On 01/27/2012 07:22 PM, Warren Block wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
On 01/27/2012 04:16 PM, Warren Block wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
am currently trying to install FreeBSD 9 on my Lenovo X220 and
noticed that the link on this page in the FreeBSD Handbook is b
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
On 01/27/2012 04:16 PM, Warren Block wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
am currently trying to install FreeBSD 9 on my Lenovo X220 and noticed
that the link on this page in the FreeBSD Handbook is broken:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO
On 01/27/2012 04:16 PM, Warren Block wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
am currently trying to install FreeBSD 9 on my Lenovo X220 and
noticed that the link on this page in the FreeBSD Handbook is broken:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install-pre.html
On Fri, 27 Jan 2012, Kaya Saman wrote:
am currently trying to install FreeBSD 9 on my Lenovo X220 and noticed that
the link on this page in the FreeBSD Handbook is broken:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install-pre.html
See the header at the top of that page. Ther
Hi,
am currently trying to install FreeBSD 9 on my Lenovo X220 and noticed
that the link on this page in the FreeBSD Handbook is broken:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install-pre.html
with link provided here:
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IM
During an unattended, non-interactive build of many ports this evening I
ran into what I think indicates that the FTP server at freebsd.isc.org
is broken. Here is what I believe to be evidence, performed from a
FreeBSD 8.2 server at one site:
site1# fetch -vvp
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub
On 12/15/2010 3:11 PM, Matthew Law wrote:
I have a single FreeBSD box acting as an FTP server for multiple FreeBSD
and Linux clients on the same /24 subnet (all gigabit ethernet). It is
currently connected by just one of it's two gig ethernet ports. I also
have two cisco switches wi
I have a single FreeBSD box acting as an FTP server for multiple FreeBSD
and Linux clients on the same /24 subnet (all gigabit ethernet). It is
currently connected by just one of it's two gig ethernet ports. I also
have two cisco switches with an etherchannel between them (using 2 x gig
por
On Jun 25, 2010, at 13:51 , andrew clarke wrote:
> On Thu 2010-06-24 23:28:27 UTC+, Svavar Ingi Hermannsson
> (sva...@security.is) wrote:
>
>> I just wanted to notify you that the Icelandic ftp mirror site doesn't seam
>> to be working.
>>
>> ftp.is.freebsd.org
>
> 21:48 ozzmo...@blizzard
On Thu 2010-06-24 23:28:27 UTC+, Svavar Ingi Hermannsson
(sva...@security.is) wrote:
> I just wanted to notify you that the Icelandic ftp mirror site doesn't seam
> to be working.
>
> ftp.is.freebsd.org
21:48 ozzmo...@blizzard [~]host ftp.is.freebsd.org
ftp.is.freebsd.org is an alias for ft
ur verið skráð frá 93.141.187.81.in-addr.arpa
Heildarfjöldi notenda er 1
Allar aðgerðir eru skráðar.
ftp...@rhnet.is
220 ftp.rhnet.is FTP server (tnftpd 20061204) ready.
Name (ftp.is.freebsd.org:craig): anonymous
331 Guest login ok, type your name as password.
Password:
230-
Hi,
I just wanted to notify you that the Icelandic ftp mirror site doesn't seam
to be working.
ftp.is.freebsd.org
Best regards,
Svavar Ingi
--
Bestu kveðjur / Best regards,
Svavar Ingi Hermannsson,
Ráðgjafi - Senior Consultant
BSc. CS, LA 27001, CISA, CISM, SCSA, MCP
sva...@security.is
http:/
In the last episode (Mar 12), Matthew Seaman said:
> On 12/03/2010 10:37:08, Leslie Jensen wrote:
> > Will Windows users be able to use an ftp client to connect? I've never
> > implemented ssh with ftp before so I want to clarify for my
> > understanding.
>
> No, they'll need a SSH/SFTP client to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 12/03/2010 10:37:08, Leslie Jensen wrote:
> Will Windows users be able to use an ftp client to connect? I've never
> implemented ssh with ftp before so I want to clarify for my understanding.
