upload problem
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I need to upload an error.log file from a gpy to my PC. Since the current version of Atom won't do uploads I usually resort to Filezilla to upload over the adhoc wifi. Unfortunately this particular gpy is not co-operating, filezilla lists the files on the gpy but I can't get it to copy any over to the PC (I think maybe the FTP server on the gpy has become corrupted?).
Is there any other way I could get a copy of the log file?
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@robert-hh Nice & it's got a scroll slider which is more than I can say for pymakr.
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@kjm You have to configure the UART port to 115200 baud 8N1. But rubbish on start after reset is normal. You should get a good prompt after that.
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@robert-hh Some rubbish characters
dtl¬ðûZÓëBg
in TeraTerm VT when I press the reset button on the GPY but it's a start I guess.
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@kjm Yes. On Windows, teraterm is also a good choice.
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@robert-hh So if I can find the right terminal environment
from pye_mp import pye; pye('main.py')
should work?
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@kjm Updated, see below. Just a glitch in the browser.
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@robert-hh huh?
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@kjm The editor requires a terminal with vt100 support. The terminal window of pymakr may not be suitable for that. Try applications like Putty on Windows, screen or picocom on OS X or picocom or tio on Linux.
The documentation is in the repository: https://github.com/robert-hh/Micropython-Editor
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@robert-hh I tried to use that editor in your build
upysh is intended to be imported using: from upysh import * To see this help text again, type "man". upysh commands: pwd, cd("new_dir"), ls, ls(...), head(...), cat(...), hd(...) newfile(...), mv("old", "new"), rm(...), mkdir(...), rmdir(...) clear <dir> cert <dir> lib <dir> sys 29 boot.py 34 main.py 262 project.pymakr 4,056k free >>> from pye_mp import pye >>> pye('main.py')
but the prompt vanishes after the pye('main.py') line. Should it work OK in Atom like upysh? If so can you see what I'm doing wrong?
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@kjm after importing * from upysh, there is a command 'man' to list all commands, there is 'ls' or 'ls (name)' to list files, and a few more unix shell like commands.
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@robert-hh said in upload problem:
from upysh import *
The cat is a nice feature Rob. Do you have anything in your image that shows file size as easily?
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@kjm You can always use a tool like putty with screen log enabled, or on Linux picocom, pipe'd with tee in a file, and log the screen output to a file.
When using my image, there should the module upysh be embedded. start it with:from upysh import *
cat("name of the logile")That will print the content of the logfile. Still ftp should work.
I have here an alternative ftp server, https://github.com/robert-hh/FTP-Server-for-ESP8266-ESP32-and-PYBD/blob/master/ftp_pycom.py
It starts an ftp server on port 5024. That one will also work with Windows command line ftp. Since it runs on the pycom device in foreground, you have to terminate it with Ctrl-C.
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@crumble Yesterday was a rough day, couldn't get that log file out of the gpy no matter what I tried. Ended up reading it out line-by-line from the gpy in Atom. A tedious process for a 720k logfile. That's what I get for breaking my own rule of limiting the size of any logfile. Actually impressed that LittleFS managed to handle a file of that size without breaking.
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@kjm said in upload problem:
I figure the filezilla settings must be OK because it connects & shows the files on the gpy.
No. That shows that FTP Server is working and your filezilla settings are wrong. The amount of connections is not limited to 1. Otherwise FTP uses another connection to up/download a file. Download may work sometimes, if the load of the *Py is very low. So you may think you have the right settings, but it is not. Trust us, we have been there before you. This can happen even month after you had it working. And yes I thought about kermit and zmodem as well, but checking the settings a n-th time was the solution.
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@kjm said in upload problem:
If not can you explain a bit more how I'd dump to the uart & capture on the PC?
No, none of the utilities are meant to do that. Because ftp works. For filezilla, check that the number of sessions is limited to 1.
