okay short improvement maybe the wrong way but so you can revoke the
exexute permission on others
I changed ownership of /var/sftp to root:sftpuser and permission to 0710
Am 01.05.2015 um 15:46 schrieb Markus Rosjat:
Am 01.05.2015 um 15:36 schrieb Markus Rosjat:
well I got it running to a
On 05/01/15 09:35, Markus Rosjat wrote:
well I got it running to a point were my user got loged in to his home dir.
he is now chrooted to /var/sftp because this one is owned by root and
not writeable for others.
still can jump from home dir (well it's not really this home)
hi there,
I just do some testing with sftp access and I stumbled about some things
I dont get.
if I use the chroot I would asume the user cant browse to the root dir
but it seems he can.
Do I get the whole chroot thing wrong here ?
I set sshd up to just use key auth and gave the user a
On 05/01/15 07:07, Markus Rosjat wrote:
hi there,
I just do some testing with sftp access and I stumbled about some things
I dont get.
if I use the chroot I would asume the user cant browse to the root dir
but it seems he can.
Do I get the whole chroot thing wrong here ?
You get the
well I got it running to a point were my user got loged in to his home dir.
he is now chrooted to /var/sftp because this one is owned by root and
not writeable for others.
still can jump from home dir (well it's not really this home)
/var/sftp/testsftp to the root (which is the actual
Am 01.05.2015 um 15:36 schrieb Markus Rosjat:
well I got it running to a point were my user got loged in to his
home dir.
he is now chrooted to /var/sftp because this one is owned by root and
not writeable for others.
still can jump from home dir (well it's not really this home)
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