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*MX has more options than Cumulus 1 had, | *MX has more options than Cumulus 1 had, | ||
*some defaults are different in the two flavours. | *some defaults are different in the two flavours. | ||
While Cumulus 1 only supports standard FTP, MX supports tha,t plus SFTP and FTPS. Which you select depends on your web site, it might be that you used a tool to manually upload files and so you can copy settings from that tool into the MX settings. | |||
Like Cumulus 1, MX has an '''External Programs''' section. Here you can enter a command and (in separate box) parameters for 3 possible timings (at real-time, at interval, and at end of day). Typically, on a windows device you would enter the name of a batch file (filename ends in .cmd). On a device running Linux, it could be a shell command file (ends in .sh) or indeed a command like "php" to run a php script whose name is specifed in parameters box. The final parameter might be preceded by ">" to direct the output to a log file. | Like Cumulus 1, MX has an '''External Programs''' section. Here you can enter a command and (in separate box) parameters for 3 possible timings (at real-time, at interval, and at end of day). Typically, on a windows device you would enter the name of a batch file (filename ends in .cmd). On a device running Linux, it could be a shell command file (ends in .sh) or indeed a command like "php" to run a php script whose name is specifed in parameters box. The final parameter might be preceded by ">" to direct the output to a log file. |
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