Why I cannot connect/transfer using script, when I can using GUI (or vice versa)?

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Common Problems

There are three common reasons why a script does not work, when a connectivity is otherwise possible

Environment

You run script from a different environment (under a different account/service; with a different configuration) than the GUI.

See another FAQ: My script works fine when executed manually, but fails or hangs when run by Windows Scheduler, SSIS or other automation service. What am I doing wrong? (Although it covers a different topic, its recommendations are valid for this case as well).

Configuration

You have your session configured differently in the script and in the GUI.

Paths

You use different paths in the script than in the GUI.

  • Always make sure you that use the exact paths that you see on the label above the file panel in the GUI. Use Copy Path to Clipboard command to avoid typing errors.
  • Common mistake is using paths that are relative to the home folder as absolute paths. For example, when there’s data folder in your /home/user folder, you cannot refer to the folder as /data. Either use an absolute path /home/user/data (recommended) or relative path data.
  • Remote paths are case sensitive. So Data is not the same as data.

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Source and Destination Inputs

Commands in scripting (like put and get) and some methods in .NET assembly (like Session.GetFiles and Session.PutFiles) do not take mere paths as inputs. The source input is expected to be a path terminated by a slash (a backslash when uploading) and followed by a file mask. Similarly the destination input is expected to be a path also terminated by a slash (a backslash when downloading) followed by an optional operation mask. As a simple example, a command to upload all files in scripting should be like:

put C:\source\path\* /destination/path/

Similarly in .NET assembly:

$session.PutFiles("C:\source\path\*", "/destination/path/").Check()

The trailing \* in the source path and the / in the destination path both matter. Read documentation of respective scripting commands or .NET assembly methods for details. In .NET assembly, in many cases, it’s easier to use more specific methods like Session.PutFileToDirectory, Session.PutFilesToDirectory,Session.GetFileToDirectory or Session.GetFilesToDirectory, as they do not have that strict interpretation of the inputs.

Logging

You can also enable a session logging both in the GUI (on Logging page of Preferences dialog) and the script (using a command-line parameter /log) and compare the logs to find out what is different. Use a command-line parameter /loglevel=* to enable a password logging and check if a correct password is used.

If you decide to seek a help, make sure you provide both complete logs, when describing your issue.

Further Reading

Last modified: by martin