No, they'll need a SSH/SFTP client to be able to connect
krad skrev 2010-03-12 11:07:
enable sftp in ssh and chroot all the users and make the sftp only accounts
I wrote this guide for work a year or so ago. It was for solaris but it was
using openssh so should work fine on bsd
1. Dont bother with sun ssh it wont work. Opensolaris and later
On 12 March 2010 08:27, Olivier Nicole wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > I need to have ftp access to a machine. I've found pure-ftpd but it was
>
> Hummm, you want the short answer? Don't enable ftp :)
>
> Ftp only accepts plain text passwords (until you enable things like
> kerebos, one time password, etc), s
Hi,
> I need to have ftp access to a machine. I've found pure-ftpd but it was
Hummm, you want the short answer? Don't enable ftp :)
Ftp only accepts plain text passwords (until you enable things like
kerebos, one time password, etc), so it is not, it cannot be, secure.
SFTP is there, working e
ws clients
accessing the ftp server. I have SAMBA running, but I need a solution
for access from the Internet.
/Leslie
___
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http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail t
Yuri wrote:
When I try to log on to FTP I get this error:
$ ftp ftp.freebsd.org
Trying 204.152.184.73...
Connected to ftp.freebsd.org.
500 OOPS: vsftpd: not found: directory given in
'secure_chroot_dir':/usr/local/share/vsftpd/empty
Yuri
___
freebs
When I try to log on to FTP I get this error:
$ ftp ftp.freebsd.org
Trying 204.152.184.73...
Connected to ftp.freebsd.org.
500 OOPS: vsftpd: not found: directory given in
'secure_chroot_dir':/usr/local/share/vsftpd/empty
Yuri
___
freebsd-questions@f
On Mon, 10 Aug 2009 16:36:36 -0400, Tsu-Fan Cheng wrote:
> Hi,
>I use freebsd7.2 and can't access my friend's FTP server (crystal FTP
> server) from command line. I can't run any command in the ftp server, it
> only responds "Entering Extended passive mod
Hi,
I use freebsd7.2 and can't access my friend's FTP server (crystal FTP
server) from command line. I can't run any command in the ftp server, it
only responds "Entering Extended passive mode" and hang. But when I ftp from
windows command prompt, it actually works. So
On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 03:10:24PM +0100, RS Wood typed:
> 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
In the last episode (Jul 10), Steve Bertrand said:
> RS Wood wrote:
> > Finally, I'm aware FTP has inherent security liabilities as passwords
> > cross the net in clear text, but I'm not convinced casual users on
> > Windows boxes will be able to manage fun stuff like SSH connections or
> > alterna
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 use
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 relevan
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
On Apr 21, 2009, at 1:35 PM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
I think I just got some help on IRC:
is it on the local network of your firewall and not this
computer?
yes!
thats why you can't connect to it
Suggestions on how to fix this problem using pf would be greatly
appreciated though.
Many th
Redd Vinylene wrote:
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 9:13 PM, Chuck Swiger wrote:
On Apr 21, 2009, at 11:40 AM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
I'm trying to connect to my friend's FTP server but I'm getting a "No
route
to host" when trying from my NAT workstation. It works
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 10:27 PM, Chuck Swiger wrote:
> On Apr 21, 2009, at 1:25 PM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
>
>> Yeah, the default route is set. Routing works just fine. In fact, it's
>> been working for years. It's just this one FTP server that it won't connect
On Apr 21, 2009, at 1:25 PM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
Yeah, the default route is set. Routing works just fine. In fact,
it's been working for years. It's just this one FTP server that it
won't connect to.
Then it could be a legitimate error being returned by a remote router,
al
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 9:13 PM, Chuck Swiger wrote:
> On Apr 21, 2009, at 11:40 AM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
>
>> I'm trying to connect to my friend's FTP server but I'm getting a "No
>> route
>> to host" when trying from my NAT workstation. It wor
On Apr 21, 2009, at 11:40 AM, Redd Vinylene wrote:
I'm trying to connect to my friend's FTP server but I'm getting a
"No route
to host" when trying from my NAT workstation. It works just fine
when I
connect from my NAT server though.
Internet -> NAT server (192.1
Hi,
I'm trying to connect to my friend's FTP server but I'm getting a "No route
to host" when trying from my NAT workstation. It works just fine when I
connect from my NAT server though.
