.\" Copyright (c) 1985, 1988, 1991 The Regents of the University of California. .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" %sccs.include.redist.man% .\" .\" @(#)ftpd.8 6.9 (Berkeley) %G% .\" .Dd .Dt FTPD 8 .Os BSD 4.2 .Sh NAME .Nm ftpd .Nd .Tn DARPA Internet File Transfer Protocol server .Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm ftpd .Op Fl d .Op Fl l .Op Fl t Ar timeout .Op Fl T Ar maxtimeout .Sh DESCRIPTION .Nm Ftpd is the .Tn DARPA Internet File Transfer Protocol server process. The server uses the .Tn TCP protocol and listens at the port specified in the .Dq ftp service specification; see .Xr services 5 . .Pp Available options: .Bl -tag -width Ds .It Fl d Debugging information is written to the syslog. .It Fl l Each .Xr ftp 1 session is logged in the syslog. .It Fl t The inactivity timeout period is set to .Ar timeout seconds (the default is 15 minutes). .It Fl T A client may also request a different timeout period; the maximum period allowed may be set to .Ar timeout seconds with the .Fl T option. The default limit is 2 hours. .El .Pp The ftp server currently supports the following ftp requests; case is not distinguished. .Bl -column "Request" -offset indent .It Request Ta "Description" .It ABOR Ta "abort previous command" .It ACCT Ta "specify account (ignored)" .It ALLO Ta "allocate storage (vacuously)" .It APPE Ta "append to a file" .It CDUP Ta "change to parent of current working directory" .It CWD Ta "change working directory" .It DELE Ta "delete a file" .It HELP Ta "give help information" .It LIST Ta "give list files in a directory" Pq Dq Li "ls -lgA" .It MKD Ta "make a directory" .It MDTM Ta "show last modification time of file" .It MODE Ta "specify data transfer" Em mode .It NLST Ta "give name list of files in directory" .It NOOP Ta "do nothing" .It PASS Ta "specify password" .It PASV Ta "prepare for server-to-server transfer" .It PORT Ta "specify data connection port" .It PWD Ta "print the current working directory" .It QUIT Ta "terminate session" .It REST Ta "restart incomplete transfer" .It RETR Ta "retrieve a file" .It RMD Ta "remove a directory" .It RNFR Ta "specify rename-from file name" .It RNTO Ta "specify rename-to file name" .It SITE Ta "non-standard commands (see next section)" .It SIZE Ta "return size of file" .It STAT Ta "return status of server" .It STOR Ta "store a file" .It STOU Ta "store a file with a unique name" .It STRU Ta "specify data transfer" Em structure .It SYST Ta "show operating system type of server system" .It TYPE Ta "specify data transfer" Em type .It USER Ta "specify user name" .It XCUP Ta "change to parent of current working directory (deprecated)" .It XCWD Ta "change working directory (deprecated)" .It XMKD Ta "make a directory (deprecated)" .It XPWD Ta "print the current working directory (deprecated)" .It XRMD Ta "remove a directory (deprecated)" .El .Pp The following non-standard or .Tn UNIX specific commands are supported by the SITE request. .Pp .Bl -column Request -offset indent .It Sy Request Ta Sy Description .It UMASK Ta change umask. Em E.g. SITE UMASK 002 .It IDLE Ta set idle-timer. Em E.g. SITE IDLE 60 .It CHMOD Ta change mode of a file. Em E.g. SITE CHMOD 755 filename .It HELP Ta give help information. Em E.g. SITE HELP .El .Pp The remaining ftp requests specified in Internet .%T "RFC 959" are recognized, but not implemented. MDTM and SIZE are not specified in .%T "RFC 959" , but will appear in the next updated FTP RFC. .Pp The ftp server will abort an active file transfer only when the ABOR command is preceded by a Telnet "Interrupt Process" (IP) signal and a Telnet "Synch" signal in the command Telnet stream, as described in Internet .%T "RFC 959" . If a STAT command is received during a data transfer, preceded by a Telnet IP and Synch, transfer status will be returned. .Pp .Nm Ftpd interprets file names according to the .Dq globbing conventions used by .Xr csh 1 . This allows users to utilize the metacharacters .Dq Li \&*?[]{}~ . .Pp .Nm Ftpd authenticates users according to three rules. .Pp .Bl -enum -offset indent .It The user name must be in the password data base, .Pa /etc/passwd , and not have a null password. In this case a password must be provided by the client before any file operations may be performed. .It The user name must not appear in the file .Pa /etc/ftpusers . .It The user must have a standard shell returned by .Xr getusershell 3 . .It If the user name is .Dq anonymous or .Dq ftp , an anonymous ftp account must be present in the password file (user .Dq ftp ) . In this case the user is allowed to log in by specifying any password (by convention this is given as the client host's name). .El .Pp In the last case, .Nm ftpd takes special measures to restrict the client's access privileges. The server performs a .Xr chroot 2 command to the home directory of the .Dq ftp user. In order that system security is not breached, it is recommended that the .Dq ftp subtree be constructed with care; the following rules are recommended. .Bl -tag -width "~ftp/pub" -offset indent .It Pa ~ftp Make the home directory owned by .Dq ftp and unwritable by anyone. .It Pa ~ftp/bin Make this directory owned by the super-user and unwritable by anyone. The program .Xr ls 1 must be present to support the list command. This program should have mode 111. .It Pa ~ftp/etc Make this directory owned by the super-user and unwritable by anyone. The files .Xr passwd 5 and .Xr group 5 must be present for the .Xr ls command to be able to produce owner names rather than numbers. The password field in .Xr passwd is not used, and should not contain real encrypted passwords. These files should be mode 444. .It Pa ~ftp/pub Make this directory mode 777 and owned by .Dq ftp . Users should then place files which are to be accessible via the anonymous account in this directory. .El .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr ftp 1 , .Xr getusershell 3 , .Xr syslogd 8 .Sh BUGS The anonymous account is inherently dangerous and should avoided when possible. .Pp The server must run as the super-user to create sockets with privileged port numbers. It maintains an effective user id of the logged in user, reverting to the super-user only when binding addresses to sockets. The possible security holes have been extensively scrutinized, but are possibly incomplete. .Sh HISTORY The .Nm command appeared in .Bx 4.2 .