Download FlashFXP
FlashFXP is a powerful and convenient FTP client. It works smoothly behind a proxy, does not have download file size limits, can import lists of favorite servers from most popular programs, supports SSL/TLS authentication and much more. Moreover, FlashFXP allows you to manage file transfer between individual servers (FXP).
Using FlashFXP makes it easy to download files located in different folders or even on different FTP servers. You can place all the files you want to download in a single queue. The software will remember their locations, connect to the right servers at start-up, navigate to the right folders and start the download. It features a simple and intuitive UI.
Key features of FlashFXP:
- Ability to limit the upload & download speed.
- Site manager import/export.
- Internal file editor.
- Scheduled task execution.
- Ability to use sound effects.
- Ability to log all actions.
- Data transfer between servers.
- Search on remote FTP servers.
- Full control over the file queue.
- Backup functions.
- Added a new Character Encoding setting "Strict character encoding" in the Site Manager / Options tab. When checked, FlashFXP will not attempt to detect UTF-8 mixed with non-UTF-8 text. On servers that do not use UTF-8 certain character encodings may incorrectly detect as UTF-8 and as a result garble the text, checking this setting can avoid the issue. We have seen this issue on Xlight FTP server software when using the character encoding Chinese Simplified (GBK/GB2312).
- Fixed: A slow performance startup issue under a remote terminal session when the window state was maximized.
- Change: When running under a remote terminal session we've reduced the amount of memory allowed to be allocated for remote directory caching. The original memory allocation limit was calculated based on a desktop PC and now we a different method for server environments to make FlashFXP more server resource friendly.
- The crash report dialog is now dpi-aware.
- Updated SecureBlackBox library.
- Fixed: In a site profile if the login type was previously set to "Key based" and then changed to "Normal" the previously saved key was still used during authentication and before the password authentication. Now the key authentication is not attempted.
Cackle