On 30 mei 2006, at 03:33, GiL A. Virtucio wrote:
to restrict users from navigating outside their home directories
through FTP try using an FTP server that support chrooting. you
might want to check proftpd. http://www.proftpd.org/
it is also included in the ports collection.
hope this
2006/5/30, GiL A. Virtucio [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
to restrict users from navigating outside their home directories through FTP
try using an FTP server that support chrooting. you might want to check
proftpd. http://www.proftpd.org/
it is also included in the ports collection.
hope this helps :)
Hello,
Yes, I understand that To lockup a user from navigating outside their home
directories through
ftp, I simply can add them to /etc/ftpchroot and when a user connects It
wont allow him
to go any level higher than his Home Directory.
No need for proftpd as additional port, because the
Marwan Sultan wrote:
Hello,
Yes, I understand that To lockup a user from navigating outside their
home directories through
ftp, I simply can add them to /etc/ftpchroot and when a user connects
It wont allow him
to go any level higher than his Home Directory.
No need for proftpd as
On Tuesday 30 May 2006 01:28, Mikhail Goriachev wrote:
Marwan Sultan wrote:
Hello,
Yes, I understand that To lockup a user from navigating outside their
home directories through
ftp, I simply can add them to /etc/ftpchroot and when a user connects
It wont allow him
to go any
On Tuesday 30 May 2006 01:28, Mikhail Goriachev wrote:
Marwan Sultan wrote:
Hello,
Yes, I understand that To lockup a user from navigating outside their
home directories through
ftp, I simply can add them to /etc/ftpchroot and when a user connects
It wont allow him
to
to restrict users from navigating outside their home directories through FTP
try using an FTP server that support chrooting. you might want to check
proftpd. http://www.proftpd.org/
it is also included in the ports collection.
hope this helps :)
=
Gil A.