Net::FTPServer - A secure, extensible and configurable Perl FTP server
ftpd [--help] [-d] [-v] [-p port] [-s] [-S] [-V] [-C conf_file] [-P pidfile] [-o option=value]
Net::FTPServer
is a secure, extensible and configurable FTP
server written in Perl.
Current features include:
* Authenticated FTP access. * Anonymous FTP access. * Complete implementation of current RFCs. * ASCII or binary type file transfers. * Active or passive mode file transfers. * Run standalone or from inetd(8). * Security features: chroot, resource limits, tainting, protection against buffer overflows. * IP-based and/or IP-less virtual hosts. * Complete access control system. * Anonymous read-only FTP personality. * Virtual filesystem allows files to be served from a database. * Directory aliases and CDPATH support. * Extensible command set. * Generate archives on the fly.
A standard ftpd.conf
file is supplied with the distribution.
Full documentation for all the possible options which you
may use in this file is contained in this manual page. See
the section CONFIGURATION below.
After doing make install
, the standard ftpd.conf
file should
have been installed in /etc/ftpd.conf
. You will probably need to
edit this file to suit your local configuration.
Also after doing make install
, several start-up scripts will have
been installed in /usr/sbin/*ftpd.pl
. (On Debian in /usr/bin
or
/usr/local/bin
). Each start-up script starts the server in a
different configuration: either as a full FTP server, or as an
anonymous-only read-only FTP server, etc.
The commonly used scripts are:
* /usr/sbin/ftpd.pl * /usr/sbin/ro-ftpd.pl
The first script is for the full FTP server.
These scripts assume that the perl
interpreter can be found on the
current $PATH
. In the rare situation when this is not the case, you
may need to edit these scripts.
If you have a high load site, you will want to run Net::FTPServer
as a standalone server. To start Net::FTPServer
as a standalone
server, do:
/usr/sbin/ftpd.pl -S
You may want to add this to your local start-up files so that the server starts automatically when you boot the machine.
To stop the server, do:
killall ftpd.pl
(Note: Azazel
points out that the above is a Linux-ism. Solaris
administrators may get a nasty shock if they type killall
as root
!
Just kill the parent ftpd.pl
process by hand instead).
Add the following line to /etc/inetd.conf
:
ftp stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd ftpd.pl
(This assumes that you have the tcp-wrappers
package installed to
provide basic access control through /etc/hosts.allow
and
/etc/hosts.deny
. This access control is in addition to any access
control which you may configure through /etc/ftpd.conf
.)
After editing this file you will need to inform inetd
:
killall -HUP inetd
xinetd
is a modern alternative to inetd
which is supposedly
simpler to configure. In practice, however, it has proven to be quite
difficult to configure services under xinetd
(mainly because
xinetd
gives no diagnostic information when things go wrong). The
following configuration has worked for me:
Create the file /etc/xinetd.d/net-ftpserver
containing:
# default: on # description: Net::FTPServer, a secure, \ # extensible, configurable FTP server. # service ftp { socket_type = stream wait = no user = root server = /usr/sbin/ftpd.pl log_on_success += DURATION USERID log_on_failure += USERID disable = no }
Check any other possible FTP server configurations to ensure they
are all disabled (ie. disable = yes
in all other files).
Restart xinetd
using:
/etc/init.d/xinetd restart
--help Display help and exit -d, -v Enable debugging -p PORT Listen on port PORT instead of the default port -s Run in daemon mode (default: run from inetd) -S Run in background and in daemon mode -V Show version information and exit -C CONF Use CONF as configuration file (default: /etc/ftpd.conf) -P PIDFILE Save pid into PIDFILE (daemon mode only) -o option=value Override config file option with value --test Test mode (used only in automatic testing scripts)
Net::FTPServer
can be configured and extended in a number
of different ways.
Firstly, almost all common server configuration can be carried
out by editing the configuration file /etc/ftpd.conf
.
Secondly, commands can be loaded into the server at run-time to provide custom extensions to the common FTP command set. These custom commands are written in Perl.
Thirdly, one of several different supplied personalities can be
chosen. Personalities can be used to make deep changes to the FTP
server: for example, there is a supplied personality which allows the
FTP server to serve files from a relational database. By subclassing
Net::FTPServer
, Net::FTPServer::DirHandle
and
Net::FTPServer::FileHandle
you may also write your own
personalities.
The next sections talk about each of these possibilities in turn.
A standard /etc/ftpd.conf
file is supplied with Net::FTPServer
in the distribution. The possible configuration options are listed in
full below.
Simple configuration options can also be given on the command line
using the -o
option. Command line configuration options override
those from the configuration file.
Use the <Include filename> directive to include
the contents of filename
directly at the current point
within the configuration file.
You cannot use <Include> within a <Host> section, or at least you can but it won't work the way you expect.
Include all files matching wildcard
at this point in
the file. The files are included in alphabetical order.
You cannot use <IncludeWildcard> within a <Host> section, or at least you can but it won't work the way you expect.
Run with debugging. Equivalent to the command line -d
option.
Default: 0
Example: debug: 1
The TCP port number on which the FTP server listens when
running in daemon mode (see daemon mode
option below).
Default: The standard ftp/tcp service port from /etc/services
Example: port: 8021
Run as a daemon. If set, the FTP server will open a listening socket on its default port number, accept new connections and fork off a new process to handle each connection. If not set (the default), the FTP server will handle a single connection on stdin/stdout, which is suitable for use from inetd.
The equivalent command line options are -s
and -S
.
Default: 0
Example: daemon mode: 1
Run in the background. If set, the FTP server will fork into the background before running.
The equivalent command line option is -S
.
Default: 0
Example: run in background: 1
If set, then all warning and error messages are appended to this file. If not set, warning and error messages get sent to STDERR and to syslog.
Having an error log is highly recommended.
Default: (not set, warnings and errors go to syslog)
Example: error log: /var/log/ftpd.errors
Maintainer's email address.
Default: root@hostname
Example: maintainer email: bob@example.com
Assign users into classes. One or more class
directives can be
added to the configuration file to aggregate individual users into
larger groups of users called classes.
By default all anonymous users are in class anonymous
and every
other user is in class users
.
The configuration file can contain zero or more class
directives. The format of the class directive is either:
class: CLASSNAME USERNAME[,USERNAME[,...]]
or:
class: CLASSNAME { perl code ... }
Examples of the first form are:
class: staff rich class: students ann,mary,pete
User rich
will be placed into class staff
, and users ann
,
mary
and pete
will be placed into class students
.
Examples of the second form are:
class: family { /jones$/ } class: friends { $_ ne "jeff" }
Any username ending in jones
(eg. rjones
, timjones
) will be
in class family
. Any other user except jeff
will be placed in
class friends
. Note that the Perl code must be surrounded by
{...}
and must return a boolean true or false value. The username
is available as $_
. The Perl code is arbitrary: it might, for
example, use an external file or database lookup in order to work out
if a user belongs to a class.
class
directives are evaluated in the order in which they appear in
the configuration file until one matches the username.
Default: Anonymous users are assigned to class anonymous
and
everyone else is assigned to class users
.
Timeout on control connection. If a command has not been received after this many seconds, the server drops the connection. You may set this to zero to disable timeouts completely (although this is not recommended).
Default: 900 (seconds)
Example: timeout: 600
Resource limits. These limits are applied to each child process and are important in avoiding denial of service (DoS) attacks against the FTP server.
