On Friday 10 July 2009 16:10:24 RS Wood wrote: > I run a small engineering company* that exchanges large files (CAD, > etc.) with clients, and I want to keep the docs off my email server by > setting up a stand alone FTP server where each client can upload and > download its relevant files. As such, my own users/employees should be > able to reach every client’s FTP space but each client should only be > able to reach his own. As my users finish a doc, they place it in that > client’s FTP directory and the client can log in and get it. As such, > I don’t want any form of unauthenticated FTP. [snip] > Is the solution ftpchroot? If so, it’s not clear how I can chroot > each potential client into his own directory, as my understanding is > that all chrooted users wind up at the same place (like /var/ftp/pub). > Or is the solution that each client gets access to his own home > directory; if so, how do I ensure my staff has access to each client’s > home directory?
I haven't tried this, but man ftpd.conf suggests something along the lines of: chroot chroot /some/path/%u where the second chroot is the ftp class, and %u will be expanded to the username. Make sure all your external users are in ftp class chroot (by putting their usernames in /etc/ftpchroot), and make /some/path group-owned and group-readable by a group all your staff are in (the group ownership of a directory automatically propagates to new directories created below it). Let us know how it goes! Jonathan _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"