&Lauri.Watts;
File Sharing
How to share files with &kpf;
File sharing
Shared Folders
&kpf; provides simple file sharing using &HTTP; (the Hyper Text
Transfer Protocol,) which is the same protocol used by web sites to provide
data to your web browser. &kpf; is strictly a public fileserver, which means
that there are no access restrictions to shared files: whatever you select
for sharing is available to anyone.
&kpf; is designed to be used for sharing files with friends, not to
act like a fully-fledged web server such as
Apache. &kpf; was primarily conceived as an easy
way to share files with others while chatting on IRC
(Internet Relay Chat, or chat rooms
.)
&kpf; runs as an applet inside &kicker;. This means that it takes up
little space on your screen and its status is always visible. To start the
&kpf; applet, right click on &kicker; and choose
Add Applet to Panel... to open the Add
Applet dialog. Select Public File Server and
click the Add to Panel button.
&kpf; employs the concept of shared folders. You may choose one or
more folders to make public, and all files in that folder (and any
subfolders) will be shared.
Please be extremely careful about which folders you share. Remember
that all files in the folder and its subfolders, including
hidden
files (dotfiles
to the techies) will be
made available to the world, so be careful not to share sensitive
information, such as passwords, cryptographic keys, your addressbook,
documents private to your organization, &etc;.
Once &kpf; is running, you will see a square applet with a thin sunken
bevel and an icon depicting an hot air balloon. The
balloon is visible when no folders are being shared.
To share a folder, right click on the
balloon icon and a pop-up menu will appear, containing only one item,
New Server.... Selecting this entry will cause a
wizard
to appear, which will ask you a few simple
questions. Completing the questions will set up a folder for sharing.
There is an alternative to using the applet directly when you want to
share a folder. &kpf; is integrated with &konqueror;.
With &konqueror; open and displaying a folder,
right click on the background and bring up the
Properties
dialog. On install, &kpf; added a
Sharing tab to this dialog. You will be offered the
option of starting &kpf; if it is not running. Choosing
Ok will send a signal to the &kpf; applet, asking it
to add a new share.
For more detailed information, such as how to share different
directories to different people, see the &kpf; handbook.