Resource Default Unit limit memory 16384 KBytes Amount of memory per child limit nr processes 10 (none) Number of processes limit nr files 20 (none) Number of open files
To instruct the server not to limit a particular resource, set the
limit to -1
.
Example:
limit memory: 32768 limit nr processes: 20 limit nr files: 40
limit nr processes: -1
Limit on the number of clients who can simultaneously connect. If this limit is ever reached, new clients will immediately be closed. It will not even ask the client to login. This feature works in daemon mode only.
Default: 255
Example: max clients: 600
Message to display when ``max clients'' has been reached.
You may use the following % escape sequences within the message for internal variables:
%x ``max clients'' setting that has been reached %E maintainer email address (from ``maintainer email'' setting above) %G time in GMT %R remote hostname or IP address if ``resolve addresses'' is not set %L local hostname %T local time %% just an ordinary ``%''
Default: Maximum connections reached
Example: max clients message: Only %x simultaneous connections allowed. Please try again later.
Resolve addresses. If set, attempt to do a reverse lookup on client addresses for logging purposes. If you set this then some clients may experience long delays when they try to connect. Not recommended on high load servers.
Default: 0
Example: resolve addresses: 1
Require resolved addresses. If set, client addresses must validly resolve otherwise clients will not be able to connect. If you set this then some clients will not be able to connect, even though it is probably the fault of their ISP.
Default: 0
Example: require resolved addresses: 1
Change process name. If set (the default) then the FTP server will change its process name to reflect the IP address or hostname of the client. If not set then the FTP server will not try to change its process name.
Default: 1
Example: change process name: 0
Greeting type. The greeting is printed before the user has logged in. Possible greeting types are:
full Full greeting, including hostname and version number. brief Hostname only. terse Nothing text Display greeting from ``greeting text'' option.
The SITE VERSION command can also reveal the version number. You
may need to turn this off by setting allow site version command: 0
below.
Default: full
Example: greeting type: text
Greeting text. If the greeting type
is set to text
then this
contains the text to display.
Default: none
Example: greeting text: Hello. I'll be your server today.
Welcome type. The welcome is printed after a user has logged in. Possible welcome types are:
normal Normal welcome message: ``Welcome <<username>>.'' text Take the welcome message from ``welcome text'' option. file Take the welcome message from ``welcome file'' file.
Default: normal
Example: welcome type: text
If welcome type
is set to text
, then this contains the text
to be printed after a user has logged in.
You may use the following % escape sequences within the welcome text to substitute for internal variables:
%E maintainer's email address (from ``maintainer email'' setting above) %G time in GMT %R remote hostname or IP address if ``resolve addresses'' is not set %L local hostname %m user's home directory (see ``home directory'' below) %T local time %U username given when logging in %u currently a synonym for %U, but in future will be determined from RFC931 authentication, like wu-ftpd %% just an ordinary ``%''
Default: none
Example: welcome text: Welcome to this FTP server.
If welcome type
is set to file
, then this contains the file
to be printed after a user has logged in.
You may use any of the % escape sequences defined in welcome text
above.
Default: none
Example: welcome file: /etc/motd
Home directory. This is the home directory where we put the user once they have logged in. This only applies to non-anonymous logins. Anonymous logins are always placed in "/", which is at the root of their chrooted environment.
You may use an absolute path here, or else one of the following special forms:
%m Use home directory from password file or from NSS. %U Username. %% A single % character.
For example, to force a user to start in ~/anon-ftp
when they
log in, set this to %m/anon-ftp
.
Note that setting the home directory does not perform a chroot.
Use the root directory
setting below to jail users into a
particular directory.
Home directories are relative to the current root directory.
In the anonymous read-only (ro-ftpd) personality, set home
directory to /
or else you will get a warning whenever a user
logs in.
Default: %m
Examples:
home directory: %m/anon-ftp home directory: /
Root directory. Immediately after logging in, perform a chroot into the named directory. This only applies to non-anonymous logins, and furthermore it only applies if you have a non-database VFS installed. Database VFSes typically cannot perform chroot (or, to be more accurate, they have a different concept of chroot - typically assigning each user their own completely separate namespace).
You may use %m and %U as above.
For example, to jail a user under ~/anon-ftp
after login, do:
home directory: / root directory: %m/anon-ftp
Notice that the home directory is relative to the current root directory.
Default: (none)
Example: root directory: %m/anon-ftp
Time zone to be used for MDTM and LIST stat information.
Default: GMT
Examples:
time zone: Etc/GMT+3 time zone: Europe/London time zone: US/Mountain
Local addresses. If you wish the FTP server (in daemon mode) to only bind to a particular local interface, then give its address here.
Default: none
Example: local address: 127.0.0.1
Allow anonymous access. If set, then allow anonymous access through
the ftp
and anonymous
accounts.
Default: 0
Example: allow anonymous: 1
Validate email addresses. Normally when logging in anonymously, you are asked to enter your email address as a password. These options can be used to check and enforce email addresses in this field (to some extent, at least -- you obviously can't force someone to enter a true email address).
The anonymous password check
option may be set to rfc822
,
no browser
, trivial
or none
. If set to rfc822
then
the user must enter a valid RFC 822 email address as password. If
set to no browser
then a valid RFC 822 email address must be
entered, and various common browser email addresses like
mozilla@
and IEverUser@
are refused. If set to trivial
then we just check that the address contains an @ char. If set to
none
, then we do no checking. The default is none
.
If the anonymous password enforce
option is set and the
password fails the check above, then the user will not be allowed
to log in. The default is 0 (unset).
These options only have effect when allow anonymous
is set.
Example:
anonymous password check: rfc822 anonymous password enforce: 1
Allow proxy FTP. If this is set, then the FTP server can be told to actively connect to addresses and ports on any machine in the world. This is not such a great idea, but required if you follow the RFC very closely. If not set (the default), the FTP server will only connect back to the client machine.
Default: 0
Example: allow proxy ftp: 1
Allow the FTP server to connect back to ports < 1024. This is rarely useful and could pose a serious security hole in some circumstances.
Default: 0
Example: allow connect low port: 1
What range of local ports will the FTP server listen on in passive
mode? Choose a range here like 1024-5999,49152-65535
. The special
value 0
means that the FTP server will use a kernel-assigned
ephemeral port.
Default: 49152-65535
Example: passive port range: 0
Which source port to use for active (non-passive) mode when connecting
to the client for PORT mode transfers. The special value 0
means
that the FTP server will use a kernel-assigned ephemeral port. To
strictly follow RFC, this should be set to ftp-data(20)
. This may
be required for certain brain-damaged firewall configurations. However,
for security reasons, the default setting is intentionally set to 0
to utilize a kernel-assigned ephemeral port. Use this directive at
your own risk!
SECURITY PRECAUTIONS:
1) Unfortunately, to use a port < 1024 requires super-user privileges. Thus, low ports will not work unless the FTP server is invoked as super-user. This also implies that all processes handling the client connections must also remain super-user throughout the entire session. It is highly discouraged to use a low port.
http://cr.yp.to/ftp/security.html (See "Connection laundering" section)
2) There sometimes exists a danger of needing to connect to the same remote host:port. Using the same IP/port on both sides will cause connect() to fail if the old socket is still being broken down. This condition will not occur if using an ephemeral port.
http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=fa.epucqgv.1l2kl0e@ifi.uio.no (See "unable to create socket" comment)
3) Many hackers use source port 20 to blindly circumvent certain naive firewalls. Using an ephemeral port (the default) may help discourage such dangerous naivety.
man nmap (See the -g option)
Default: 0
Example: ftp data port: ftp-data
Maximum number of login attempts before we drop the connection and issue a warning in the logs. Wu-ftpd defaults this to 5.
