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proftpd konfigurieren



Hi Liste,

hab die Standardkonfiguration von Proftpd: anonym darf in /home/ftp/incoming nur schreiben, nicht lesen, sonst in /home/ftp nur lesen und nicht schreiben [1].

Da es aber ein Rechner ist, über den man nur remote zugreifen kann, ist es sehr lästig, dass ich als lokaler Nutzer des Systems den selben Einschränkungen unterliege. Ich möchte, das alle lokalen Nutzer dieses Systems (oder wenns nicht anders geht die Mitglieder einer bestimmten Gruppe) Auf home/ftp und allen Unterordnern lesen und schreiben können.

Kann mir einer einen Hinweis geben, wie ich das am besten realisiere?

Ich gebs lieber gleich zu: Ich kenne mich mit dieser apache-style Konfiguration der Zugriffsbeschränkungen nicht wirklich aus. Ich kann mir zwar denken was da passiert, aber sicher bin ich mir nicht.

Schöne Grüße

Bastian

[1]

---8< ---[/etc/proftpd.conf]---

#
# /etc/proftpd.conf -- This is a basic ProFTPD configuration file.
# To really apply changes reload proftpd after modifications.
#

ServerName                      "Debian"
ServerType                      standalone
DeferWelcome                    off

MultilineRFC2228                on
DefaultServer                   on
ShowSymlinks                    on
AllowOverwrite                  on

TimeoutNoTransfer               600
TimeoutStalled                  600
TimeoutIdle                     1200

DisplayLogin                    welcome.msg
DisplayFirstChdir               .message
ListOptions                     "-l"

DenyFilter                      \*.*/

# Uncomment this if you are using NIS or LDAP to retrieve passwords:
#PersistentPasswd               off

# Uncomment this if you would use TLS module:
#TLSEngine                      on

# Uncomment this if you would use quota module:
#Quotas                         on

# Uncomment this if you would use ratio module:
#Ratios                         on

# Port 21 is the standard FTP port.
Port                            21

# To prevent DoS attacks, set the maximum number of child processes
# to 30.  If you need to allow more than 30 concurrent connections
# at once, simply increase this value.  Note that this ONLY works
# in standalone mode, in inetd mode you should use an inetd server
# that allows you to limit maximum number of processes per service
# (such as xinetd)
MaxInstances                    30

# Set the user and group that the server normally runs at.
User                            nobody
Group                           nogroup

<Directory /*>
# Umask 022 is a good standard umask to prevent new files and dirs
# (second parm) from being group and world writable.
  Umask                         022  022
# Normally, we want files to be overwriteable.
  AllowOverwrite                on
</Directory>

# A basic anonymous configuration, no upload directories.

<Anonymous ~ftp>
   User                         ftp
   Group                                nogroup
   # We want clients to be able to login with "anonymous" as well as "ftp"
   UserAlias                    anonymous ftp
   # Cosmetic changes, all files belongs to ftp user
   DirFakeUser  on ftp
   DirFakeGroup on ftp

   RequireValidShell            off

   # Limit the maximum number of anonymous logins
   MaxClients                   10

   # We want 'welcome.msg' displayed at login, and '.message' displayed
   # in each newly chdired directory.
   DisplayLogin                 welcome.msg
   DisplayFirstChdir            .message

   # Limit WRITE everywhere in the anonymous chroot
   <Directory *>
     <Limit WRITE>
       DenyAll
     </Limit>
   </Directory>

    # Uncomment this if you're brave.
    <Directory incoming>
      # Umask 022 is a good standard umask to prevent new files and dirs
      # (second parm) from being group and world writable.
      Umask                             022  022
      <Limit READ WRITE>
        DenyAll
      </Limit>
      <Limit STOR>
        AllowAll
      </Limit>
    </Directory>

</Anonymous>
---8< ---[/etc/proftpd.conf]---



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