Transmit Folder

Folder Transfer is a file transfer software that can transfer files from pc to pc, and send files and folders to multiple computers over internet or local area. Lastly, dropping a folder into the empty space on the right (or the local/remote switch button) will change Transmit to that folder. There’s also spring-loaded folders. When dragging, simply hover over a folder and watch it spring open allowing you to drill down the folder hierarchy mid-drag.

So, you have files you need to manage on servers. Maybe you’re a developer. Maybe you’re a system administrator.

Maybe you’re a contractor or freelancer. But you need to connect to a thing, and upload, download, or tweak the files on that thing. That’s what Transmit is for. Transmit’s big strength is its clean interface — our famous “dual-pane” view is way faster than the Finder. But Transmit also has tons of very nice features like File Sync, which can mirror remote and local (or, now, local and local!) files in one click. Transmit also takes great care to let you organize your Servers for fast access.

And with Panic Sync, you can sync them to all of your computers. Never type a server address again. Now, long ago we’d call Transmit an “FTP client”, but today, with Transmit 5, we connect to lots of different server types and cloud services. For example, Amazon S3 dramatically changed the way files are served on the internet, and Transmit is a great way to manage your Amazon S3 buckets. Put simply: Transmit lets you quickly and easily manage files on the internet. Find docs, tutorials, hints, or get support in the Lost Your Serial Number?

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It’s easy to use, but there’s a whole lot under the surface. And while we try to design apps for the majority, sometimes we throw in some power user features for the pros. As the Finnish always say, “always add a few extra blood dumplings when cooking mykyrokka for a tonttu-ukko!” So here are 15 “secrets” of Transmit 4. Hopefully you’ll learn at least one new thing! Add Custom Icons to your Favorites Every single one of your Transmit favorites can have its own, easy-to-recognize icon.

Kenichi has provided a (beautiful) starter set of 16 — just click on the icon when editing a favorite! You can also load your own images. (We’ve found the from the Iconfactory to be a particularly good set.) And if you choose “Use Server Favicon”, we’ll do our best to get the icon from the server itself and slap it on a nice little label for you. Show the File Count Add a counter to your path bar to see some useful numbers. Just choose View ▸ Show Item Count.

Skip Files Automatically It’s a hugely powerful new feature that’s a little bit hidden: in Transmit 4, you can have Transmit arbitrarily skip files based on any number of rules. Hate.svn or.git folders? Never want to accidentally transfer your apps to a specific server?

There’s lots to explore here. Customize Your Favorites View Right-click in a Favorites list to reveal a secret menu: “Use Small Icons” and “Arrange By”. The former gives you a much more compact list.

The latter will allow you to perform a one-time sort of your items. Try Dock Send Inspired by the late Erik J.

Barzeski (he’s alive), Dock Send is a great feature for those of you who quickly fling items to various favorites all day long. First, edit a Favorite, and enable Dock Send. Make sure the favorite has both a Remote Path (where your files go) and a Local Path (where your files come from) assigned to it. Now, drag a file from your specified Local Path to the Transmit dock icon. Transmit will look at the local path of the file you just dropped, then look at your favorites and say, “Hey, is Dock Send enabled for any favorite that uses this Local Path?

Oh, here’s one! I’ll connect and upload this file to the specified Remote Path right away!” Does that make sense? Based on where the file came from, Transmit picks the right place for it to go. With judicious use of Dock Send, you can have a full suite of virtual droplets that are as easy as dragging items to the dock icon. Make a Droplet Don’t forget about droplets!

Transmit Folder

Save them anywhere on your disk, send them to clients, or put them in your Dock, and get a system-wide drag target for instant uploads. Just click Save as Droplet when editing a Favorite. (Make sure Transmit is installed on any machine using a Droplet.) 7. Quickly Copy a Web URL First, edit your Favorite and set a proper “Root URL” for your Favorite.

Terms Of Service

I.e., the base web URL that your files are served from. Then, connect to your server, right click an item, and choose “Copy URL”. (Bonus sub-tip: right click and choose Preview In Browser for instant preview action!) 8. Navigate in Both Sides, Simultaneously Do your local files share the same hierarchy as your remote files? With Linked Folder Navigation, why not have Transmit automatically change both sides at once when as you navigate? Choose Go ▸ Link Folder Navigation, or add the Folder Linking button to your toolbar and click it.

Now, every time you open a folder, Transmit will check to see if there’s a folder with the same name on the other side. If there is, Transmit will open that folder too! Transmit 4 is pretty smart about this — if you navigate into a folder that doesn’t have a twin on the other side, that’s fine.

