolor red
}
while ($webclient.IsBusy) { continue }

PS. Helps a lot, when I'm wondering "did it stop working, or is it just my slow ASDL connection?"

Solution 7 - Powershell

You can simply handle file uploads through PowerShell, like this. Complete project is available on Github here https://github.com/edouardkombo/PowerShellFtp

#Directory where to find pictures to upload
$Dir= 'c:\fff\medias\'

#Directory where to save uploaded pictures
$saveDir = 'c:\fff\save\'

#ftp server params
$ftp = 'ftp://10.0.1.11:21/'
$user = 'user'
$pass = 'pass'

#Connect to ftp webclient
$webclient = New-Object System.Net.WebClient 
$webclient.Credentials = New-Object System.Net.NetworkCredential($user,$pass)  

#Initialize var for infinite loop
$i=0

#Infinite loop
while($i -eq 0){ 

    #Pause 1 seconde before continue
    Start-Sleep -sec 1

    #Search for pictures in directory
    foreach($item in (dir $Dir "*.jpg"))
    {
        #Set default network status to 1
        $onNetwork = "1"

        #Get picture creation dateTime...
        $pictureDateTime = (Get-ChildItem $item.fullName).CreationTime

        #Convert dateTime to timeStamp
        $pictureTimeStamp = (Get-Date $pictureDateTime).ToFileTime()

        #Get actual timeStamp
        $timeStamp = (Get-Date).ToFileTime() 
    
        #Get picture lifeTime
        $pictureLifeTime = $timeStamp - $pictureTimeStamp

        #We only treat pictures that are fully written on the disk
        #So, we put a 2 second delay to ensure even big pictures have been fully wirtten   in the disk
        if($pictureLifeTime -gt "2") {    

            #If upload fails, we set network status at 0
            try{

                $uri = New-Object System.Uri($ftp+$item.Name)

                $webclient.UploadFile($uri, $item.FullName)

            } catch [Exception] {
            
                $onNetwork = "0"
                write-host $_.Exception.Message;
            }

            #If upload succeeded, we do further actions
            if($onNetwork -eq "1"){
                "Copying $item..."
                Copy-Item -path $item.fullName -destination $saveDir$item 

                "Deleting $item..."
                Remove-Item $item.fullName
            }


        }  
    }
}	

Solution 8 - Powershell

Goyuix's solution works great, but as presented it gives me this error: "The requested FTP command is not supported when using HTTP proxy."

Adding this line after $ftp.UsePassive = $true fixed the problem for me:

$ftp.Proxy = $null;

Solution 9 - Powershell

You can use this function :

function SendByFTP {
    param (
        $userFTP = "anonymous",
        $passFTP = "anonymous",
        [Parameter(Mandatory=$True)]$serverFTP,
        [Parameter(Mandatory=$True)]$localFile,
        [Parameter(Mandatory=$True)]$remotePath
    )
    if(Test-Path $localFile){
        $remoteFile = $localFile.Split("\")[-1]
        $remotePath = Join-Path -Path $remotePath -ChildPath $remoteFile
        $ftpAddr = "ftp://${userFTP}:${passFTP}@${serverFTP}/$remotePath"
        $browser = New-Object System.Net.WebClient
        $url = New-Object System.Uri($ftpAddr)
        $browser.UploadFile($url, $localFile)    
    }
    else{
        Return "Unable to find $localFile"
    }
}

This function send specified file by FTP. You must call the function with these parameters :

  • userFTP = "anonymous" by default or your username
  • passFTP = "anonymous" by default or your password
  • serverFTP = IP address of the FTP server
  • localFile = File to send
  • remotePath = the path on the FTP server

For example :

SendByFTP -userFTP "USERNAME" -passFTP "PASSWORD" -serverFTP "MYSERVER" -localFile "toto.zip" -remotePath "path/on/the/FTP/"

Solution 10 - Powershell

Simple solution if you can install curl.

curl.exe -p --insecure  "ftp://<ftp_server>" --user "user:password" -T "local_file_full_path"

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionmagolView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PowershellGoyuixView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PowershellCyril GuptaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PowershellDexter LegaspiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PowershellMartin PrikrylView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PowershellPatrickView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PowershellAlex from JitbitView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PowershellEdouard KomboView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PowershellMike BradyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - PowershellhasmaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - PowershellAnurag GandhiView Answer on Stackoverflow