Default: 3
Example: max login attempts: 5
Use PAM for authentication. Required on systems such as Red Hat Linux
and Solaris which use PAM for authentication rather than the normal
/etc/passwd
mechanisms. You will need to have the Authen::PAM
Perl module installed for this to work.
Default: 0
Example: pam authentication: 1
If PAM authentication is enabled, then this is the PAM application
name. I have used ftp
as the default which is the same name
that wu-ftpd chooses. FreeBSD users will want to use ftpd
here.
Default: ftp
Example: pam application name: ftpd
Only in the Full
personality, this allows you to specify a password
file which is used for authentication. If you enable this option, then
normal PAM or /etc/passwd
is bypassed and this password file is
used instead.
Each line in the password file has the following format:
username:crypted_password:unix_user[:root_directory]
Comments and blank lines are ignored.
For example, a line with:
guest:ab01FAX.bQRSU:rich:/home/rich/guest-uploads
would allow someone to log in as guest
with password
123456
. After logging in, the FTP server will assume the identity
of the real Unix user rich
, and will chroot itself into the
/home/rich/guest-uploads
directory.
(Note that because ordinary PAM/passwd
is bypassed, it would no
longer be possible for a user to log in directly with the username
rich
).
Crypted passwords can be generated using the following command:
perl -e 'print crypt ("123456", "ab"), "\n"'
Replace 123456
with the actual password, and replace ab
with two
random letters from the set [a-zA-Z0-9./]
. (The two random letters
are the so-called salt and are used to make dictionary attacks
against the password file more difficult - see crypt(3)).
The user's home directory comes from the real Unix password file
(or nsswitch-configured source) for the real Unix user. You cannot
use password files to override this, and so if you are using the
optional root_directory
parameter, it would make sense to add
home directory: /
into your configuration file.
Anonymous logins are not affected by the password file
option. Use the allow anonymous
flag to control whether anonymous
logins are permitted in the Full
back-end.
Password files are not the height of security, but they are included because they can sometimes be useful. In particular if the password file can be read by untrusted users then it is likely that those same users can run the crack program and eventually find out your passwords. Some small additional security is offered by having the password file readable only by root (mode 0600). In future we may offer MD5 or salted SHA-1 hashed passwords to make this harder.
A curious artifact of the implementation allows you to list the same user with multiple different passwords. Any of the passwords is then valid for logins (and you could even have the user map to different real Unix users in different chrooted directories!)
Default: (none)
Example: password file: /etc/ftpd.passwd
Location of the file to store the process ID (PID). Applies only to the deamonized process, not the child processes.
Default: (no pidfile created)
Example: pidfile: /var/run/ftpd.pid
Location to store all client commands sent to the server. The format is the date, the pid, and the command. Following the pid is a "-" if not authenticated the username if the connection is authenticated. Example of before and after authentication:
[Wed Feb 21 18:41:32 2001][23818:-]USER rob [Wed Feb 21 18:41:33 2001][23818:-]PASS 123456 [Wed Feb 21 18:41:33 2001][23818:*]SYST
Default: (no logging)
Examples:
client logging: /var/log/ftpd.log client logging: /tmp/ftpd_log.$hostname
Location of transfer log. The format was taken from wu-ftpd and ProFTPD xferlog. (See also "man xferlog")
Default: (no logging)
Examples:
xfer logging: /var/log/xferlog xfer logging: /tmp/xferlog.$hostname
If set to 1, then password (PASS
) commands will not be
logged in the client log. This option has no effect unless
client logging is enabled.
Default: 0 (PASS lines will be shown)
Example: hide passwords in client log: 1
Enable syslogging. If set, then Net::FTPServer will send much information to syslog. On many systems, this information will be available in /var/log/messages or /var/adm/messages. If clear, syslogging is disabled.
Default: 1
Example: enable syslog: 0
Timeout for ident authentication lookups. A timeout (in seconds) must be specified in order to enable ident lookups. There is no way to specify an infinite timeout. Use 0 to disable this feature.
Default: 0
Example: ident timeout: 10
Access control rules.
Access control rules are all specified as short snippets of Perl script. This allows the maximum configurability -- you can express just about any rules you want -- but at the price of learning a little Perl.
You can use the following variables from the Perl:
$hostname Resolved hostname of the client [1] $ip IP address of the client $user User name [2] $class Class of user [2] $user_is_anonymous True if the user is an anonymous user [2] $pathname Full pathname of the file being affected [2] $filename Filename of the file being affected [2,3] $dirname Directory name containing file being affected [2] $type 'A' for ASCII, 'B' for binary, 'L8' for local 8-bit $form Always 'N' $mode Always 'S' $stru Always 'F'
Notes:
[1] May be undefined, particularly if resolve addresses
is not set.
[2] Not available in access control rule
since the user has not
logged in at this point.
[3] Not available for list directory rule
.
Access control rule. The FTP server will not accept any connections
from a site unless this rule succeeds. Note that only $hostname
and $ip
are available to this rule, and unless resolve addresses
and require resolved addresses
are both set $hostname
may
be undefined.
Default: 1
Examples:
(a) Deny connections from *.badguys.com:
access control rule: defined ($hostname) && \ $hostname !~ /\.badguys\.com$/
(b) Only allow connections from local network 10.0.0.0/24:
access control rule: $ip =~ /^10\./
User access control rule. After the user logs in successfully, this rule is then called to determine if the user may be permitted access.
Default: 1
Examples:
(a) Only allow ``rich'' to log in from 10.x.x.x network:
user access control rule: $user ne "rich" || \ $ip =~ /^10\./
(b) Only allow anonymous users to log in if they come from hosts with resolving hostnames (``resolve addresses'' must also be set):
user access control rule: !$user_is_anonymous || \ defined ($hostname)
(c) Do not allow user ``jeff'' to log in at all:
user access control rule: $user ne "jeff"
Retrieve rule. This rule controls who may retrieve (download) files.
Default: 1
Examples:
(a) Do not allow anyone to retrieve ``/etc/*'' or any file anywhere called ``.htaccess'':
retrieve rule: $dirname !~ m(^/etc/) && $filename ne ".htaccess"
(b) Only allow anonymous users to retrieve files from under the ``/pub'' directory.
retrieve rule: !$user_is_anonymous || $dirname =~ m(^/pub/)
Store rule. This rule controls who may store (upload) files.
In the anonymous read-only (ro-ftpd) personality, it is not possible to upload files anyway, so setting this rule has no effect.
Default: 1
Examples:
(a) Only allow users to upload files to the ``/incoming'' directory.
store rule: $dirname =~ m(^/incoming/)
(b) Anonymous users can only upload files to ``/incoming'' directory.
store rule: !$user_is_anonymous || $dirname =~ m(^/incoming/)
(c) Disable file upload.
store rule: 0
Delete rule. This rule controls who may delete files or rmdir directories.
In the anonymous read-only (ro-ftpd) personality, it is not possible to delete files anyway, so setting this rule has no effect.
Default: 1
Example: delete rule: 0
List rule. This rule controls who may list out the contents of a directory.
Default: 1
Example: list rule: $dirname =~ m(^/pub/)
Mkdir rule. This rule controls who may create a subdirectory.
In the anonymous read-only (ro-ftpd) personality, it is not possible to create directories anyway, so setting this rule has no effect.
Default: 1
Example: mkdir rule: 0
Rename rule. This rule controls which files or directories can be renamed.
