TC will not change FTP password
Moderators: white, Hacker, petermad, Stefan2
TC will not change FTP password
Hi
I believe this is a bug:
I have a website on a webhosting service, which I access through FTP. To enhance security, I changed the FTP password in the control panel of the webhotel. Then of course TC FTP could not logon. But no matter how many times a changed the password in TC, TC continued to use the old password. I could see that because they are of different lengths. So I couldn't FTP-access my web server with TC until I reconfigured the webserver to use the old password...
I use TC 9.0a (x64) on Windows 10 64-bit.
Best regards,
Henrik R.
I believe this is a bug:
I have a website on a webhosting service, which I access through FTP. To enhance security, I changed the FTP password in the control panel of the webhotel. Then of course TC FTP could not logon. But no matter how many times a changed the password in TC, TC continued to use the old password. I could see that because they are of different lengths. So I couldn't FTP-access my web server with TC until I reconfigured the webserver to use the old password...
I use TC 9.0a (x64) on Windows 10 64-bit.
Best regards,
Henrik R.
Where is your wcx_ftp.ini located? Somewhere you can write to it? Check the location in Help > About Total Commander.
Regards
Dalai
Regards
Dalai
#101164 Personal licence
Ryzen 5 2600, 16 GiB RAM, ASUS Prime X370-A, Win7 x64
Plugins: Services2, Startups, CertificateInfo, SignatureInfo, LineBreakInfo - Download-Mirror
Ryzen 5 2600, 16 GiB RAM, ASUS Prime X370-A, Win7 x64
Plugins: Services2, Startups, CertificateInfo, SignatureInfo, LineBreakInfo - Download-Mirror
And? Can you write to it?HeRo wrote:Yes. I have found it.
Regards
Dalai
#101164 Personal licence
Ryzen 5 2600, 16 GiB RAM, ASUS Prime X370-A, Win7 x64
Plugins: Services2, Startups, CertificateInfo, SignatureInfo, LineBreakInfo - Download-Mirror
Ryzen 5 2600, 16 GiB RAM, ASUS Prime X370-A, Win7 x64
Plugins: Services2, Startups, CertificateInfo, SignatureInfo, LineBreakInfo - Download-Mirror
Yes. That seems to work. When I change the FTP-password I can't logon, and when I change it back again, I can logon again.MVV wrote:Please try to change password in elevated TC instance (start TC via Run as Administrator context menu item)...
The only peculiarity is that the window that shows the logon-process seems to show that the password has the same (short) length, although I change to a longer password.
So thank you! But it would be nice if TC alerted me saying: "You have to run as Admin to change password!"
You don't have to start TC as admin to change FTP password, you just have configuration files in program folders that may only be written by administrators (or elevated users)... Or maybe only one of them.
Try to edit and save both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini to check it.
Where are your config files located? Under Program Files? In TC directory? In user profile?
Try to edit and save both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini to check it.
Where are your config files located? Under Program Files? In TC directory? In user profile?
They are both in same folder, and I can edit and save wincmd.ini (with my text editor) too. The folder is:MVV wrote:You don't have to start TC as admin to change FTP password, you just have configuration files in program folders that may only be written by administrators (or elevated users)... Or maybe only one of them.
Try to edit and save both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini to check it.
Where are your config files located? Under Program Files? In TC directory? In user profile?
C:\Users\Henrik\AppData\Roaming\GHISLER
(I guess that's where TC put them.)
So,
you have TC 9.0a (x64) on Windows 10 64-bit.
The Info from "Help > About Total Commander" is "C:\Users\Henrik\AppData\Roaming\GHISLER".
There you have found both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini
and you have write access to them and had already modifies them successfully.
But you can change the FTP password in elevated TC instance ONLY?
Seems to me your NTFS file permissions are messed up, and you run your Text editor with elevated rights also?
Normally, the user with not-elevated rights should have write access to that folder, and non-elevated TC should be able to modify his config files.
BTW: the writing of the TC settings to wincmd.ini works without elevated admin access for you?
Odd, that doesn't fit together at all.
you have TC 9.0a (x64) on Windows 10 64-bit.
The Info from "Help > About Total Commander" is "C:\Users\Henrik\AppData\Roaming\GHISLER".
There you have found both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini
and you have write access to them and had already modifies them successfully.
But you can change the FTP password in elevated TC instance ONLY?
Seems to me your NTFS file permissions are messed up, and you run your Text editor with elevated rights also?
Normally, the user with not-elevated rights should have write access to that folder, and non-elevated TC should be able to modify his config files.
BTW: the writing of the TC settings to wincmd.ini works without elevated admin access for you?
Odd, that doesn't fit together at all.
Yes,yes,yes...Stefan2 wrote:So,
you have TC 9.0a (x64) on Windows 10 64-bit.
The Info from "Help > About Total Commander" is "C:\Users\Henrik\AppData\Roaming\GHISLER".
There you have found both wincmd.ini and wcx_ftp.ini
and you have write access to them and had already modifies them successfully.
But you can change the FTP password in elevated TC instance ONLY?
Seems to me your NTFS file permissions are messed up, and you run your Text editor with elevated rights also?
Normally, the user with not-elevated rights should have write access to that folder, and non-elevated TC should be able to modify his config files.
BTW: the writing of the TC settings to wincmd.ini works without elevated admin access for you?
Odd, that doesn't fit together at all.
But I don't have any idea about whether my NTFS file permissions are messed up.
And I don't know if my EmEditor has elevated rights. I used it to test editing and saving of both ini-files.
I created a new FTP-account without problems when I was trying to change password.MVV wrote:Well, let's stop changing passwords, are you able to add a new FTP connection or e.g. change title/username of existing one? Create a new folder in FTP connections list? All these things should be possible just as changing password...