Help:FTP

Help for ftp:// (FTP) links on English Wikipedia.

Background

FTP links (ftp://) existed before the invention of the World Wide Web. Prior to the 1990s, it was the ubiquitous method of transferring files over the Internet. As the web (http://) gained dominance, FTP was still used by many institutions because of established practice and the cost of changing systems. Nevertheless, FTP has serious shortcomings from a security standpoint and incompatibilities between FTP servers/clients. By 2021, most modern web browsers ceased support for the FTP protocol. For most web users clicking a ftp:// now results in a page not found. At the same time many institutions have migrated to https:// and so each year the number of dead FTP links increases and working FTP links are fewer. On English Wikipedia, over 90% of the existing FTP links are dead, and many of those that are still live are gradually dying off.

Archives

Pure FTP links can sometimes be saved at a web archive provider, like the Wayback Machine.

If the link has or had a HTTPS gateway, it may have been archived with the ftp:// version of the URI - in these cases cite it with {{tlx|cite web}}. For the {{para|url}} use the https:// version of the link, and for {{para|archive-url}} use whatever archive URL works, either the one using ftp:// or https://

FTP client software

See Comparison of FTP client software. Software is available on multiple platforms for GUI or command-line. Note that some FTP clients are not compatible with some FTP servers. This can give the false impression that a FTP link is dead. It is recommended to use an advanced modern client that can auto-negotiate such as lftp.