Default: 1
Example: rename rule: $pathname !~ m(/.htaccess$)
Chdir rule. This rule controls which directories are acceptable to a CWD or CDUP.
Example: chdir rule: $pathname !~ m/private/
Change directory message file. If set, then the first time (per session) that a user goes into a directory which contains a file matching this name, that file will be displayed.
The file may contain any of the following % escape sequences:
%C current working directory %E maintainer's email address (from ``maintainer email'' setting above) %G time in GMT %R remote hostname or IP address if ``resolve addresses'' is not set %L local hostname %m user's home directory (see ``home directory'' below) %T local time %U username given when logging in %u currently a synonym for %U, but in future will be determined from RFC931 authentication, like wu-ftpd %% just an ordinary ``%''
Default: (none)
Example: chdir message file: .message
Allow the rename (RNFR/RNTO) command to overwrite files. If unset, then we try to test whether the rename command would overwrite a file and disallow it. However there are some race conditions with this test.
Default: 1
Example: allow rename to overwrite: 0
Allow the store commands (STOR/STOU/APPE) to overwrite files. If unset, then we try to test whether the store command would overwrite a file and disallow it. However there are some race conditions with this test.
Default: 1
Example: allow store to overwrite: 0
Define an alias name
for directory dir
. For example, the command
alias: mirror /pub/mirror
would allow the user to access the
/pub/mirror
directory directly just by typing cd mirror
.
Aliases only apply to the cd (CWD) command. The cd foo
command checks
for directories in the following order:
foo in the current directory an alias called foo foo in each directory in the cdpath (see ``cdpath'' command below)
You may list an many aliases as you want.
Alias names cannot contain slashes (/).
Although alias dirs may start without a slash (/), this is unwise and it's better that they always start with a slash (/) char.
General format: alias: name dir
Define a search path which is used when changing directories. For
example, the command cdpath: /pub/mirror /pub/sites
would allow
the user to access the /pub/mirror/ftp.cpan.org
directory
directly by just typing cd ftp.cpan.org
.
The cd foo
command checks for directories in the following order:
foo in the current directory an alias called foo (see ``alias'' command above) foo in each directory in the cdpath
General format: cdpath: dir1 [dir2 [dir3 ...]]
SITE VERSION command. If set, then the SITE VERSION command reveals the current Net::FTPServer version string. If unset, then the command is disabled.
Default: 1
Example: allow site version command: 0
SITE EXEC command. If set, then the SITE EXEC command allows arbitrary commands to be executed on the server as the current user. If unset, then this command is disabled. The default is disabled for obvious security reasons.
If you do allow SITE EXEC, you may need to increase the per process memory, processes and files limits above.
Default: 0
Example: allow site exec command: 1
Archive mode. If set (the default), then archive mode is
enabled, allowing users to request, say, file.gz
and
get a version of file
which is gzip-compressed on the
fly. If zero, then this feature is disabled. See the
section ARCHIVE MODE elsewhere in this manual for details.
Since archive mode is implemented using external commands,
you need to ensure that programs such as gzip
,
compress
, bzip2
, uuencode
, etc. are available on
the $PATH
(even in the chrooted environment), and you also
need to substantially increase the normal per-process memory,
processes and files limits.
Default: 1
Example: enable archive mode: 0
Temporary directory for generating ZIP files in archive mode. In archive mode, when generating ZIP files, the FTP server is capable of either creating a temporary file on local disk containing the ZIP contents, or can generate the file completely in memory. The former method saves memory. The latter method (only practical on small ZIP files) allows the server to work more securely and in certain read-only chrooted environments.
(Unfortunately the ZIP file format itself prevents ZIP files from being easily created on the fly).
If not specified in the configuration file, this option
defaults to using /tmp
. If there are local users on the
FTP server box, then this can lead to various tmp
races,
so for maximum security you will probably want to change
this.
If specified, and set to a string, then the string is the name of a directory which is used for storing temporary zip files. This directory must be writable, and must exist inside the chrooted environment (if chroot is being used).
If specified, but set to "0" or an empty string, then the server will always generate the ZIP file in memory.
In any case, if the directory is found at runtime to be unwritable, then the server falls back to creating ZIP files in memory.
Default: /tmp
Example: archive zip temporaries:
Example: archive zip temporaries: /var/ziptmp
Custom SITE commands. Use this command to define custom SITE commands. Please read the section LOADING CUSTOMIZED SITE COMMANDS in this manual page for more detailed information.
The site command
command has the form:
site command: cmdname file
cmdname is the name of the command (eg. for SITE README you
would set cmdname == readme
). file is a file containing the
code of the site command in the form of an anonymous Perl
subroutine. The file should have the form:
sub { my $self = shift; # The FTPServer object. my $cmd = shift; # Contains the command itself. my $rest = shift; # Contains any parameters passed by the user.
: : : :
$self->reply (RESPONSE_CODE, RESPONSE_TEXT); }
You may define as many site commands as you want. You may also override site commands from the current personality here.
Example:
site command: quota /usr/local/lib/ftp/quota.pl
and the file /usr/local/lib/ftp/quota.pl
contains:
sub { my $self = shift; # The FTPServer object. my $cmd = shift; # Contains "QUOTA". my $rest = shift; # Contains parameters passed by user.
# ... Some code to compute the user's quota ...
$self->reply (200, "Your quota is $quota MB."); }
The client types SITE QUOTA
and the server responds with:
"200 Your quota is 12.5 MB.".
<Host hostname> ... </Host> encloses
commands which are applicable only to a particular
host. hostname
may be either a fully-qualified
domain name (for IP-less virtual hosts) or an IP
address (for IP-based virtual hosts). You should read
the section VIRTUAL HOSTS in this manual page for
more information on the different types of virtual
hosts and how to set it up in more detail.
Note also that unless you have set enable virtual hosts: 1
,
all <Host> sections will be ignored.
Unless this option is uncommented, virtual hosting is disabled and the <Host> sections in the configuration file have no effect.
Default: 0
Example: enable virtual hosts: 1
IP-less virtual hosts. If you want to enable IP-less virtual
hosts, then you must set up your DNS so that all hosts map
to a single IP address, and place that IP address here. This
is roughly equivalent to the Apache NameVirtualHost
option.
IP-less virtual hosting is an experimental feature which requires changes to clients.
Default: (none)
Example: virtual host multiplex: 1.2.3.4
Example <Host> section. Allow the dangerous SITE EXEC command on local connections. (Note that this is still dangerous).
<Host localhost.localdomain> ip: 127.0.0.1 allow site exec command: 1 </Host>
Example <Host> section. This shows you how to do IP-based
virtual hosts. I assume that you have set up your DNS so that
ftp.bob.example.com
maps to IP 1.2.3.4
and ftp.jane.example.com
maps to IP 1.2.3.5
, and you have set up suitable IP aliasing
in the kernel.
You do not need the ip:
command if you have configured reverse
DNS correctly AND you trust your local DNS servers.
<Host ftp.bob.example.com> ip: 1.2.3.4 root directory: /home/bob home directory: / user access control rule: $user eq "bob" maintainer email: bob@bob.example.com </Host>
<Host ftp.jane.example.com> ip: 1.2.3.5 root directory: /home/jane home directory: / allow anonymous: 1 user access control rule: $user_is_anonymous maintainer email: jane@jane.example.com </Host>
These rules set up two virtual hosts called ftp.bob.example.com
and ftp.jane.example.com
. The former is located under bob's
home directory and only he is allowed to log in. The latter is
located under jane's home directory and only allows anonymous
access.
