I am trying to run multiple instances of FTP servers on same localhost using the following code:
# "create_multiple_ftp_servers.py"
from multiprocessing import Pool
import sys
sys.path.insert(1, r'C:\Users\Desktop\PythonCodes')
import create_ftp_server
ftp_server_dict = {'ftp1': ['127.0.0.1', 'test', 'test@123', r'C:\Users\Desktop\ftpdir', 1024],
'ftp2': ['127.0.0.1', 'test', 'test@123', r'C:\Users\Desktop\ftpdir', 1025]}
for k, v in ftp_server_dict.items():
with Pool(5) as p:
server_instance = p.map(create_ftp_server.ftp, [v,])
p.close()
Then following "create_ftp_server.py" file is used to create and run an instance of FTP server:
import os
from pyftpdlib.authorizers import DummyAuthorizer
from pyftpdlib.handlers import FTPHandler
from pyftpdlib.servers import FTPServer
def ftp(data):
# Instantiate a dummy authorizer for managing 'virtual' users
authorizer = DummyAuthorizer()
# Define a new user having full r/w permissions and a read-only
# anonymous user
authorizer.add_user(data[1], data[2], data[3], perm='elradfmwMT')
authorizer.add_anonymous(os.getcwd())
# Instantiate FTP handler class
handler = FTPHandler
handler.authorizer = authorizer
# Define a customized banner (string returned when client connects)
handler.banner = "pyftpdlib based ftpd ready."
# Specify a masquerade address and the range of ports to use for
# passive connections. Decomment in case you're behind a NAT.
# handler.masquerade_address = '151.25.42.11'
handler.passive_ports = range(60000, 65535)
# Instantiate FTP server class and listen on 0.0.0.0:2121
address = (data[0], data[4])
server = FTPServer(address, handler)
# set a limit for connections
server.max_cons = 256
server.max_cons_per_ip = 5
# start ftp server
server.serve_forever()
After running the above codes I expect that there should be 2 instances of FTP servers to run on the localhost or '127.0.0.1" on port number 1024 & 1025 respectively.
But after running the above code only one instance of FTP server is running on the localhost. Can somebody please let me know how to resolve this issue.