Internet -> NAT server (192.168.187.1) -> NAT workstation (192.168.187.2)
I&
Hello,
2008/9/8 Martin Schweizer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Or maybe you're looking for solution like ftp server and accounts in
> > database ?
>
> This is a possible way. Probably the combination ftp users in a database is
> ok. Which one is the "best"
Hello Sebastian
Sorry for the delay but I was very bussy.
Am Thu, Sep 04, 2008 at 09:31:03AM +0200 Sebastian Tymków schrieb:
> Have you tried cpanel or webmin ?
I checked webmin but not very depth.
> Or maybe you're looking for solution like ftp server and accounts in
> databas
Hello,
Have you tried cpanel or webmin ?
Or maybe you're looking for solution like ftp server and accounts in
database ?
Best regards,
Sebastian Tymków
2008/9/4 Martin Schweizer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hello
>
> I've three FreeBSD 7.0 server. Im looking for a combina
Hello
I've three FreeBSD 7.0 server. Im looking for a combination where I can
create/delete etc. ftp users as a non-root user (probably from a template). Do
you have some hints which combinations works in such a constellation?
Regards,
--
Martin Schweizer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PC-Service M. S
On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 07:59:20 +0300, Manolis Kiagias <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Running an FTP behind a home DSL router is perfectly possible. You will
>just have to open a range of ports on the router itself eg 25000-25050
>and forward them to your ftp server internal IP addres
POST
request, using a simple upload script (numerous examples of those to be found
on the web). Of course, the traffic for that is larger since it will be
base64 encoded. On the plus side, you don't need local user accounts on the
ftp server, while still having full control over where the
).
J.
Running an FTP behind a home DSL router is perfectly possible. You
will just have to open a range of ports on the router itself eg
25000-25050 and forward them to your ftp server internal IP
address. Then set the FTP server to only use these ports for
passive transfers.
For exam
ient
application.
Running an FTP behind a home DSL router is perfectly possible. You will
just have to open a range of ports on the router itself eg 25000-25050
and forward them to your ftp server internal IP address. Then set the
FTP server to only use these ports for passive transfers.
For example
On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 22:06:24 -0400, Jon Radel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>What control do you have over the firewall? One of the cleaner
>solutions would be to run an ftp proxy on the firewall, such as that
>supplied with pf. See ftp-proxy(8) or
>http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/ftp.html
Unfortunat
Gilles wrote:
> Hello
>
> We have FreeBSD server on our private LAN behind a NAT firewall on
> which I'd like to add an FTP server so that customers can send us
> stuff.
>
> Problem is, since customers might have a NAT firewall on their end,
> the client application
Hello
We have FreeBSD server on our private LAN behind a NAT firewall on
which I'd like to add an FTP server so that customers can send us
stuff.
Problem is, since customers might have a NAT firewall on their end,
the client application must connect in passive mode... but this just
move
Hello David,
Wednesday, April 11, 2007, 9:12:17 PM, you wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 April 2007 12:26:42 pm Derrill Guilbert wrote:
>> I've been given an old machine, and asked to turn it into an ftp server. It
>> will got on its own IP, separate from the one our LAN uses. It wil
On Apr 11, 2007, at 1:26 PM, Derrill Guilbert wrote:
What I would really prefer is some sort of BSD based simple FTP server
setup. I've found several BSD based router/firewall/whatever
servers out
there, such as m0n0wall and pfsense, among others, and I would like
something that simpl
On 2007/04/12 7:57, Derrill Guilbert seems to have typed:
> I actually know how to set up a FreeBSD machine with FTP server, but was
> hoping there was something simpler - and therefore quicker, and
> theoretically more secure out of the box, with essentially nothing else
> running? I
On 4/11/07, Pieter de Goeje <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wednesday 11 April 2007, David J Brooks wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 April 2007 12:26:42 pm Derrill Guilbert wrote:
> > I've been given an old machine, and asked to turn it into an ftp
server.
> > It will got on its
On Wednesday 11 April 2007, David J Brooks wrote:
> On Wednesday 11 April 2007 12:26:42 pm Derrill Guilbert wrote:
> > I've been given an old machine, and asked to turn it into an ftp server.