Otherwise, you could simply read and print the logfile on the GPY, and have a little tool on you PC whch just writes whatever comes from the serial port to a file. On Linux, cp or cat could do that in principle, with the exception that the link is not closed. Otherwise you can write a little python script using pyserial to do that. Then you can also use a special character like 0x04 (Ctrl-D) or 0x1a (Ctrl-Z) as end-of-file mark.
But still, ftp would be my personal preference, and especially the ftp client on the GPY, because that one could run autonomously, e.g. uploading logs every x hours or on specific events.
P.S.: No problem with RAM size on the GPY.
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I figure the filezilla settings must be OK because it connects & shows the files on the gpy. The firmware version on this gpy is actually one of yours Rob, I was wondering if one of the utilities you have in your releases might be able to do an upload? If not can you explain a bit more how I'd dump to the uart & capture on the PC?
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@kjm I do not believe that the FTP server is corrupted. Within it's limitations it usually works reliable. Maybe the Filezilla setting is wrong.
Besides that, you can always dump the content to the USB/UART and capture the data.
You can also implement a ftp client on your GPY and upload the file to a ftp server on your PC. I tried using ftplib.py once and it worked. Code of ftplib.py is attached. It is not the smallest lib in the world, so precompiling or freezing it may be needed. You may also remove unneeded code.# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """An FTP client class and some helper functions. Based on RFC 959: File Transfer Protocol (FTP), by J. Postel and J. Reynolds Example:: >>> from ftplib import FTP >>> ftp = FTP('ftp.python.org') # connect to host, default port >>> ftp.login() # default, i.e.: user anonymous, passwd anonymous@ '230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply.' >>> ftp.dir() # list directory contents total 9 drwxr-xr-x 8 root wheel 1024 Jan 3 1994 . drwxr-xr-x 8 root wheel 1024 Jan 3 1994 .. drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 1024 Jan 3 1994 bin drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 1024 Jan 3 1994 etc d-wxrwxr-x 2 ftp wheel 1024 Sep 5 13:43 incoming drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 1024 Nov 17 1993 lib drwxr-xr-x 6 1094 wheel 1024 Sep 13 19:07 pub drwxr-xr-x 3 root wheel 1024 Jan 3 1994 usr -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 312 Aug 1 1994 welcome.msg '226 Transfer complete.' >>> ftp.quit() '221 Goodbye.' >>> """ # Changes and improvements suggested by Steve Majewski. # Modified by Jack to work on the mac. # Modified by Siebren to support docstrings and PASV. # Modified by Phil Schwartz to add storbinary and storlines callbacks. # Modified by Giampaolo Rodola' to add TLS support. # Modified, stripped down and cleaned up by Christopher Arndt for MicroPython import usocket as _socket import gc # Magic number from <socket.h> # Process data out of band MSG_OOB = 0x1 # Line terminators (we always output CRLF, but accept any of CRLF, CR, LF) CRLF = b'\r\n' # The standard FTP server control port FTP_PORT = const(21) # Range of possible client source ports for active transfers MIN_PORT = const(40001) MAX_PORT = const(40100) # The sizehint parameter passed to readline() calls MAXLINE = const(1024) BLOCKSIZE = const(1024) _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT = object() # For compatibility with CPython version with SSL support _SSLSocket = None # Exception raised when an error or invalid response is received class Error(Exception): """Base FTP exception.""" pass def _resolve_addr(addr): if isinstance(addr, (bytes, bytearray)): return addr if not addr[0]: host = "127.0.0.1" if len(addr) == 2 else "::1" else: host = addr[0] return _socket.getaddrinfo(host, addr[1]) class socket: def __init__(self, *args, **kw): if args and isinstance(args[0], _socket.socket): self._sock = args[0] else: self._sock = _socket.socket(*args, **kw) def accept(self): s, addr = self._sock.accept() return self.