FTP/SFTP Component - Camel 2.0 onwards
This component provides access to remote file systems over the FTP and SFTP protocols.
Using Camel 1.x
If you are using Camel 1.x then see this link for documentation.
This page is only for Camel 2.0 or newer.
URI format
ftp://[username@]hostname[:port]/directoryname[?options] sftp://[username@]hostname[:port]/directoryname[?options]
Where directoryname represents the underlying directory. Can contain nested folders.
The username is currently only possible to provide in the hostname parameter.
If no username is provided, then anonymous
login is attempted using no password.
If no port number is provided, Camel will provide default values according to the protocol (ftp = 21, sftp = 22).
You can append query options to the URI in the following format, ?option=value&option=value&...
URI Options
The options below are exclusive for the FTP2 component.
Name |
Default Value |
Description |
---|---|---|
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Specifies the password to use to log in to the remote file system. |
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|
Specifies the file transfer mode, BINARY or ASCII. Default is ASCII ( |
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When consuming, a local work directory can be used to store the remote file content directly in local files, to avoid loading the content into memory. This is beneficial, if you consume a very big remote file and thus can conserve memory. See below for more details. |
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FTP only: Specifies whether to use passive mode connections. Default is active mode { |
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FTP only: Reference to a bean in the registry as a |
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SFTP only: Sets the |
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SFTP only: Set the private key file to that the SFTP endpoint can do private key verification. |
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SFTP only: Set the private key file passphrase to that the SFTP endpoint can do private key verification. |
|
3 |
Specifies the maximum reconnect attempts Camel performs when it tries to connect to the remote FTP server. Use 0 to disable this behavior. |
|
1000 |
Delay in millis Camel will wait before performing a reconnect attempt. |
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Camel 2.1: Allows you to use a custom |
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Camel 2.1: Allows you to use a custom |
You can configure additional options on the ftpClient
and ftpClientConfig
from the URI directly by using the ftpClient.
or ftpClientConfig.
prefix.
For example to set the setDataTimeout
on the FTPClient
to 30 seconds you can do:
from("ftp://foo@myserver?password=secret&ftpClient.dataTimeout=30000").to("bean:foo");
You can mix and match and have use both prefixes, for example to configure date format or timezones.
from("ftp://foo@myserver?password=secret&ftpClient.dataTimeout=30000&ftpClientConfig.serverLanguageCode=fr").to("bean:foo");
You can have as many of these options as you like.
See the documentation of the Apache Commons FTP FTPClientConfig for possible options and more details.
And as well for Apache Commons FTP FTPClient.
If you do not like having many and long configuration in the URI you can refer to the ftpClient
or ftpClientConfig
to use by letting Camel lookup in the Registry for it.
For example:
<bean id="myConfig" class="org.apache.commons.net.ftp.FTPClientConfig"> <property name="lenientFutureDates" value="true"/> <property name="serverLanguageCode" value="fr"/> </bean>
And then let Camel lookup this bean when you use the # notation in the [URI].
from("ftp://foo@myserver?password=secret&ftpClientConfig=#myConfig").to("bean:foo");
More URI options
See File2 as all the options there also applies for this component.
Examples
ftp://someone@someftpserver.com/public/upload/images/holiday2008?password=secret&binary=true
ftp://someoneelse@someotherftpserver.co.uk:12049/reports/2008/password=secret&binary=false
ftp://publicftpserver.com/download
FTP Consumer does not support concurrency
The FTP consumer (with the same endpoint) does not support concurrency (the backing FTP client is not thread safe).
You can use multiple FTP consumers to poll from different endpoints. It is only a single endpoint that does not support concurrent consumers.
The FTP producer does not have this issue, it supports concurrency.
In the future we will add consumer pooling to Camel to allow this consumer to support concurrency as well.
