Network Working Group M.A. Padlipsky
Request for Comments #506 MIT-Multics
NIC #16157 6/26/73
An FTP Command-Naming Problem
In using the File Transfer Protocol, I've noticed that the choice of
names for two crucial commands is faulty. The commands are STOR, which
tell the Server to take a file in, and RETR, which tells the Server to
send a file out. The trouble is that telling the Server to "retrieve" a
file sounds like a desire for the file to be taken in by the Server
rather than be sent out. For that matter, telling the Server to "store"
the file sounds like it could be either a command to send it out or a
command to take it in. The names of the commands, then, are both
connotatively ambiguous and not very mnemonic if they are thought of as
commands to the Server. (If they're thought of as commands to the User
Host, they make more sense -- but they're not commands to the Use
(Host.)
Of course, memorizing the denotations -- despite the connotations -- is
a solution. But it would probably be easier for users if the names were
more suggestive of the functions named. Therefore, I propose that PUSH
and PULL be added to the FTP as synonyms for RETR and STOR, respectively
(I hope). Even GIVE and TAKE would be an improvement. At the very
least, SEND should be a synonym for RETR. (1)
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(1) Note that by specifying synonyms rather than replacement, existing
correct reflexes -- and "automata" -- are not disturbed, while newcomers
to FTPing are given a better chance of choosing right.
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Padlipsky [Page 1]
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