> > It will got on its own IP, separate from the one our LAN uses. It will
> >
On Wednesday 11 April 2007 12:26:42 pm Derrill Guilbert wrote:
> I've been given an old machine, and asked to turn it into an ftp server. It
> will got on its own IP, separate from the one our LAN uses. It will have
> three read-only users and maybe five read/write users. It will co
I've been given an old machine, and asked to turn it into an ftp server. It
will got on its own IP, separate from the one our LAN uses. It will have
three read-only users and maybe five read/write users. It will contain
design data that we're transferring to the offices in China. That i
On 2/10/07, George Greene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
i would like to use freebsd 6.2 to setup an ftp server that allows
anonymous access and does not allow those anonymous user to see any
other directories other than the pub directory where the files will
reside.
The easiest way to do
i would like to use freebsd 6.2 to setup an ftp server that allows
anonymous access and does not allow those anonymous user to see any
other directories other than the pub directory where the files will
reside.
so far i have been able to turn on the ftp server. in the file,
inetd.conf i
Ok, just so everyone knows the problem I was having where I was getting a
421 error when trying to connect to my ftp server was due to an error on my
part when setting up ftpd. I had it both in rc and in inetd.conf.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
"Guillermo Gonzalez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> When I try to ftp localhost I get this:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ ftp localhost
> Trying ::1...
> Connected to localhost.
> 220- Welcome message goes here :D
> 220 tester FTP server (Version 6.00LS) read
When I try to ftp localhost I get this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ ftp localhost
Trying ::1...
Connected to localhost.
220- Welcome message goes here :D
220 tester FTP server (Version 6.00LS) ready.
331 Guest login ok, send your email address as password.
230- READ OR DIE!!1
230 Guest login ok
t; wrote:
Dear FreeBSD
Can I make my own bootable CD from FreeBSD, actually
from the ftp
server:
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/6.1-RELEASE
?
I really need it. I can't pay for your CD ROM so any
help would be very
much appreciated.
I'll download everything and put it on a CD
" in front of the ftp. The problem
is the internal address the ftp server has and the nat that the router has
to do. FreeBSD knows nothing about the external address... I think you'll
have better results getting a second IP address for your ftp server and
just route packets. Or you could
On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 16:40:18 +0200, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a FreeBSD 6.1 box running behind a router/gateway. When it tries
to go into passive mode, it returns it's internal 192.168. ip address to
the client which the client stupidly uses to try to connect to. I've
confirmed this by
That is more a matter for your router. Your router should be wrapping the
internal address with a public one. Be sure you are forwarding all the
ports needed for ftp.
-Derek
At 09:40 AM 9/14/2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a FreeBSD 6.1 box running behind a router/gateway. W
I have a FreeBSD 6.1 box running behind a router/gateway. When it tries
to go into passive mode, it returns it's internal 192.168. ip address to
the client which the client stupidly uses to try to connect to. I've
confirmed this by tyring to FTP from several external systems (windows &
linux). I
It appears that FTP clients using FTP are not able to interact passively
with my FTP server. I am wondering if there is a rule somebody could
point me to that works rather well.
${ip} is the IP address fo the server (not the client).
this does not work.
snip
#/** Allow
Why don't you just download the CD image and burn that
onto a CD?
Go to
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/6.1/
--- Stojance <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dear FreeBSD
> Can I make my own bootable CD from FreeBSD, actually
> from the
On Saturday 29 July 2006 16:04, Jerry McAllister wrote:
>
> I don't know Nero so I don't know what choices it offers.
> But, generally you just want a plain burn plus fixate.
>
in nero, there is one of the upper drop down menus thats has "burn image".
that is the only thing one needs to do to s
On Jul 29, 2006, at 2:04 PM, Jerry McAllister wrote:
Dear FreeBSD
Can I make my own bootable CD from FreeBSD, actually from the ftp
server: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/6.1-RELEASE ?
I really need it. I can't pay for your CD ROM so any help would be
very
much apprec
>
> Dear FreeBSD
> Can I make my own bootable CD from FreeBSD, actually from the ftp
> server: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/6.1-RELEASE ?
