Ok. If all you care about is the users home dir you can ignore sshd
and set the users home dir; as in useradd -other_option -h /some/dir.
Use ACLs for file level acces conttole and set the users shell to
none. Not as good as a chariot jail but some what acceptable and easy
to inplament.
Wish I could provide detail but I am on my blackberry rite now.

On 8/17/10, Jason Holtzapple <m...@bitflip.net> wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 12:58 PM, keith smith wrote:
>> I'm running centOS 5 something. I configure SFTP and removed FTP.  Now I
>> need to add a user, lets say billybob.  By default his home directory
>> would be /hone/billybob.  I need to remove that and give him access to
>> only one directory within the docroot of a vhost.  Say the directory
>> /home/someVhost/public_html/documents/
>
> Unfortunately the version of openssh included in Centos 5 doesn't have
> the functionality you need (specifically ChrootDirectory and friends).
> One way to solve this by installing a newer copy of openssh and
> disabling the old.
>
>

-- 
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