More information
limitations
The option readLock can be used to force Camel not to consume files that is currently in the progress of being written. However, this option is turned off by default, as it requires that the user has write access. There are other solutions to avoid consuming files that are currently being written over FTP; for instance, you can write to a temporary destination and move the file after it has been written.
The ftp producer does not support appending to existing files. Any existing files on the remote server will be deleted before the file is written.
Message Headers
The following message headers can be used to affect the behavior of the component
Header |
Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the output file name (relative to the endpoint directory) to be used for the output message when sending to the endpoint. If this is not present and no expression either, then a generated message ID is used as the filename instead. |
|
The actual absolute filepath (path + name) for the output file that was written. This header is set by Camel and its purpose is providing end-users the name of the file that was written. |
|
Current index out of total number of files being consumed in this batch. |
|
Total number of files being consumed in this batch. |
|
The remote hostname. |
|
Path to the local work file, if local work directory is used. |
Using Local Work Directory
Camel supports consuming from remote FTP servers and downloading the files directly into a local work directory. This avoids reading the entire remote file content into memory as it is streamed directly into the local file using FileOutputStream
.
Camel will store to a local file with the same name as the remote file, though with .inprogress
as extension while the file is being downloaded. Afterwards, the file is renamed to remove the .inprogress
suffix. And finally, when the Exchange is complete the local file is deleted.
So if you want to download files from a remote FTP server and store it as files then you need to route to a file endpoint such as:
from("ftp://someone@someserver.com?password=secret&localWorkDirectory=/tmp").to("file://inbox");
Optimization by renaming work file
The route above is ultra efficient as it avoids reading the entire file content into memory. It will download the remote file directly to a local file stream. The java.io.File
handle is then used as the Exchange body. The file producer leverages this fact and can work directly on the work file java.io.File
handle and perform a java.io.File.rename
to the target filename. As Camel knows it's a local work file, it can optimize and use a rename instead of a file copy, as the work file is meant to be deleted anyway.
Samples
In the sample below we set up Camel to download all the reports from the FTP server once every hour (60 min) as BINARY content and store it as files on the local file system.
And the route using Spring DSL:
<route> <from uri="ftp://scott@localhost/public/reports?password=tiger&binary=true&delay=60000"/> <to uri="file://target/test-reports"/> </route>
Consuming a remote FTP server triggered by a route
The FTP consumer is built as a scheduled consumer to be used in the from route. However, if you want to start consuming from an FTP server triggered within a route.
Notice we use the Content Enricher EIP with the pollEnrich
DSL to consume the FTP file:
from("seda:start") // set the filename in FILE_NAME header so Camel know the name of the remote file to poll .setHeader(Exchange.FILE_NAME, header("myfile")) .pollEnrich("ftp://admin@localhost:21/getme?password=admin&binary=false") .to("mock:result");
Filter using org.apache.camel.component.file.GenericFileFilter
Camel supports pluggable filtering strategies. This strategy it to use the build in org.apache.camel.component.file.GenericFileFilter
in Java. You can then configure the endpoint with such a filter to skip certain filters before being processed.
In the sample we have build our own filter that only accepts files starting with report in the filename.
And then we can configure our route using the filter attribute to reference our filter (using #
notation) that we have defines in the spring XML file:
<!-- define our sorter as a plain spring bean --> <bean id="myFilter" class="com.mycompany.MyFileFilter"/> <route> <from uri="ftp://someuser@someftpserver.com?password=secret&filter=#myFilter"/> <to uri="bean:processInbox"/> </route>
Filtering using ANT path matcher
The ANT path matcher is a filter that is shipped out-of-the-box in the camel-spring jar. So you need to depend on camel-spring if you are using Maven.
The reason is that we leverage Spring's AntPathMatcher to do the actual matching.
The file paths are matched with the following rules:
?
matches one character*
matches zero or more characters**
matches zero or more directories in a path
The sample below demonstrates how to use it:
Debug logging
This component has log level TRACE that can be helpful if you have problems.