> I really need it. I can't pay for your CD ROM so any help would be very
> much appreciated.
> I'll down
Dear FreeBSD
Can I make my own bootable CD from FreeBSD, actually from the ftp
server: ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/6.1-RELEASE ?
I really need it. I can't pay for your CD ROM so any help would be very
much appreciated.
I'll download everything and put it on a CD a
Lars Stokholm wrote:
> On 5/25/06, Mikhail Goriachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Yeah, I agree. I forced my users to use SFTP through FileZilla on
>> windows. They actually think they're using FTP instead of SFTP. So
>> everyone is happy including me.
>
> Isn't it a problem that they can't be ch
On 5/25/06, Lars Stokholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 5/25/06, Mikhail Goriachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah, I agree. I forced my users to use SFTP through FileZilla on
> windows. They actually think they're using FTP instead of SFTP. So
> everyone is happy including me.
Isn't it a prob
Lars Stokholm wrote:
On 5/25/06, Mikhail Goriachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yeah, I agree. I forced my users to use SFTP through FileZilla on
windows. They actually think they're using FTP instead of SFTP. So
everyone is happy including me.
Isn't it a problem that they can't be chrooted?
On 5/25/06, Mikhail Goriachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yeah, I agree. I forced my users to use SFTP through FileZilla on
windows. They actually think they're using FTP instead of SFTP. So
everyone is happy including me.
Isn't it a problem that they can't be chrooted?
_
Paul Schmehl wrote:
> --On May 24, 2006 4:32:55 PM +0200 User Gandalf
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Dear List,
>>
>> I would like to install an ftp server. Some of the users want to upload
>> files to the server. I would not like to start an f
--On May 24, 2006 4:32:55 PM +0200 User Gandalf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Dear List,
I would like to install an ftp server. Some of the users want to upload
files to the server. I would not like to start an ftp server at all,
because I'm too paranoid. But my users demand it.
I use vsftpd
-Derek
At 09:32 AM 5/24/2006, User Gandalf wrote:
Dear List,
I would like to install an ftp server. Some of the users want to upload
files to the server. I would not like to start an ftp server at all,
because I'm too paranoid. But my users demand it. I looked a
* User Gandalf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-05-24 16:32:55 +0200]:
> I looked at the ports tree and I found many ftp servers. I cannot
> choose between them. Can you recommend one for me?
Second the recommendation for vsftpd.
Thomas
--
N.J. Thomas
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Etiamsi occiderit me, in ipso sp
User Gandalf wrote:
>
> Dear List,
>
> I would like to install an ftp server. Some of the users want to upload
> files to the server. I would not like to start an ftp server at all,
> because I'm too paranoid. But my users demand it. I looked at the ports
> tree and I
Dear List,
I would like to install an ftp server. Some of the users want to upload
files to the server. I would not like to start an ftp server at all,
because I'm too paranoid. But my users demand it. I looked at the ports
tree and I found many ftp servers. I cannot choose between
> I tried the default ftp server with FreeBSD 5.4 and users
> with no shell
> accounts but it does not work.
>
> Does anyone know of a ftp server that users would still have home
> directories but no shell access /sbin/nologin and that could still
> upload files to t
t;[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wednesday 10 May 2006 16:20, Sean Murphy wrote:
> I tried the default ftp server with FreeBSD 5.4 and users with no shell
> accounts but it does not work.
>
> Does anyone know of a ftp server that users would still have home
> directories but no shel
On Wednesday 10 May 2006 16:20, Sean Murphy wrote:
> I tried the default ftp server with FreeBSD 5.4 and users with no shell
> accounts but it does not work.
>
> Does anyone know of a ftp server that users would still have home
> directories but no shell access /sbin/nologin and t
On 5/10/06, Sean Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I tried the default ftp server with FreeBSD 5.4 and users with no shell
accounts but it does not work.
Does anyone know of a ftp server that users would still have home
directories but no shell access /sbin/nologin and that could still
I tried the default ftp server with FreeBSD 5.4 and users with no shell
accounts but it does not work.