__class__(s), addr def sendall(self, *args): return self._sock.send(*args) def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self._sock, name) def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, *args): self._sock.close() # The main class itself class FTP: """An FTP client class. To create a connection, call the class using these arguments:: host, port, user, passwd, acct, timeout, source_address The host, user, passwd and acct arguments are all strings, while port is an integer. The default value for all is None, which means the following defaults will be used: host: localhost, port: 21, user: 'anonymous', passwd: anonymous@', acct: '' timeout must be numeric and also defaults to None, meaning that no timeout will be set on any ftp socket(s). If a timeout is passed, then this is now the default timeout for all ftp socket operations for this instance. If supplied, source_address must be a 2-tuple (host, port) for all sockets created by this instance to bind to as their source address before connecting. If you pass a host name or address to the constructor, the 'connect' method will be called directly with the host and port given. Otherwise use 'connect' later, optionally passing host and port arguments. If you also pass a non-empty value for user, the 'login' method will be called with user, passwd and acct given after calling 'connect'. To download a file, use ftp.retrlines('RETR ' + filename), or ftp.retrbinary() with slightly different arguments. To upload a file, use ftp.storbinary(), which has an open file as argument (see its definition below for details). The download/upload functions first issue appropriate TYPE and PORT or PASV commands. """ host = None port = FTP_PORT timeout = _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT source_address = None sock = None file = None welcome = None passive = 1 encoding = "latin-1" def __init__(self, host=None, port=None, user=None, passwd=None, acct=None, timeout=_GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, source_address=None): """Initialization method (called by class instantiation). See class docstring for supported arguments. """ # These two settings are not tied to the connection, so if they are # given, we override the defaults, regardless of whether an initial # host to conenct to has been given or not. if timeout is not None: self.timeout = timeout if source_address: self.source_address = source_address if host: self.connect(host, port) if user: self.login(user, passwd, acct) def __enter__(self): return self # Context management protocol: try to quit() if active def __exit__(self, *args): if self.sock is not None: try: self.quit() except (OSError, EOFError): pass finally: if self.sock is not None: self.close() def _create_connection(self, addr, timeout=None, source_address=None): sock = socket() addrinfos = _resolve_addr(addr) for af, _, _, _, addr in addrinfos: try: sock.connect(addr) except Exception as exc: print(exc) else: if timeout and timeout is not _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT: sock.settimeout(timeout) try: sock.family = af except: pass return sock else: raise Error("Could not connect to %r" % (addr,)) def connect(self, host=None, port=None, timeout=None, source_address=None): """Connect to host. Arguments are: - host: hostname to connect to (string, default previous host) - port: port to connect to (integer, default previous port) - timeout: the timeout for *this connection's* socket - source_address: a 2-tuple (host, port) for *this connection's* socket to bind to as its source address before connecting. """ if host: self.host = host if port: self.port = port if timeout is None: timeout = self.timeout if not source_address: source_address = self.source_address self.sock = self._create_connection((self.host, self.port), timeout, source_address) self.af = self.sock.family self.file = self.sock.makefile('rb') self.welcome = self.getresp() return self.welcome # Internal: return one line from the server, stripping CRLF. # Raise EOFError if the connection is closed def getline(self): line = self.file.readline(MAXLINE + 1) if len(line) > MAXLINE: raise Error("got more than %d bytes" % self.maxline) if not line: raise EOFError return