![]() ![]() It might be some kind of weird encoding thing. Somehow the server was replacing ü (which is created by typing option u and then "u") with "u\314\210". This explains the "550 -file or directory not found" message I was getting, and why I couldn't delete the files. Here's what server support was # ls -lah | grep DHG153 They finally sent me a list and asked "are these the ones?" It turned out that I was using an umlaut-u or ü in those filenames, which were images of work by a German artist. I had sent them a list of files to delete which they couldn't find. After requesting help from server support they sent me the errors they were getting via email. Eventually started getting more information with the error: file or directory not found. Same login was used and we do have root access. P S- Would also appreciate recommendations for alternate (preferably free) ftp client, which support told me to try. If this is the reason it would be a bug in Interarchy so I think another explanation is likely. ![]() File had been misnamed but was close to (starting characters identical) the correctly named file in source. I had deleted prior from my source directory. BTW, just remembered that the problem first manifested when I tried to run a mirror and it quit with a case mismatch error on a misnamed file which needed to be deleted. VPS support deleted the files for me, but I'd like to know why this is happening. Since the directory was mirrored with Interarchy, it's possible Interarchy itself is preventing deletion because I am working in this case from a simple directory listing. Up until now this has worked fine so I'm wondering if the problem could be some kind of server access blocking. Selected files are not deleted and Interarchy gives a server error 550 message for each file. Recently I've encountered a problem when trying to delete image files from the server with Interarchy 10.0.5 ftp client. We have a website hosted on a VPS, with thousands of largish images, which I have been maintaining with Interarchy via a directory mirror from my desktop.
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