Does anyone know of a ftp server that users would still have home
directories but no shell access /sbin/nologin and that could still
upload files to there home directories.
Thanks
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Try ftp://ftp.csua.berleley.edu/pub/.1/ports/distfiles/staroffice52/
> >
> >
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Sunday, Ap
roffice52/
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2006 9:55 PM
> To: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
> Subject: ftp server
>
> Dear FreeBSD:
>
> I can get
Try ftp://ftp.csua.berleley.edu/pub/.1/ports/distfiles/staroffice52/
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2006 9:55 PM
To: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject: ftp server
Dear FreeBSD:
I can get to
Dear FreeBSD:
I can get to your web page
www.freebsd.org/cgi//pds.cgi?ports/editors/staroffice52. I can find the
staroffice52 info, one of which is sources. when I click on sources I
arrive at a page which gives me a lot of ftp sites for downloading so-5
2-ga-bin-linux-en.bin, or 109939-03.ta
You would edit /etc/services to change the standard port numbers FTP
uses.
Say change port 20 & 21 to 35520 & 35521.
You also must realize that your public internet users who want to
access
your FTP server must also change their FTP port numbers to the same
ones you used in /etc/service
> Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 20:58:36 -0800
> From: ross <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: changeing the port of the ftp server
> To: "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org"
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; delsp=yes; charset=
--- ross <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I can't for the life of me figure out how to change the port of my ftp
> server. My (crummy) ISP blocks port 21 and I would like to change the
> default port of the ftp server in order to give access to the outside
> world.
I can't for the life of me figure out how to change the port of my ftp
server. My (crummy) ISP blocks port 21 and I would like to change the
default port of the ftp server in order to give access to the outside
world.
--
Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.oper
you box, it's a very big security
risk.
You should not be making native ftp available to public login
unless you are running a anonymous ftp server within a jail.
You should use SSH's sftp which first creates a tunnel between
remote and host and then encrypts the login id/pw and the
com
server)
Also, I have absolutely no problem with making connections to my
server from inside my LAN.
The problem is when someone tries to connect to my servers FTP server.
It just doesnt work!
In addition to the rules and log I pasted below, here are my tweaked rulesets:
/etc/ipf.rules:
___IPF__
, February 14, 2006 8:59 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Cant login to FTP server.
Hi,
the server is connected directly to "the wild", and I'm connecting
from a remote non-local host.
Are you sure that those are ipf rules? They look a lot like ipnat
rul
e or
> from public internet remote user to your gateway ftp server.
>
> I am guessing its from gateway box to public internet remote ftp
> site.
> Your nat rules need to look like this example. You are missing the
> second rule.
>
> map dc0 10.0.10.0/29 -> 0/32 proxy port
nning ftp from.
> like from LAN box to gateway server or
> from gateway box to public internet remote ftp site or
> from public internet remote user to your gateway ftp server.
>
> I am guessing its from gateway box to public internet remote ftp
> site.
> Your nat rules nee
Daniel
You did not say where you were running ftp from.
like from LAN box to gateway server or
from gateway box to public internet remote ftp site or
from public internet remote user to your gateway ftp server.
I am guessing its from gateway box to public internet remote ftp
site.
Your nat
Hi, I have some FTP login problems.
I run FreeBSD 6.0-RELEASE, and I have ipf and ipnat enabled.
___SNIP___
Status: Connecting to dienub.org ...
Status: Connected with dienub.org. Waiting for welcome message...
Response: 220 m00h.dienub.org FTP server (Version 6.00LS) ready.
Command
I have written an ftp server in perl to aid with installations over ftp.
http://www.ludd.luth.se/~pb/perlftp3.pl
Do like this:
If your release is located in /path_to_relases/5.4-RELEASE on 10.0.0.99
Type on your 10.0.0.99 freebsd machine:
perlftp3.pl /path_to_relases 12000
Then
On Wed, Jul 13, 2005 at 05:02:52PM -0700, Andrei Iarus wrote:
>
> > I think you should investigate the pkg_add(1) man
> > page. A quick way
> > to install directly a package (that means a
> > precompiled "port") is to
> > use the following syntax:
> >
> > # pkg_add -rv port-name
> >
> > i.e
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