FileZilla is a free application available both as a client and server. It occupies very little space, but despite that, this FTP client offers many features.
The interface is easy-to-use, with everything being where it should be. You have a site manager at your disposal, where you can save your web servers and login details. If you want to upload or download a file, you can just drag&drop it where you wish; remote editing is supported.
FileZilla is able to upload large files; you can close the program, so you can resume the transfers later. Everything is configurable, including speeds.
Version 3.1.0.1 fixes many bugs, even a vulnerability that could allow an attacker to trick FileZilla in thinking that some SLL/TLS transfers were successful.
What’s new in FileZilla version 3.1.5.1:
- Clearing private data no longer crashes if quickconnect bar is hidden
- Update remote directory tree if deleting a subdirectory
- Fix parsing of HTTP chunk lengths for the update downloader
- Reduce memory consumption of remote directory tree
- Rewrite the code that added local directories to the queue. New one is faster and avoids some potentially thread-unsafe behaviour of the old code
What’s new in FileZilla version 3.1.6:
- Automatically refresh remote directory listing if queue finishes successfully
- Speed up refresh of remote directory listing if adding files during uploads
- Connections no longer time out waiting on a directory listing getting retrieved by a different connection
- Number of files were not updated if deleting remote files
Just so you know, the WordPress script and other files were uploaded to Free Software Workshop’s host via FileZilla FTP client.
Download FileZilla FTP Client
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