When you return to the folder you branched from, it’ll start paying attention again. Make “Get Info” Automatically Update As You Change Files The traditional Get Info window is good for learning about a single item. But maybe you want to Get Info on a whole bunch of things, and you don’t want to open 4,000 windows. It’s easy to create a Get Info “Inspector” — just hit ⌥⌘I (Option-Command-I).

Now, as you change files, Get Info will automatically update. Learn Some Drag and Drop Tricks Did you know you can drag files into all areas of the path bar?. Dropping on the folder icon will add a folder to Places for quick access. Mininova editor. Dropping items onto any component of the path bar will either move or transfer those item to that folder. Lastly, dropping a folder into the empty space on the right (or the local/remote switch button) will change Transmit to that folder.

There’s also spring-loaded folders. When dragging, simply hover over a folder and watch it spring open allowing you to drill down the folder hierarchy mid-drag. The file lists also trigger activation, so dragging items from other applications or another Transmit window is quick and easy. While dragging pause over a file list for a second and Transmit will activate the window/application allowing for seamless drag and drop without obstruction. Another useful AND “secret” feature is the ability to drag re-order file operations in the Transfers list. Simply grab a top-level row and drag it to a new location in the list, boom, instant prioritization of your transfers.

Show Folders Above Files It’s totally possible. (This is a Windows thing, yeah?) Choose View ▸ Show View Options, then check Show folders above files. Zip Files Directly On an SFTP Server (And More) If you’re connected via SFTP, and are connected to a Unix server, it’s super simple.

Don’t waste a transfer! Select an item, and choose File ▸ Send SSH Command. If you click on the little action button, we’ve pre-loaded “zip” and “unzip” shortcuts, but you can execute any UNIX command. Hide iDisk/Bonjour Favorites or Prevent Transmit Disk from Opening Windows Got your Terminal window open?

This one’s for experts only. If you want to prevent the Finder from automatically opening Transmit Disks after mounting, paste: defaults write com.panic.transmit OpenMountedFinderWindow -bool NO defaults write com.panic.transmitmenu OpenMountedFinderWindow -bool NO If you want to hide the Bonjour collections from Favorites, paste: defaults write com.panic.transmit RendezvousEnabled -bool NO defaults write com.panic.transmit ShowiDiskInFavorites -bool NO Hope these help somebody.

Get Image Dimensions using Quick Look It’s a minor point, but worth mentioning — if you use Quick Look on any image, local or remote, we’ll put the dimensions in the title bar. Make a Local/Local or Remote/Remote Window This one is pretty fundamental, but seems to slip by some — it’s possible to set both sides of Transmit’s split window to the same view. Just click the tiny icon on the right side of the path bar to toggle between a local or remote view. If you want to manage your local hard drive with the ease of Transmit, or if you want to easily fling a file from one server to another, there’s no better way. Customize Keyboard Shortcuts It’s possibly one of the greatest hidden features in Mac OS X, and works for almost all apps. Want, say, Send SSH Command to have a keyboard shortcut?

First, open System Preferences ▸ Keyboard, and click Keyboard Shortcuts. Now, select “Application Shortcuts” on the left, and click the “Plus”. From the pop-up menu, choose Transmit. Now, let’s type in “Send SSH Command”, and give it the shortcut of our choosing! (The ellipsis is important! If the menu item has one, you need one. Hit Option-Semicolon to type it.) That’s it!

Without even having to relaunch Transmit, your shortcut has been added. One note: this can be tricky for dynamic menu items that change based on what’s selected — you’ve gotta match the name exactly. Enjoy the hot tips! I see here on this page about organizing “A favorites” list by name or address with a right-click – but how about organizing “THE favorites” list – i want to automatically organize by name (where THE favorites list is the list of folders in the left sidebar that contains iDisk, Bonjour, and History icons) also, i would like to hide iDisk, Bonjour, and History from the Favorites list. How do i do that? Ps: Transmit is one of the most powerful and most droolingly incredible applications i have EVER used. I’ve been using it for over 5 years.

Recently, i spent over 4 hours searching for similar capability in Windows FTP apps, trying to find a parallel, and concluded it did not exist – features like mounting an FTP disk.omg drool. and others. Kudos for your ftp clienti’m serious! It could have been casted for the movie kickass.;) the only thing i’m missing is a fxp functionality. From time to time i have to transfer a huge amount of data of customers’ sites from one server to another. In those cases it would be really comfortabel to have a fxp feature instead of downloading everything locally and then uploading the stuff again to a remote server. This would really be the killer feature to knock out the rest completely.;) more info on fxp.

