FTP Clients - Part 16: NetDrive
For the next installments in my series about FTP clients, I will be taking a look at two FTP redirectors at the same time. In this specific blog post, I will focus on NetDrive (from Bdrive Inc.), whereas my previous post looked at WebDrive (from South River Technologies).
At the time of this blog's writing, NetDrive is a for-retail FTP client and redirector which is available from the following URL:
For this blog post I will be using NetDrive version 2.3.2.
NetDrive 2.3 Overview
NetDrive is different from many of the other FTP clients that I have reviewed because it is an Internet protocol redirector, meaning that it allows you to map drive letters to a variety of Internet repositories. When you install and open NetDrive, you are presented with the list of supported Internet protocols and repositories which you can use for mapping drives:
As you can see from the illustration above, NetDrive's list of support technologies is quite extensive: DropBox, Box.net, Google Drive, OneDrive, Amazon S3, Openstack Swift, FTP, SFTP, and WebDAV.
When you add a drive or configure the settings for one of the default drives, you are presented with a dialog box where you can enter the settings for the drive connection; note that there are very few settings for FTP connections:
As you add drives, the NetDrive user interface will display the drives and their current connection status:
As an added touch, NetDrive customizes its drive icons in Windows Explorer, so you can easily see the type of mapped drive for each connection:
I would love to take an in-depth look at all of the supported protocols in this review, but this series is about FTP clients, so I'll move on to the FTP-specific features that I normally review.
Using NetDrive 2.3 with FTP over SSL (FTPS)
NetDrive 2.3 has built-in support for FTP over SSL (FTPS), although it only appears to support Explicit FTPS - and it does so in a confusing way. When you are editing the settings for an FTP drive connection, you need to check the box for SSL/TLS in order to enable FTPS. Unfortunately, when you do so, the dialog box will change the port to 990, which is the port number for Implicit FTPS; however, in my testing I could not get Implicit FTPS to work:
With the above information in mind, I needed to manually change the port number back to 21 in order to use Explicit FTPS with NetDrive:
Using NetDrive 2.3 with True FTP Hosts
True FTP hosts are not supported natively by NetDrive 2.3, and there are no settings which allow you to customize the login environment in order to work around this situation.
Using NetDrive 2.3 with Virtual FTP Hosts
NetDrive 2.3's login settings allow you to specify the virtual host name as part of the user credentials by using syntax like "ftp.example.com|username" or "ftp.example.com\username", so you can use virtual FTP hosts with NetDrive 2.3.
Scorecard for NetDrive 2.3
This concludes my quick look at a few of the FTP features that are available with NetDrive 2.3, and here are the scorecard results:
Client Name | Directory Browsing | Explicit FTPS | Implicit FTPS | Virtual Hosts | True HOSTs | Site Manager | Extensibility |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NetDrive 2.3.2 | N/A | Y | N1 | Y | N2 | Y | N/A |
Notes:
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That wraps things up for today's review of NetDrive 2.3. Your key take-aways should be: NetDrive has some nice features, and it supports a wide variety of protocols with a similar user experience; that being said, NetDrive has very few settings for drive connections, so its capabilities are somewhat limited.
(Cross-posted from http://blogs.msdn.com/robert_mcmurray/)