Example <Host> section. This shows you how to do IP-less virtual hosts. Note that IP-less virtual hosts are a highly experimental feature, and require the client to support the HOST command.
You need to set up your DNS so that both ftp.bob.example.com
and ftp.jane.example.com
point to your own IP address.
virtual host multiplex: 1.2.3.4
<Host ftp.bob.example.com> root directory: /home/bob home directory: / user access control rule: $user eq "bob" </Host>
<Host ftp.jane.example.com> root directory: /home/jane home directory: / allow anonymous: 1 user access control rule: $user_is_anonymous </Host>
Socket type for contacting syslog. This is the argument to
the Sys::Syslog::setlogsock
function.
Default: unix
Example: log socket type: inet
Length of the listen queue when running in daemon mode.
Default: 10
Example: listen queue: 20
Set TCP window. See RFC 2415 Simulation Studies of Increased Initial TCP Window Size. This setting only affects the data socket. It's not likely that you will need to or should change this setting from the system-specific default.
Default: (system-specific TCP window size)
Example: tcp window: 4380
Set TCP keepalive.
Default: (system-specific keepalive setting)
Example: tcp keepalive: 1
Command filter. If set, then all commands are checked against
this regular expression before being executed. If a command
doesn't match the filter, then the command connection is
immediately dropped. This is equivalent to the AllowFilter
command in ProFTPD. Remember to include ^...$
around the filter.
Default: (no filter)
Example: command filter: ^[A-Za-z0-9 /]+$
Advanced command filtering. The restrict command
directive takes
the form:
restrict command: "COMMAND" perl code ...
If the user tries to execute COMMAND
, then the perl code
is
evaluated first. If it evaluates to true, then the command is allowed
to proceed. Otherwise the server reports an error back to the user and
does not execute the command.
Note that the COMMAND
is the FTP protocol command, which is not
necessarily the same as the command which users will type in on their
FTP clients. Please read RFC 959 to see some of the more common FTP
protocol commands.
The Perl code has the same variables available to it as for access
control rules (eg. $user
, $class
, $ip
, etc.). The code
must not alter the global $_
variable (which contains the
complete command).
Default: all commands are allowed by default
Examples:
Only allow users in the class nukers
to delete files and
directories:
restrict command: "DELE" $class eq "nukers" restrict command: "RMD" $class eq "nukers"
Only allow staff to use the SITE WHO
command:
restrict command: "SITE WHO" $class eq "staff"
Only allow rich
to run the SITE EXEC
command:
allow site exec command: 1 restrict command: "SITE EXEC" $user eq "rich"
Go slow. If set, then the server will sleep for this many seconds before beginning to process each command. This command would be a lot more useful if you could apply it only to particular classes of connection.
Default: (no wait)
Example: command wait: 5
The list of commands which a client may issue before they have
authenticated themselves is very limited. Obviously USER
and
PASS
are allowed (otherwise a user would never be able to log
in!), also QUIT
, LANG
, HOST
and FEAT
. HELP
is also permitted
(although dubious). Any other commands not on this list will
result in a 530 Not logged in. error.
This list ought to contain at least USER
, PASS
and QUIT
otherwise the server won't be very functional.
Some commands cannot be added here -- eg. adding CWD
or RETR
to this list is likely to make the FTP server crash, or else enable
users to read files only available to root. Hence use this with
great care.
Default: USER PASS QUIT LANG HOST FEAT HELP
Example: no authentication commands: USER PASS QUIT
Use the <Perl> directive to write Perl code directly into your configuration file. Here is a simple example:
<Perl> use Sys::Hostname; $config{'maintainer email'} = "root\@" . hostname (); $config{port} = 8000 + 21; $config{debug} = $ENV{FTP_DEBUG} ? 1 : 0; </Perl>
As shown in the example, to set a configuration option called
foo
, you simply assign to the variable $config{foo}
.
All normal Perl functionality is available to you, including
use of require
if you need to run an external Perl script.
The <Perl> and </Perl> directives must each appear on a single line on their own.
To assign multiple configuration options with the same name, use an array ref:
<Perl> my @aliases = ( "foo /pub/foo", "bar /pub/bar", "baz /pub/baz" ); $config{alias} = \@aliases; </Perl>
You cannot use a <Perl> section within a <Host>
section. Instead, you must simulate it by assigning to the
%host_config
variable like this:
<Perl> $host_config{'localhost.localdomain'}{ip} = "127.0.0.1"; $host_config{'localhost.localdomain'}{'allow site exec command'}= 1; </Perl>
The above is equivalent to the following ordinary <Host> section:
<Host localhost.localdomain> ip: 127.0.0.1 allow site exec command: 1 </Host>
You may also assign to the $self
variable in order to set
variables directly in the Net::FTPServer
object itself. This
is pretty hairy, and hence not recommended, but you dig your own
hole if you want. Here is a contrived example:
<Perl> $self->{version_string} = "my FTP server/1.0"; </Perl>
A cleaner, but more complex way to do this would be to use a personality.
The <Perl> directive is potentially quite powerful. Here is a good idea that Rob Brown had:
<Perl> my %H; dbmopen (%H, "/etc/ftpd.db", 0644); %config = %H; dbmclose (%H); </Perl>
Notice how this allows you to crunch a possibly very large configuration file into a hash, for very rapid loading at run time.
Another useful way to use <Perl> is to set environment
variables (particularly $PATH
).
<Perl> $ENV{PATH} = "/usr/local/bin:$ENV{PATH}" </Perl>
Here's yet another wonderful way to use <Perl>.
Look in /usr/local/lib/ftp/
for a list of site commands
and load each one:
<Perl>
my @files = glob "/usr/local/lib/ftp/*.pl"; my @site_commands;
foreach (@files) { push @site_commands, "$1 $_" if /([a-z]+)\.pl/; }
$config{'site command'} = \@site_commands;
</Perl>
To force a particular version of Net::FTPServer to be used, include the following code in your configuration file:
<Perl> die "requires Net::FTPServer version >= 1.025" unless $Net::FTPServer::VERSION !~ /\..*\./ && $Net::FTPServer::VERSION >= 1.025; </Perl>
It is very simple to write custom SITE commands. These commands are available to users when they type "SITE XYZ" in a command line FTP client or when they define a custom SITE command in their graphical FTP client.
SITE commands are unregulated by RFCs. You may define any commands and
give them any names and any function you wish. However, over time
various standard SITE commands have been recognized and implemented
in many FTP servers. Net::FTPServer
also implements these. They
are:
SITE VERSION Display the server software version. SITE EXEC Execute a shell command on the server (in C<Net::FTPServer> this is disabled by default!) SITE ALIAS Display chdir aliases. SITE CDPATH Display chdir paths. SITE CHECKMETHOD Implement checksums. SITE CHECKSUM SITE IDLE Get or set the idle timeout. SITE SYNC Synchronize hard disks.
The following commands are found in wu-ftpd
, but not currently
implemented by Net::FTPServer
: SITE CHMOD, SITE GPASS, SITE GROUP,
SITE GROUPS, SITE INDEX, SITE MINFO, SITE NEWER, SITE UMASK.
So when you are choosing a name for a SITE command, it is probably best not to choose one of the above names, unless you are specifically implementing or overriding that command.
Custom SITE commands have to be written in Perl. However, there is very little you need to understand in order to write these commands -- you will only need a basic knowledge of Perl scripting.
As our first example, we will implement a SITE README
command.
This command just prints out some standard information.
