User's Manual

Chapter 4 Using the FTP File Server
FTP File Transfers
SDLT 600A Product Manual 80
File System Limitations 4 The following list summarizes a number of file system limitations.
File Names and Entries
4
The maximum file name length is 97 characters, including the file
name extension.
This space character is supported within a file name provided the file
name is delimited by double quotes (for example, “filename with
space”). Double quotes are not allowed within a file name.
The maximum number of entries (files and folders) depends upon the
eMAM size and the compression rate of the file system and MXF
data.
FTP Server Encoding Scheme Limitations
4
The FTP server accepts all bytes except NULL (0x00), LF (0x0A),
CR (0x0D), “ (0x22), / (0x2F), and \ (0x5C).
The FTP server is fully compatible with any NVT-ASCII character
encoding scheme. This includes ASCII, ISO 8859-x suite (Latin-1 to 9,
Cyrillic, Arabic, Greek, Hebrew, Thai), Japanese JISX0201, JISX0208,
JISX 0212, EUC, S-JIS, and UTF-8.
UTF16, UCS-2, UTF32, and UCS-4 are not supported because they fill
unused bytes with the NULL value.
The total number of bytes to code a character of a filename depends
on the encoding character set. For example, UTF-8 characters are
triple bytes, EUC-JP characters are double bytes, and US-ASCII
characters are single bytes. Therefore, the maximum number of
characters per filename depends on its character encoding.
FTP Server and FTP Client Character Set Handling
4
Java encodes everything in UTF16. The built-in FTP client has no
specific function to convert the S-JIS character set to EUC.
When using the FTP client, any connection to a FTP server requires a
name, IP address, login, password, port, and an encoding scheme
(character set). These parameters are entered via text areas and
combo boxes located on the
Configuration tab of the FTP client.