First: Create a script. You can call it whatever you want. I will call it downloader.sh
.
#!/bin/bash
PROTOCOL="ftp"
URL="server.example.com"
LOCALDIR="/home/user/downloads"
REMOTEDIR="dir/remote/server/"
USER="user"
PASS="password"
REGEX="*.txt"
LOG="/home/user/script.log"
cd $LOCALDIR
if [ ! $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "$(date "+%d/%m/%Y-%T") Cant cd to $LOCALDIR. Please make sure this local directory is valid" >> $LOG
fi
lftp $PROTOCOL://$URL <<- DOWNLOAD
user $USER "$PASS"
cd $REMOTEDIR
mget -E $REGEX
DOWNLOAD
if [ ! $? -eq 0 ]; then
echo "$(date "+%d/%m/%Y-%T") Cant download files. Make sure the credentials and server information are correct" >> $LOG
fi
Second: Add it to crontab. If you want to execute it every exact 15 minutes inside an hour:
45,30,15,00 * * * * /home/user/downloader.sh >/dev/null 2>&1
If you want to execute it each 15 minutes no matter what is the starting minute:
*/15 * * * * /home/user/downloader.sh >/dev/null 2>&1
Explaining the variables:
PROTOCOL
- What protocol to use.lftp
supports a good range of them:ftp, ftps, http, https, hftp, fish, sftp
andfile
. https and ftps require lftp to be compiled with OpenSSL or GNU TLS support.URL
- Name or IP of the server. You can even add:PORT
at the end if your server doesn't use the default port of the protocol being used.LOCALDIR
- Where to save the files.REMOTEDIR
- Where tocd
on the remote server to get the files.USER
andPASSWORD
- ftp credentials.REGEX
- Regular expression to filter files to download. It can be useful if you want to download only files of a determined extension, for example. Use*
if you want to download everything.LOG
- Logfile location.
Explaining some code logic:
1. - if
if [ ! $? -eq 0 ]; then
fi
The $?
variable is a special bash variable that means "status code of last command". Bash always return zero on successful command executions so, comparing -eq
(equal to) with the starting !
(negative) on an if
should be enough to see if cd
and lftp
had issues during execution. If you want a better log of what happened, you will have to crawl through those commands' documentation.
2. - heredocs
lftp $PROTOCOL://$URL <<- DOWNLOAD
DOWNLOAD
bash heredocs. It's a way to say "feed this command with this input list". I've named the limit string DOWNLOAD
so, everything between <<- DOWNLOAD
and DOWNLOAD
will be input to lftp
. You will see examples on the internet with <<
symbol but I prefer the <<-
version since it supports indentation.
3. - lftp commands
user $USER "$PASS"
cd $REMOTEDIR
mget -E $REGEX
These are internal commands of lftp
that means respectively, auth the user with $USER
login and "$PASS"
password, change to $REMOTEDIR
and bulk download anything with the $REGEX
keywords. You can learn them by simply typing lftp
, and as soon as an lftp shell is opened, type ?
and press Enter or ? lftp-command-you-want
and press Enter. Example:
[root@host ~]# lftp
lftp :~> ?
!<shell-command> (commands) alias [<name> [<value>]]
attach [PID] bookmark [SUBCMD] cache [SUBCMD]
cat [-b] <files> cd <rdir> chmod [OPTS] mode file...
close [-a] [re]cls [opts] [path/][pattern] debug [<level>|off] [-o <file>]
du [options] <dirs> exit [<code>|bg] get [OPTS] <rfile> [-o <lfile>]
glob [OPTS] <cmd> <args> help [<cmd>] history -w file|-r file|-c|-l [cnt]
jobs [-v] [<job_no...>] kill all|<job_no> lcd <ldir>
lftp [OPTS] <site> ln [-s] <file1> <file2> ls [<args>]
mget [OPTS] <files> mirror [OPTS] [remote [local]] mkdir [-p] <dirs>
module name [args] more <files> mput [OPTS] <files>
mrm <files> mv <file1> <file2> [re]nlist [<args>]
open [OPTS] <site> pget [OPTS] <rfile> [-o <lfile>] put [OPTS] <lfile> [-o <rfile>]
pwd [-p] queue [OPTS] [<cmd>] quote <cmd>
repeat [OPTS] [delay] [command] rm [-r] [-f] <files> rmdir [-f] <dirs>
scache [<session_no>] set [OPT] [<var> [<val>]] site <site-cmd>
source <file> torrent [-O <dir>] <file|URL>... user <user|URL> [<pass>]
wait [<jobno>] zcat <files> zmore <files>
lftp :~> ? mget
Usage: mget [OPTS] <files>
Gets selected files with expanded wildcards
-c continue, resume transfer
-d create directories the same as in file names and get the
files into them instead of current directory
-E delete remote files after successful transfer
-a use ascii mode (binary is the default)
-O <base> specifies base directory or URL where files should be placed
The knowledge related to know that mget
would be the right command inside lftp
came from reading manpages and searching for keywords like "bulk", "multi" or "mass", and knowing that the ftp(1)
command also have the mget
command so, probably lftp
would have an equivalent.
Manpage: lftp(1)