line.rstrip(CRLF).decode(self.encoding) # Internal: get a response from the server, which may possibly # consist of multiple lines. Return a single string with no # trailing CRLF. If the response consists of multiple lines, # these are separated by '\n' characters in the string def getmultiline(self): line = self.getline() if line[3:4] == '-': code = line[:3] while 1: nextline = self.getline() line = line + ('\n' + nextline) if nextline[:3] == code and \ nextline[3:4] != '-': break return line # Internal: get a response from the server. # Raise various errors if the response indicates an error def getresp(self): resp = self.getmultiline() self.lastresp = resp[:3] if resp[:1] in ('1', '2', '3'): return resp raise Error(resp) def voidresp(self): """Expect a response beginning with '2'.""" resp = self.getresp() if not resp.startswith('2'): raise Error(resp) return resp def abort(self): """Abort a file transfer. Uses out-of-band data. This does not follow the procedure from the RFC to send Telnet IP and Synch; that doesn't seem to work with the servers I've tried. Instead, just send the ABOR command as OOB data. """ line = b'ABOR' + CRLF self.sock.sendall(line) resp = self.getmultiline() if resp[:3] not in {'426', '225', '226'}: raise Error(resp) return resp def sendcmd(self, cmd): """Send a command and return the response.""" self.sock.sendall(cmd.encode(self.encoding) + CRLF) return self.getresp() def voidcmd(self, cmd): """Send a command and expect a response beginning with '2'.""" self.sock.sendall(cmd.encode(self.encoding) + CRLF) return self.voidresp() def sendport(self, host, port): """Send a PORT command with current host and given port number. """ hbytes = host.split('.') pbytes = [repr(port // 256), repr(port % 256)] bytes = hbytes + pbytes cmd = 'PORT ' + ','.join(bytes) return self.voidcmd(cmd) def sendeprt(self, host, port): """Send an EPRT command with current host and given port number.""" af = 0 if self.af == _socket.AF_INET: af = 1 if self.af == _socket.AF_INET6: af = 2 if af == 0: raise Error('unsupported address family') fields = ['', repr(af), host, repr(port), ''] cmd = 'EPRT ' + '|'.join(fields) return self.voidcmd(cmd) def makeport(self): """Create a new socket and send a PORT command for it.""" err = None sock = None if self.source_address and self.source_address[0]: host = self.source_address[0] else: # XXX: this will only work for connections to a server on the same # host! socket.getsocketname() would be needed find out the # correct socket address to report to the server host = "127.0.0.1" if self.af == _socket.AF_INET else "::1" for port in range(MIN_PORT, MAX_PORT): addrinfo = _socket.getaddrinfo(host, port) for af, socktype, proto, _, addr in addrinfo: if af == self.af and socktype == _socket.SOCK_STREAM: try: sock = socket(af, socktype, proto) sock.bind(addr) except OSError as _: err = _ if sock: sock.close() sock = None continue else: try: sock.family = af except: pass if isinstance(addr, tuple): host = addr[0] else: try: # XXX: socket.inet_ntop() is not supported on # all MicroPython ports! host = _socket.inet_ntop(af, addr[4:8]) except: pass break if sock: break if sock is None: if err is not None: raise err else: raise OSError("getaddrinfo returns an empty list") sock.listen(1) if self.af == _socket.AF_INET: self.sendport(host, port) else: self.sendeprt(host, port) if self.timeout is not _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT: sock.settimeout(self.timeout) return sock def makepasv(self): if self.af == _socket.AF_INET: host, port = parse227(self.sendcmd('PASV')) else: port = parse229(self.sendcmd('EPSV')) try: host = self.sock.getpeername() except AttributeError: # XXX: getpeername() is not supported by usocket! host = self.host return host, port def ntransfercmd(self, cmd, rest=None): """Initiate a transfer over the data connection. If the transfer is active, send a port command and the transfer command, and accept the connection. If the server is passive, send a pasv command, connect to it, and start the transfer command. Either way, return the socket for the connection and the expected size of the transfer. The expected size may be None if it could not be determined. Optional `rest' argument can be a