These are great! I actually have used most of these before. One of my favorite features, that some people may not know, when you open a document into a certain application in Transmit (let’s say an.html file into BBEdit) then edit the document and Save it; Transmit automatically uploads it back to the server to the same file, no questions asked. It works wonders when making websites and editing CSS. Also convenient to make small corrections in images through Photoshop. You can also handle how Transmit deals with certain file extensions through the Prefs.

Definitely my favorite FTP app, been recommending it for the last couple years to people. Thank you much! Great features, I learned a lot. The linking thing is great (tip 8), but it’s not “sticking” for me.

For example, when I first set up linking, everything works, but when I reopen Transmit, even though the linking button shows it’s active, it doesn’t work. I have to deselect and then reselect the button for linking to work. Perhaps, it’s something I’m doing wrong, but it seems to me that either the button needs to turn itself off if linking is not active, or it needs to remember the files/folders and work when reopening the site. This is just a revolution in remote file management. But it doesn’t solve ONE problem Although you can mount smb:// shares in finder, it’s a bloody disaster – file transfers at 6k a second!?

It takes more than 20 seconds to list folder contents in finder even though the trusty command line takes 0.2s meaning it’s not a samba problem, it’s a finder problem. Someone can do a better job than Apple on this. Apparently its been a problem for years but the dudes in cupertino don’t use Windows so they don’t acknowledge the issue.

So a samba implementation would make this awesome app 100% for me. In the roadmap by chance? Is it possible to setup DockSend so that if a sync’d directory is updated on the remote location (e.g Amazon S3), the changes are also replicated locally?

I am trying to keep Aperture libraries and some other items in sync between machines and I do not want to pay for DropBox since I am already quite deep in Amazon AWS. That said, I just started using Transmit, and I mindlessly paid for the application before even installing the trial! I guess that says a lot about the confidence that I have developed in your products after using Coda since I got my first Mac 4 yrs ago! Keep it up guys!! Guys – just bought a copy and think Transmit is great.

Can I offer two pieces of advice 1. You should have tool tips over some of the UI elements. They’re very petty icons but I’m not sure what they mean until I hit;em. On a FTP application, I don’t want to be guessing what stuff is and zap a live site. When I download a file or folder, Transmit will download it to whatever folder is open on my local pane.

And vice versa. Dreamweaver’s approach was much better as the file always ended up where it should be and not relative to what I had open in the local or remte pane. I love Transmit and I use it quite a bit, but I’m having the same problem other users have mentioned here: when synchronizing or downloading folders that contain new files within folders underneath them, it doesn’t seem to refresh the contents of the sub-folders before performing the operation. It’s a deal-breaker, honestly. All of my sites are starting to have issues and I know I can’t get a reliable backup using Transmit because if another developer or a site user has uploaded new content that Transmit doesn’t already know about, it never gets downloaded during a sync operation. Here’s hoping you guys can fix this in the next version. I was trying to figure out what a password was on one of my favorites, how do I do that?

I did this from one of the posts above which didn’t help, how do I go to Terminal and undo it: Psz: Yes. Type this command into Terminal (located in /Applications/Utilities): defaults write com.panic.Transmit CopyURLWithoutLogin 0 And that’ll do the trick. Please note that this is not recommended, as any user with access to your computer can very easily capture passwords. (That’s why it’s no longer the default.). Copy Web URL doesn’t work for me!?

Say i upload a JPG that i want to send to a client by email. I upload the jpg file using transmit and then i right click it and select copy URL and i’m assuming Transmit will make sure it’s the correct URL that i can share by email, skype, etc.

Portal

But when i send it, it just creates a path from my ftp that is not accessible by the recipient, and that doesn’t save me time, because i have to open a browser go to the file, then copy that url and send that one to the client. So not real time savings here in that department. Also opening in a browser from within Transmit is painfully slow. What am i dong wrong here? GSCopy Pro v6.0 (RoboCopy Alternative) with Open File Agent GSCopyPro is a single command-line tool (CLI) that can copy, replicate and move files from one folder to another. This folder can be on the same machine/ server or another server elsewhere.

What makes GSCopyPro stand out from other competitors is the fact it works on 32-bit as well as 64-bit systems and has no restrictions. It can easily be scheduled to run as a scheduled task and fully automated. GSCopyPro also comes with an open file agent which can copy files that are locked/ opened by other processes. This feature is supported in all windows versions from widows XP/ 2003 and later. I’m adding my vote to the cached directory listings issue. I’ve now had a couple of client sites ruined by the fact that transmit didn’t show changes made from another machine.

Today it failed several times telling me it couldn’t switch to remote subdirectories that had been removed. Is there a way to force a directory update? Refresh seems to only refresh the outer directory and not subdirectories. If not I’m going to have to go back to 1980 and get out my old bell-bottom jeans and the command line ftp, or rsync where I have ssh.