Firstly create a file called /usr/local/lib/site_readme.pl
(you
may choose a different path if you want). The file should contain:
sub { my $self = shift; my $cmd = shift; my $rest = shift;
$self->reply (200, "This is the README file for mysite.example.com.", "Mirrors are contained in /pub/mirrors directory.", " : : : : :", "End of the README file."); }
Edit /etc/ftpd.conf
and add the following command:
site command: readme /usr/local/lib/site_readme.pl
and restart the FTP server (check your system log [/var/log/messages] for any syntax errors or other problems). Here is an example of a user running the SITE README command:
ftp> quote help site 214-The following commands are recognized: 214- ALIAS CHECKMETHOD EXEC README 214- CDPATH CHECKSUM IDLE VERSION 214 You can also use HELP to list general commands. ftp> site readme 200-This is the README file for mysite.example.com. 200-Mirrors are contained in /pub/mirrors directory. 200- : : : : : 200 End of the README file.
Our second example demonstrates how to use parameters
(the $rest
argument). This is the SITE ECHO
command.
sub { my $self = shift; my $cmd = shift; my $rest = shift;
# Split the parameters up. my @params = split /\s+/, $rest;
# Quote each parameter. my $reply = join ", ", map { "'$_'" } @params;
$self->reply (200, "You said: $reply"); }
Here is the SITE ECHO
command in use:
ftp> quote help site 214-The following commands are recognized: 214- ALIAS CHECKMETHOD ECHO IDLE 214- CDPATH CHECKSUM EXEC VERSION 214 You can also use HELP to list general commands. ftp> site echo hello how are you? 200 You said: 'hello', 'how', 'are', 'you?'
Our third example is more complex and shows how to interact
with the virtual filesystem (VFS). The SITE SHOW
command
will be used to list text files directly (the user normally
has to download the file and view it locally). Hence
SITE SHOW readme.txt
should print the contents of the
readme.txt
file in the local directory (if it exists).
All file accesses must be done through the VFS, not by directly accessing the disk. If you follow this convention then your commands will be secure and will work correctly with different back-end personalities (in particular when ``files'' are really blobs in a relational database).
sub { my $self = shift; my $cmd = shift; my $rest = shift;
# Get the file handle. my ($dirh, $fileh, $filename) = $self->_get ($rest);
# File doesn't exist or not accessible. Return an error. unless ($fileh) { $self->reply (550, "File or directory not found."); return; }
# Check it's a simple file. my ($mode) = $fileh->status;
unless ($mode eq "f") { $self->reply (550, "SITE SHOW command is only supported on plain files."); return; }
# Try to open the file. my $file = $fileh->open ("r");
unless ($file) { $self->reply (550, "File or directory not found."); return; }
# Copy data into memory. my @lines = ();
while (defined ($_ = $file->getline)) { # Remove any native line endings. s/[\n\r]+$//;
push @lines, $_; }
# Close the file handle. unless ($file->close) { $self->reply (550, "Close failed: ".$self->system_error_hook()); return; }
# Send the file back to the user. $self->reply (200, "File $filename:", @lines, "End of file."); }
This code is not quite complete. A better implementation would
also check the "retrieve rule" (so that people couldn't
use SITE SHOW
in order to get around access control limitations
which the server administrator has put in place). It would also
check the file more closely to make sure it was a text file and
would refuse to list very large files.
Here is an example (abbreviated) of a user using the
SITE SHOW
command:
ftp> site show README 200-File README: 200-$Id: FTPServer.pm,v 1.2 2003/09/28 11:55:07 rwmj Exp $ 200- 200-Net::FTPServer - A secure, extensible and configurable Perl FTP server. [...] 200-To contact the author, please email: Richard Jones <rich@annexia.org> 200 End of file.
Currently Net::FTPServer
is supplied with three standard
personalities. These are:
Full The complete read/write anonymous/authenticated FTP server which serves files from a standard Unix filesystem.
RO A small read-only anonymous-only FTP server similar in functionality to Dan Bernstein's publicfile program.
DBeg1 An example FTP server which serves files to a PostgreSQL database. This supports files and hierarchical directories, multiple users (but not file permissions) and file upload.
The standard Full personality will not be explained here.
The RO personality is the Full personality with all code related to writing files, creating directories, deleting, etc. removed. The RO personality also only permits anonymous logins and does not contain any code to do ordinary authentication. It is therefore safe to use the RO personality where you are only interested in serving files to anonymous users and do not want to worry about crackers discovering a way to trick the FTP server into writing over a file.
The DBeg1 personality is a complete read/write
FTP server which stores files as BLOBs (Binary Large
OBjects) in a PostgreSQL relational database. The
personality supports file download and upload and
contains code to authenticate users against a users
table in the database (database ``users'' are thus
completely unrelated to real Unix users). The
DBeg1 is intended only as an example. It does
not support advanced features such as file
permissions and quotas. As part of the schoolmaster.net
project Bibliotech Ltd. have developed an even more
advanced database personality which supports users,
groups, access control lists, quotas, recursive
moves and copies and many other features. However this
database personality is not available as source.
To use the DBeg1 personality you must first run a
PostgreSQL server (version 6.4 or above) and ensure
that you have access to it from your local user account.
Use the initdb
, createdb
and createuser
commands to create the appropriate user account and
database (please consult the PostgreSQL administrators
manual for further information about this -- I do
not answer questions about basic PostgreSQL knowledge).
Here is my correctly set up PostgreSQL server, accessed from my local user account ``rich'':
cruiser:~$ psql Welcome to the POSTGRESQL interactive sql monitor: Please read the file COPYRIGHT for copyright terms of POSTGRESQL
type \? for help on slash commands type \q to quit type \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query You are currently connected to the database: rich
rich=> \d Couldn't find any tables, sequences or indices!
You will also need the following Perl modules installed: DBI, DBD::Pg.
Now you will need to create a database called ``ftp'' and populate it with data. This is how to do this:
createdb ftp psql ftp < doc/eg1.sql
Check that no ERRORs are reported by PostgreSQL.
You should now be able to start the FTP server by running the following command (not as root):
./dbeg1-ftpd -S -p 2000 -C ftpd.conf
If the FTP server doesn't start correctly, you should check the system log file [/var/log/messages].
Connect to the FTP server as follows:
ftp localhost 2000
Log in as either rich/123456 or dan/123456 and then try to move around, upload and download files, create and delete directories, etc.
By subclassing Net::FTPServer
, Net::FTPServer::DirHandle
and/or
Net::FTPServer::FileHandle
you can create custom
personalities for the FTP server.
Typically by overriding the hooks in the Net::FTPServer
class
you can change the basic behaviour of the FTP server - turning
it into an anonymous read-only server, for example.
By overriding the hooks in Net::FTPServer::DirHandle
and
Net::FTPServer::FileHandle
you can create virtual filesystems:
serving files into and out of a database, for example.
The current manual page contains information about the
hooks in Net::FTPServer
which may be overridden.
See Net::FTPServer::DirHandle(3) for information about
the methods in Net::FTPServer::DirHandle
which may be
overridden.
See Net::FTPServer::FileHandle(3) for information about
the methods in Net::FTPServer::FileHandle
which may be
overridden.
The most reasonable way to create your own personality is
to extend one of the existing personalities. Choose the
one which most closely matches the personality that you
want to create. For example, suppose that you want to create
another database personality. A good place to start would
be by copying lib/Net/FTPServer/DBeg1/*.pm
to a new
directory lib/Net/FTPServer/MyDB/
(for example). Now
edit these files and substitute "MyDB" for "DBeg1". Then
examine each subroutine in these files and modify them,
consulting the appropriate manual page if you need to.
