![]() ![]() Obviously this is some odd reasoning at Hitron where they consider passive FTP some kind of P2P sharing. If I turn off the blocking of P2P sharing, which I'd rather not, passive FTP works. I don't have complete control over the firewall, but I have some. However, I just switched modems to an Hitron CGN3, or CGN3ROG, if you like (note the 'ROG' suffix). I have a very fast, and mostly reliable connection. Personally I find it unacceptable that GoDaddy is engaging in this silliness, but that's them, and they've always been a pain in the ass for real Webmasters, and Systems Administrators.Īs an example: My ISP is Rogers, in the suburbs of Toronto. In other words, you may have to turn the firewall off. If it's your ISP's device, you may have limited control over the firewall, and be unable to filter exactly what you want. If it's your own router inside the service provider's device, you need to refer to the manufacturer's support information, or some other online resource. I can tell you that on OS X Yosemite it is not the Mac's firewall. To test this, turn off all your firewalls, then try to narrow down which one it is. The answer is to let that part through your firewall. Some modern routers, and high speed modem/router devices block passive FTP, or one part of it, on their firewalls. GoDaddy has configured ProFTP to only serve in passive mode, and there's a caveat with that: However, most FTP servers support active, and passive modes, and give you the choice. Modern FTP clients will select passive, or active FTP mode automatically, so this is not usually an issue. Try setting data connection type to PASV (passive mode) ![]() ![]() Are you following godaddy's FTP instructions, and what brand is your router?
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