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  2. WebDAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebDAV

    WebDAV (Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning) is a set of extensions to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which allows user agents to collaboratively author contents directly in an HTTP web server by providing facilities for concurrency control and namespace operations, thus allowing Web to be viewed as a writeable, collaborative medium and not just a read-only medium. [1]

  3. davfs2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davfs2

    It is an open-source [7] GPL-licensed file system for mounting WebDAV servers. It uses the FUSE file system API to communicate with the kernel and the neon WebDAV library for communicating with the web server.

  4. SRV record - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRV_record

    An example SRV record in textual form that might be found in a zone file might be the following: _sip._tcp.example.com. 86400 IN SRV 0 5 5060 sipserver.example.com. This points to a server named sipserver.example.com listening on TCP port 5060 for Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) protocol services.

  5. SabreDAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SabreDAV

    sabre/dav is an open-source WebDAV server, developed by fruux and built in PHP. It is an implementation of the WebDAV protocol (with extensions for CalDAV [ 2 ] and CardDAV ), providing a native PHP server implementation which operates on Apache 2 and Nginx web servers.

  6. WinSCP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinSCP

    WinSCP (Windows Secure Copy) [3] is a file manager, SSH File Transfer Protocol (SFTP), File Transfer Protocol (FTP), WebDAV, Amazon S3, and secure copy protocol (SCP) client for Microsoft Windows. The WinSCP project has released its source code on GitHub under an open source license, while the program itself is distributed as proprietary ...

  7. CrushFTP Server - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrushFTP_Server

    Custom web upload forms for collecting additional information with file uploads which can be passed to jobs and events. Bandwidth limiters. Internal statistic gathering. User and group inheritance on a per setting level. Max login time, idle time. Max upload, download, and minimum download speed. Quotas and ratios.

  8. Comparison of CalDAV and CardDAV implementations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_CalDAV_and...

    WebDAV ACL editor Discovery of other user’s collections ICalendar events ICalendar tasks ICalendar journals ICalendar VAVAILABILITY (RFC 7953) CalDAV Scheduling CardDAV vCard Synchronization User interface Online store.well-known URLs FBURL DNS SRV handles home-sets AgenDAV [1] Cross-platform JavaScript Web browser: GNU GPL: Yes limited No ...

  9. CardDAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CardDAV

    vCard Extensions to WebDAV (CardDAV) is an address book client/server protocol designed to allow users to access and share contact data on a server. The CardDAV protocol was developed by the IETF and was published as RFC 6352 in August 2011. [1] CardDAV is based on WebDAV, which is based on HTTP, and it uses vCard for contact data. [2]