Net:FTPServer
is capable of hosting multiple FTP sites on
a single machine. Because of the nature of the FTP protocol,
virtual hosting is almost always done by allocating a single
separate IP address per FTP site. However, Net::FTPServer
also supports an experimental IP-less virtual hosting
system, although this requires modifications to the client.
Normal (IP-based) virtual hosting is carried out as follows:
* For each FTP site, allocate a separate IP address. * Configure IP aliasing on your normal interface so that the single physical interface responds to multiple virtual IP addresses. * Add entries (A records) in DNS mapping each site's name to a separate IP address. * Add reverse entries (PTR records) in DNS mapping each IP address back to the site hostname. It is important that both forward and reverse DNS is set up correctly, else virtual hosting may not work. * In /etc/ftpd.conf you will need to add a virtual host section for each site like this:
<Host sitename>
ip: 1.2.3.4 ... any specific configuration options for this site ...
</Host>
You don't in fact need the "ip:" part assuming that your forward and reverse DNS are set up correctly. * If you want to specify a lot of external sites, or generate the configuration file automatically from a database or a script, you may find the <Include filename> syntax useful.
There are examples in /etc/ftpd.conf
. Here is how
IP-based virtual hosting works:
* The server starts by listening on all interfaces. * A connection arrives at one of the IP addresses and a process is forked off. * The child process finds out which interface the client connected to and reverses the name. * If: the IP address matches one of the "ip:" declarations in any of the "Host" sections, or: there is a reversal for the name, and the name matches one of the "Host" sections in the configuration file, then: configuration options are read from that section of the file and override any global configuration options specified elsewhere in the file. * Otherwise, the global configuration options only are used.
IP-less virtual hosting is an experimental feature. It
requires the client to send a HOST
command very early
on in the command stream -- before USER
and PASS
. The
HOST
command explicitly gives the hostname that the
FTP client is attempting to connect to, and so allows
many FTP sites to be multiplexed onto a single IP
address. At the present time, I am not aware of any
FTP clients which implement the HOST
command, although
they will undoubtedly become more common in future.
This is how to set up IP-less virtual hosting:
* Add entries (A or CNAME records) in DNS mapping the name of each site to a single IP address. * In /etc/ftpd.conf you will need to list the same single IP address to which all your sites map:
virtual host multiplex: 1.2.3.4
* In /etc/ftpd.conf you will need to add a virtual host section for each site like this:
<Host sitename>
... any specific configuration options for this site ...
</Host>
Here is how IP-less virtual hosting works:
* The server starts by listening on one interface. * A connection arrives at the IP address and a process is forked off. * The IP address matches "virtual host multiplex" and so no IP-based virtual host processing is done. * One of the first commands that the client sends is "HOST" followed by the hostname of the site. * If there is a matching "Host" section in the configuration file, then configuration options are read from that section of the file and override any global configuration options specified elsewhere in the file. * If there is no matching "Host" section then the global configuration options alone are used.
The client is not permitted to issue the HOST
command
more than once, and is not permitted to issue it after
login.
Only certain configuration options are available inside the <Host> sections of the configuration file. Generally speaking, the only configuration options you can put here are ones which take effect after the site name has been determined -- hence "allow anonymous" is OK (since it's an option which is parsed after determining the site name and during log in), but "port" is not (since it is parsed long before any clients ever connect).
Make sure your default global configuration is
secure. If you are using IP-less virtual hosting,
this is particularly important, since if the client
never sends a HOST
command, the client gets
the global configuration. Even with IP-based virtual
hosting it may be possible for clients to sometimes
get the global configuration, for example if your
local name server fails.
IP-based virtual hosting always takes precedence above IP-less virtual hosting.
With IP-less virtual hosting, access control cannot
be performed on a per-site basis. This is because the
client has to issue commands (ie. the HOST
command
at least) before the site name is known to the server.
However you may still have a global "access control rule".
Beginning with version 1.100, Net::FTPServer
is able
to generate certain types of compressed and archived files
on the fly. In practice what this means is that if a user
requests, say, file.gz
and this file does not actually
exist (but file
does exist), then the server will
dynamically generate a gzip-compressed version of file
for the user. This also works on directories, so that a
user might request dir.tar.gz
which does not exist
(but directory dir
does exist), and the server tars
up and compresses the entire contents of dir
and
presents that back to the user.
Archive mode is enabled by default. However, it will
not work unless you substantially increase the per-process
memory, processes and files limits. The reason for this
is that archive mode works by forking external programs
such as gzip
to perform the compression. For the same
reason you may also need to ensure that at least
gzip
, compress
, bzip2
and uuencode
programs
are available on the current $PATH
, particularly if
you are using a chrooted environment.
To disable archive mode put enable archive mode: 0
into the configuration file.
The following file extensions are supported:
.gz GZip compressed. Requires gzip program on PATH. .Z Unix compressed. Requires compress program on PATH. .bz2 BZip2 compressed. Requires bzip2 program on PATH. .uue UU-encoded. Requires uuencode program on PATH. .tar Tar archive. Requires Perl Archive::Tar module. .zip DOS ZIP archive. Requires Perl Archive::Zip module. .list Return a list of all the files in this directory.
File extensions may be combined. Hence .tar.gz
,
.tar.bz2
and even .tar.gz.uue
will all work
as you expect.
Archive mode is, of course, extensible. It is particularly
simple to add another compression / filter format. In
your personality (or in a <Perl> section in the configuration
file) you need to add another key to the archive_filters
hash.
$ftps->{archive_filters}{".foo"} = &_foo_filter;
The value of this key should be a function as defined below:
\%filter = _foo_filter ($ftps, $sock);
The filter should return a hash reference (undef if it fails). The hash should contain the following keys:
sock Newly opened socket. pid PID of filter program.
The _foo_filter
function takes the existing socket and
filters it, providing a new socket which the FTP server will
write to (for the data connection back to the client). If
your filter is a Unix program, then the simplest thing is
just to define _foo_filter
as:
sub _foo_filter { return $_[0]->archive_filter_external ($_[1], "foo" [, args ...]); }
The archive_filter_external
function takes care of the
tricky bits for you.
Adding new generators (akin to the existing tar and ZIP) is more tricky. I suggest you look closely at the code and consult the author for more information.
This is the main entry point into the FTP server. It starts the FTP server running. This function never normally returns.
If no arguments are given, then command line arguments are taken
from the global @ARGV
array.
This is a general library function shared between many of the back-end database personalities. It converts a general wildcard (eg. *.c) into a regular expression (eg. ^.*\.c$ ).
Thanks to: Terrence Monroe Brannon <terrence.brannon@oracle.com>.
This is a general library function shared between many of the back-end database personalities. It converts a general wildcard (eg. *.c) into the strange wildcardish format used by SQL LIKE operator (eg. %.c).
This function sends a standard single line or multi-line FTP
server reply to the client. The $code
should be one of the
standard reply codes listed in RFC 959. The one or more
$line
arguments are the (free text) of the reply. Do
not include carriage returns at the end of each $line
.
This function adds the correct line ending format as specified
in the RFC.
This function is identical to the normal syslog
function
to be found in Sys::Syslog
. However, it only uses syslog
if the enable syslog
configuration option is set to true.
Use this function instead of calling syslog
directly.
Read configuration option $name
from the configuration file.
Look for a <Host> section which contains "ip: $ip_addr". If one is found, return the site name of the Host section. Otherwise return undef.
