Installing and Administering Internet Services

184 Chapter 5
Configuring TFTP and BOOTP Servers
Command Options for Using TFTP
Command Options for Using TFTP
Internet Services includes a TFTP client implementation,
/usr/bin/tftp. You can use this client to verify that your TFTP server
is working correctly. For example, to retrieve the file bootf from the
TFTP server duncan, enter the following:
/usr/bin/tftp duncan
At the tftp prompt, enter:
get bootf
Table 5-3 describes the most common tftp commands you can use when
transferring files. For information on the other tftp options, type man 1
tftp.
Table 5-3 tftp File Transfer Options
ascii Sets the TFTP file transfer type to ASCII. This is the
default type.
binary Sets the TFTP file transfer type to binary.
get remote_file [local_file] Copy remote_file to local_file. If local_file is
unspecified, tftpd uses the specified remote_file
name as the local_file name. If local_file is specified
as “-”, the remote file is copied to standard output.
put local_file [remote_file] Copy local_file to remote_file. If remote_file is
unspecified, tftpd assigns the local_file name to the
remote_file name.
verbose When verbose is on, tftpd displays responses from
the server host. When verbose is on and a file
transfer completes,tftpd reports information about
the efficiency of the transfer. Enter the verbose
command at the tftpd> prompt to turn the
verbose setting on or off.