On 8/29/2012 2:48 PM, Earnie Boyd wrote:
On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 2:37 PM, Andy Koppe wrote:
On 29 August 2012 19:02, Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
On 8/29/2012 12:58 PM, Mike Casile wrote:

New install of latest cygwin (CYGWIN_NT-6.1-WOW64 1.7.16(0.262/5/3)
2012-07-20
22:55) on a new Windows 7 system. When I do ftp <host>  it prompts for
uid, then
prompts for pw (normal).  Problem is, password echoes on the screen ...
and then
it hangs and connection is never made.  If I do ftp -s:<script> <host> ...
and
the script starts with uid/pw ... it all runs fine. Same with pscp.  With
putty,
no problem because putty gets control and prompts for uid/pw itself.  I am
thinking this is a config fat-finger on my part ... but I am out of my
depth.


You have two alternatives here:

   1. Install the inetutils package so you're using the Cygwin FTP client
      (or pick an alternative Cygwin package offering your favorite FTP
       client).

   2. Continue to use the Windows FTP client but only do so from a shell
      prompt started from cmd.exe (i.e. no Mintty, xterm, etc).

Again: cmd.exe and console windows are different things. Invoking
bash.exe (or tcsh.exe, or zsh.exe, or ...) directly from an Explorer
shortcut or the Run dialog or whatever will work just fine, with
Windows automatically creating a console window for it. No cmd.exe
needed there.

Right, the issue is the PTY emulation issue that no one can do
anything about.  The Cygwin dependent terminal programs like mintty
and rxvt cause the issue because of the buffering used in the pipes
opened to native program.  The native programs do not flush properly
the I/O and thus you get garbage.  So therefore a native terminal
(a.k.a. console window) works because the buffering doesn't occur.

Yeah, though buffering isn't the problem here.  It's that the password
is rendered in the clear as you type it by the Windows FTP client if
you run it from a Cygwin terminal.  This is why I suggested *not*
running it from a Cygwin terminal if Mike really wants the Windows
FTP client.  Whether the Windows FTP client is run in a console or
cmd.exe is really, in this case, inconsequential.  Both will work
for the work-flow Mike describes.  The key take-away from the original
post is that the Windows FTP client is being used, not the Cygwin one.
That's why I mentioned using the Cygwin one as another alternative to
avoid the observed behavior of the Windows FTP client with Cygwin
terminals.

--
Larry

_____________________________________________________________________

A: Yes.
> Q: Are you sure?
>> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
>>> Q: Why is top posting annoying in email?

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