Cyberduck

Cyberduck is an open-source client for FTP and SFTP, WebDAV, and cloud storage (OpenStack Swift, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2 and Microsoft Azure), available for macOS and Windows (as of version 4.0) licensed under the GPL. Cyberduck is written in Java and C# using the Cocoa user interface framework on macOS and Windows Forms on Windows. It supports FTP/TLS (FTP secured over SSL/TLS), using AUTH TLS as well as directory synchronization. The user interacts with the user interface (GUI), including file transfer by drag and drop and notifications via Growl. It is also able to open some files in external text editors.

Cyberduck
Developer(s)David V. Kocher, Yves Langisch
Initial releaseApril 2002 (2002-04)[1]
Stable release
8.6.0[2] Edit this on Wikidata / 30 May 2023
Repository
Written inJava, C#
Operating systemmacOS, Windows
Available in37 languages
TypeFTP client
License2017: GPL-3.0-or-later[3]
2002: GPL-2.0-or-later[1]
Websitecyberduck.io

Cyberduck includes a bookmark manager and supports Apple's Keychain and Bonjour networking. It supports multiple languages including English, Catalan, Czech, Chinese (Traditional and Simplified), Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Welsh.

Cyberduck CLI

The Cyberduck creator also provides a version for the command-line interface (CLI), called duck, available for Windows, macOS and Linux. It has its own website at duck.sh. The program can be used as FTP and SFTP-client, for operations with different cloud services.

See also

References

  1. Kocher, David. "Cyberduck". ~/dkocher. Archived from the original on 2002-08-03. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  2. "Release notes and previous releases".
  3. Kocher, David (2017-07-24). "Changeset 42003". trac.cyberduck.io. Retrieved 2019-12-02. Update to GNU GPLv3.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.