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C
- client
A process that sends commands and receives responses. Note that in GridFTP, the client may or may not take part in the actual movement of data.
- client/server transfer
In a client/server transfer, there are only two entities involved in the transfer, the client entity and the server entity. We use the term entity here rather than process because in the implementation provided in GT4, the server entity may actually run as two or more separate processes.
The client will either move data from or to his local host. The client will decide whether or not he wishes to connect to the server to establish the data channel or the server should connect to him (MODE E dictates who must connect).
If the client wishes to connect to the server, he will send the PASV (passive) command. The server will start listening on an ephemeral (random, non-privileged) port and will return the IP and port as a response to the command. The client will then connect to that IP/Port.
If the client wishes to have the server connect to him, the client would start listening on an ephemeral port, and would then send the PORT command which includes the IP/Port as part of the command to the server and the server would initiate the TCP connect. Note that this decision has an impact on traversing firewalls. For instance, the client's host may be behind a firewall and the server may not be able to connect.
Finally, now that the data channel is established, the client will send either the RETR “filename” command to transfer a file from the server to the client (GET), or the STOR “filename” command to transfer a file from the client to the server (PUT).
S
- server
A process that receives commands and sends responses to those commands. Since it is a server or service, and it receives commands, it must be listening on a port somewhere to receive the commands. Both FTP and GridFTP have IANA registered ports. For FTP it is port 21, for GridFTP it is port 2811. This is normally handled via inetd or xinetd on Unix variants. However, it is also possible to implement a daemon that listens on the specified port. This is described more fully in in the Architecture section of the GridFTP Developer's Guide.
- striping
When speaking about GridFTP transfers, striping refers to having multiple network endpoints at the source, destination, or both participating in the transfer of the same file. This is normally accomplished by having a cluster with a parallel shared file system. Each node in the cluster reads a section of the file and sends it over the network. This mode of transfer is necessary if you wish to transfer a single file faster than a single host is capable of. This also tends to only be effective for large files, though how large depends on how many hosts and how fast the end-to-end transfer is. Note that while it is theoretically possible to use NFS for the shared file system, your performance will be poor, and would make using striping pointless.