string that is sent as the argument to a REST command. This is essentially a server marker used to tell the server to skip over any data up to the given marker. """ size = None if self.passive: host, port = self.makepasv() conn = self._create_connection((host, port), self.timeout, self.source_address) try: if rest is not None: self.sendcmd("REST %s" % rest) resp = self.sendcmd(cmd) # Some servers apparently send a 200 reply to # a LIST or STOR command, before the 150 reply # (and way before the 226 reply). This seems to # be in violation of the protocol (which only allows # 1xx or error messages for LIST), so we just discard # this response. if resp[0] == '2': resp = self.getresp() if resp[0] != '1': raise Error(resp) except: conn.close() raise else: sock = self.makeport() try: if rest is not None: self.sendcmd("REST %s" % rest) resp = self.sendcmd(cmd) # See above. if resp[0] == '2': resp = self.getresp() if resp[0] != '1': raise Error(resp) conn, _ = sock.accept() if self.timeout is not _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT: conn.settimeout(self.timeout) finally: sock.close() if resp.startswith('150'): # this is conditional in case we received a 125 size = parse150(resp) return conn, size def login(self, user='', passwd='', acct=''): """Login, default anonymous.""" if not user: user = 'anonymous' if user == 'anonymous' and not passwd: # If there is no anonymous ftp password specified # then we'll just use 'anonymous@' # We don't send any other thing because: # - We want to remain anonymous # - We want to stop SPAM # - We don't want to let ftp sites to discriminate by the user, # host or country. passwd = 'anonymous@' resp = self.sendcmd('USER ' + user) if resp.startswith('3'): resp = self.sendcmd('PASS ' + (passwd or '')) if resp.startswith('3'): resp = self.sendcmd('ACCT ' + (acct or '')) if resp[0] != '2': raise Error(resp) return resp def retrlines(self, cmd, callback=None): """Retrieve data in line mode. A new port is created for you. Args: cmd: A RETR, LIST, or NLST command. callback: An optional single parameter callable that is called for each line with the trailing CRLF stripped. [default: print] Returns: The response code. """ if callback is None: callback = print self.sendcmd('TYPE A') with self.ntransfercmd(cmd)[0] as conn: fp = conn.makefile('rb') while 1: line = fp.readline(MAXLINE + 1) if not line: break if len(line) > MAXLINE: raise Error("got more than %d bytes" % MAXLINE) line = line.rstrip(CRLF) callback(line.decode(self.encoding)) # shutdown ssl layer if _SSLSocket is not None and isinstance(conn, _SSLSocket): conn.unwrap() return self.voidresp() def retrbinary(self, cmd, callback, blocksize=BLOCKSIZE, rest=None): """Retrieve data in binary mode. A new port is created for you. Args: cmd: A RETR command. callback: A single parameter callable to be called on each block of data read. blocksize: The maximum number of bytes to read from the socket at one time. [default: BLOCKSIZE] rest: Passed to transfercmd(). [default: None] Returns: The response code. """ self.voidcmd('TYPE I') with self.ntransfercmd(cmd, rest)[0] as conn: while 1: data = conn.recv(blocksize) if not data: break callback(data) gc.collect() # shutdown ssl layer if _SSLSocket is not None and isinstance(conn, _SSLSocket): conn.unwrap() return self.voidresp() def storbinary(self, cmd, fp, blocksize=BLOCKSIZE, callback=None, rest=None): """Store a file in binary mode. A new port is created for you. Args: cmd: A STOR command. fp: A file-like object with a read(num_bytes) method. blocksize: The maximum data size to read from fp and send over the connection at once. [default: BLOCKSIZE] callback: An optional single parameter callable that is called on each block of data after it is sent. [default: None] rest: Passed to transfercmd(). [default: None] Returns: The response code. """ self.voidcmd('TYPE I') with self.ntransfercmd(cmd, rest)[0] as conn: while 1: buf = fp.read(blocksize) if not buf: break conn.sendall(buf) if callback: callback(buf) # shutdown ssl layer if _SSLSocket is not None and isinstance(conn, _SSLSocket): conn.unwrap() return self.voidresp() def dir(self, *args, **kw): """List a directory in long form. By default list current