Apply $cmd
as a filter to socket $sock
. Returns a hash reference
which contains the following keys:
sock Newly opened socket. pid PID of filter program.
If it fails, returns undef
.
See section ARCHIVE MODE elsewhere in this manual for more information.
The visit
function recursively "visits" every file and directory
contained in $dirh
(which must be a directory handle).
\%functions
is a reference to a hash of file types to functions.
For example:
'f' => \&visit_file, 'd' => \&visit_directory, 'l' => \&visit_symlink, &c.
When a file of the known type is encountered, the appropriate
function is called with $_
set to the file handle. (All functions
are optional: if visit
encounters a file with a type not listed
in the %functions
hash, then that file is just ignored).
The return value from functions is ignored, except for the
return value from the directory ('d') function. The directory
function should return 1 to indicate that visit
should recurse
into that directory. If the directory function returns 0, then
visit
will skip that directory.
visit
will call the directory function once for $dirh
.
Open a data connection. Returns the socket (an instance of IO::Socket
) or undef if it fails for some reason.
Hook: Called before command line arguments and configuration file are read.
Status: optional.
Notes: You may append your own information to $self->{version_string}
from this hook.
Hook: Called before command line arguments are parsed.
Status: optional.
Notes: You can use this hook to supply your own command line arguments. If you parse any arguments, you should remove them from the @args array.
Hook: Called after all command line arguments and configuration file have been read and parsed.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called only in daemon mode after the control port is bound but before starting the accept infinite loop block.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called in daemon mode only just before accept(2)
is called
in the parent FTP server process.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called both in daemon mode and in inetd mode just after the connection has been accepted. This is called in the child process.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called after accept(2)
-ing the connection to perform access
control. Detailed request information is contained in the $self
object. If the function returns -1 then the socket is immediately
closed and no FTP processing happens on it. If the function returns 0,
then normal access control is performed on the socket before FTP
processing starts. If the function returns 1, then normal access
control is not performed on the socket and FTP processing begins
immediately.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called after accept(2)
-ing the connection to perform
per-process limits (eg. by using the setrlimit(2) system
call). Access control has already been performed and detailed
request information is contained in the $self
object.
If the function returns -1 then the socket is immediately closed and no FTP processing happens on it. If the function returns 0, then normal per-process limits are applied before any FTP processing starts. If the function returns 1, then normal per-process limits are not performed and FTP processing begins immediately.
Status: optional.
Hook: Called to perform authentication. If the authentication succeeds, this should return 0 (or any positive integer >= 0). If the authentication fails, this should return -1.
Status: required.
Hook: Called just after user $user
has successfully logged in. A good
place to change uid and chroot if necessary.
Status: optional.
Hook: Return an instance of a subclass of Net::FTPServer::DirHandle corresponding to the root directory.
Status: required.
Hook: This hook is called just before the server begins to wait for the client to issue the next command over the control connection.
Status: optional.
Hook: This hook is called immediately after the client issues
command $cmdline
, but before any checking or processing
is performed on the command. If this function returns -1, then
the server immediately goes back to waiting for the next
command. If this function returns 0, then normal command filtering
is carried out and the command is processed. If this function
returns 1 then normal command filtering is not performed
and the command processing begins immediately.
Important Note: This hook must be careful not to overwrite
the global $_
variable.
Do not use this function to add your own commands. Instead
use the $self->{command_table}
and $self->{site_command_table}
hashes.
Status: optional.
$mode - Open mode on the File object (Either reading or writing) $file - File object as returned from DirHandle::open $sock - Data IO::Socket object used for transfering \$buffer - Reference to current buffer about to be written
The \$buffer is passed by reference to minimize the stack overhead for efficiency purposes only. It is not meant to be modified by the transfer_hook subroutine. (It can cause corruption if the length of $buffer is modified.)
Hook: This hook is called after reading $buffer and before writing $buffer to its destination. If arg1 is "r", $buffer was read from the File object and written to the Data socket. If arg1 is "w", $buffer will be written to the File object because it was read from the Data Socket. The return value is the error for not being able to perform the write. Return undef to avoid aborting the transfer process.
Status: optional.
Hook: This hook is called after all command processing has been
carried out on this command. $cmd
is the command, and
$rest
is the remainder of the command line.
Status: optional.
Hook: This hook is used instead of $! when what looks like a system error occurs during a virtual filesystem handle method. It can be used by the virtual filesystem to provide explanatory text for a virtual filesystem failure which did not actually set the real $!.
Status: optional.
Hook: This hook is called after the user has QUIT
or if the FTP
client cleanly drops the connection. Please note, however, that this
hook is not called whenever the FTP server exits, particularly in
cases such as:
* The FTP server, the Perl interpreter or the personality crashes unexpectedly. * The user fails to log in. * The FTP server detects a fatal error, sends a "421" error code, and abruptly exits. * Idle timeouts. * Access control violations. * Manual server shutdowns.
Unfortunately it is not in general easily possible to catch these
cases and cleanly call a hook. If your personality needs to do cleanup
in all cases, then it is probably better to use an END
block inside
your Server object (see perlmod(3)). Even using an END
block
cannot catch cases where the Perl interpreter crashes.
Status: optional.
The SIZE, REST and RETR commands probably do not work correctly in ASCII mode.
REST does not work before STOR/STOU/APPE (is it supposed to?)
User upload/download limits.
Limit number of clients by host or IP address.
The following commands are recognized by wu-ftpd
, but are not yet
implemented by Net::FTPServer
:
SITE CHMOD There is a problem supporting this with our VFS. SITE GPASS Group functions are not really relevant for us. SITE GROUP -"- ditto -"- SITE GROUPS -"- ditto -"- SITE INDEX This is a synonym for SITE EXEC. SITE MINFO This command is no longer supported by wu-ftpd. SITE NEWER This command is no longer supported by wu-ftpd. SITE UMASK This command is difficult to support with VFS.
Symbolic links are not handled elegantly (or indeed at all) yet.
Equivalent of ProFTPD's ``DisplayReadme'' function.
The ability to hide dot files (probably best to build this into the VFS layer). This should apply across all commands. See ProFTPD's ``IgnoreHidden'' function.
Access to LDAP authentication database (can currently be done using a PAM module). In general, we should support pluggable authentication.
Log formatting similar to ProFTPD command LogFormat.
More timeouts to avoid various denial of service attacks. For example, the server should always timeout when waiting too long for an active data connection.
Support for IPv6 (see RFC 2428), EPRT, EPSV commands.
See also "XXX" comments in the code for other problems, missing features and bugs.
/etc/ftpd.conf /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/Net/FTPServer.pm /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/Net/FTPServer/DirHandle.pm /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/Net/FTPServer/FileHandle.pm /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/Net/FTPServer/Handle.pm
Richard Jones (rich@annexia.org), Rob Brown (bbb@cpan.org), Keith Turner (keitht at silvaco.com), Azazel (azazel at azazel.net), and many others.
Copyright (C) 2000 Biblio@Tech Ltd., Unit 2-3, 50 Carnwath Road, London, SW6 3EG, UK.
Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Richard Jones (rich@annexia.org) and other contributors.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Net::FTPServer::Handle(3), Net::FTPServer::FileHandle(3), Net::FTPServer::DirHandle(3), Net::FTP(3), perl(1), RFC 765, RFC 959, RFC 1579, RFC 2389, RFC 2428, RFC 2577, RFC 2640, Extensions to FTP Internet Draft draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-NN.txt.