I am uploading files to ftp using FtpWebRequest
. I need to show the status that how much is done.
So far my code is:
public void Upload(string filename, string url)
{
FileInfo fileInf = new FileInfo(filename);
string uri = "ftp://" + url + "/" + fileInf.Name;
FtpWebRequest reqFTP;
//string uri = "ftp://" + Host + "/public_html/testing/blogtest/" + fileInf.Name;
// Create FtpWebRequest object from the Uri provided
reqFTP = (FtpWebRequest)FtpWebRequest.Create(new Uri(uri));
// Provide the WebPermission Credintials
reqFTP.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(Username, Password);
// By default KeepAlive is true, where the control connection is not closed
// after a command is executed.
reqFTP.KeepAlive = false;
//reqFTP.UsePassive = true;
// Specify the command to be executed.
reqFTP.Method = WebRequestMethods.Ftp.UploadFile;
// Specify the data transfer type.
reqFTP.UseBinary = true;
// Notify the server about the size of the uploaded file
reqFTP.ContentLength = fileInf.Length;
// The buffer size is set to 2kb
int buffLength = 2048;
byte[] buff = new byte[buffLength];
int contentLen;
// Opens a file stream (System.IO.FileStream) to read the file to be uploaded
FileStream fs = fileInf.OpenRead();
// Stream to which the file to be upload is written
Stream strm = reqFTP.GetRequestStream();
// Read from the file stream 2kb at a time
contentLen = fs.Read(buff, 0, buffLength);
// Till Stream content ends
while (contentLen != 0)
{
// Write Content from the file stream to the FTP Upload Stream
strm.Write(buff, 0, contentLen);
contentLen = fs.Read(buff, 0, buffLength);
}
// Close the file stream and the Request Stream
strm.Close();
fs.Close();
}
A trivial example of FTP upload using
FtpWebRequest
with WinForms progress bar usingTask
class:The core upload code is based on:
Upload and download a binary file to/from FTP server in C#/.NET
The easiest is to use
BackgroundWorker
and put your code intoDoWork
event handler. And report progress withBackgroundWorker.ReportProgress
.The basic idea:
Make sure
WorkerReportsProgress
is enabledWith
BackgroundWorker
you can also easily implement upload cancellation.See BackgroundWorker, it allows you to run a time consuming task while the GUI still is responsive and also provides progress/cancellation.
A cancellable approach using the async/await pattern's IProgress interface, taking advantage of overlapped I/O if available. Refer to KB156932 to determine if your scenario qualifies. The cancellation token is checked before opening the streams, but otherwise is offloaded to the streams' async methods while the file is being transferred.
I have done very little benchmarking, but suspect this is only practical when sending large files. The performance of using overlapped I/O may degrade with smaller files and especially smaller buffer sizes.