directory to stdout. Optional last argument is callback function; all non-empty arguments before it are concatenated to the LIST command. (This *should* only be used for a pathname.) """ func = kw.get('callback') self.retrlines(" ".join(['LIST'] + list(args)), func) def rename(self, fromname, toname): """Rename a file.""" resp = self.sendcmd('RNFR ' + fromname) if resp[0] != '3': raise Error(resp) return self.voidcmd('RNTO ' + toname) def delete(self, filename): """Delete a file.""" resp = self.sendcmd('DELE ' + filename) if resp[:3] in {'250', '200'}: return resp else: raise Error(resp) def cwd(self, dirname): """Change to a directory.""" if dirname == '..': try: return self.voidcmd('CDUP') except Error as msg: if msg.args[0][:3] != '500': raise elif dirname == '': dirname = '.' # does nothing, but could return error cmd = 'CWD ' + dirname return self.voidcmd(cmd) def size(self, filename): """Retrieve the size of a file.""" # The SIZE command is defined in RFC-3659 resp = self.sendcmd('SIZE ' + filename) if resp[:3] == '213': s = resp[3:].strip() return int(s) def mkd(self, dirname): """Make a directory, return its full pathname.""" resp = self.voidcmd('MKD ' + dirname) # fix around non-compliant implementations such as IIS shipped # with Windows server 2003 if not resp.startswith('257'): return '' return parse257(resp) def rmd(self, dirname): """Remove a directory.""" return self.voidcmd('RMD ' + dirname) def pwd(self): """Return current working directory.""" resp = self.voidcmd('PWD') # fix around non-compliant implementations such as IIS shipped # with Windows server 2003 if not resp.startswith('257'): return '' return parse257(resp) def quit(self): """Quit, and close the connection.""" resp = self.voidcmd('QUIT') self.close() return resp def close(self): """Close the connection without assuming anything about it.""" try: file = self.file self.file = None if file is not None: file.close() finally: sock = self.sock self.sock = None if sock is not None: sock.close() def _find_parentheses(s): left = s.find('(') if left < 0: raise ValueError("missing left delimiter") right = s.find(')', left + 1) if right < 0: # string should contain '(...)' raise ValueError("missing right delimiter") return left, right def parse150(resp): """Parse the '150' response for a RETR request. Returns the expected transfer size or None; size is not guaranteed to be present in the 150 message. """ try: left, right = _find_parentheses(resp) except ValueError: return None else: try: val, _ = resp[left+1:right].split(None, 1) return int(val) except (ValueError, TypeError) as exc: raise Error("Error parsing response '%s': %s" % (resp, exc)) def parse227(resp): """Parse the '227' response for a PASV request. Raises error_proto if it does not contain '(h1,h2,h3,h4,p1,p2)' Return ('host.addr.as.numbers', port#) tuple. """ if not resp.startswith('227'): raise Error("Unexpected response: %s" % resp) try: left, right = _find_parentheses(resp) numbers = tuple(int(i) for i in resp[left+1:right].split(',', 6)) host = '%i.%i.%i.%i' % numbers[:4] port = (numbers[4] << 8) + numbers[5] except Exception as exc: raise Error("Error parsing response '%s': %s" % (resp, exc)) return host, port def parse229(resp): """Parse the '229' response for an EPSV request. Raises error_proto if it does not contain '(|||port|)' Return port number as integer. """ if not resp.startswith('229'): raise Error("Unexpected response: %s" % resp) try: left, right = _find_parentheses(resp) if resp[left + 1] != resp[right - 1]: raise ValueError("separator mismatch") parts = resp[left + 1:right].split(resp[left+1]) if len(parts) != 5: raise ValueError("unexpected number of values") except ValueError as exc: raise Error("Error parsing response '%s': %s" % (resp, exc)) return int(parts[3]) def parse257(resp): """Parse the '257' response for a MKD or PWD request. This is a response to a MKD or PWD request: a directory name. Returns the directory name in the 257 reply. """ if resp[3:5] != ' "': # Not compliant to RFC 959, but UNIX ftpd does this return '' dirname = '' i = 5 n = len(resp) while i < n: c = resp[i] i = i+1 if c == '"': if i >= n or resp[i] != '"': break i = i+1 dirname = dirname + c return dirname