xref: /freebsd/libexec/ftpd/ftpd.8 (revision 39ee7a7a6bdd1557b1c3532abf60d139798ac88b)
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28.\"     @(#)ftpd.8	8.2 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
29.\" $FreeBSD$
30.\"
31.Dd January 21, 2010
32.Dt FTPD 8
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm ftpd
36.Nd Internet File Transfer Protocol server
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl 468ADdEhMmOoRrSUvW
40.Op Fl l Op Fl l
41.Op Fl a Ar address
42.Op Fl P Ar port
43.Op Fl p Ar file
44.Op Fl T Ar maxtimeout
45.Op Fl t Ar timeout
46.Op Fl u Ar umask
47.Sh DESCRIPTION
48The
49.Nm
50utility is the
51Internet File Transfer Protocol
52server process.
53The server uses the
54.Tn TCP
55protocol
56and listens at the port specified with the
57.Fl P
58option or in the
59.Dq ftp
60service specification; see
61.Xr services 5 .
62.Pp
63Available options:
64.Bl -tag -width indent
65.It Fl 4
66When
67.Fl D
68is specified, accept connections via
69.Dv AF_INET
70socket.
71.It Fl 6
72When
73.Fl D
74is specified, accept connections via
75.Dv AF_INET6
76socket.
77.It Fl 8
78Enable transparent UTF-8 mode.
79RFC\ 2640 compliant clients will be told that the character encoding
80used by the server is UTF-8, which is the only effect of the option.
81.Pp
82This option does not enable any encoding conversion for server file names;
83it implies instead that the names of files on the server are encoded
84in UTF-8.
85As for files uploaded via FTP, it is the duty of the RFC\ 2640 compliant
86client to convert their names from the client's local encoding to UTF-8.
87FTP command names and own
88.Nm
89messages are always encoded in ASCII, which is a subset of UTF-8.
90Hence no need for server-side conversion at all.
91.It Fl A
92Allow only anonymous ftp access.
93.It Fl a
94When
95.Fl D
96is specified, accept connections only on the specified
97.Ar address .
98.It Fl D
99With this option set,
100.Nm
101will detach and become a daemon, accepting connections on the FTP port and
102forking children processes to handle them.
103This is lower overhead than starting
104.Nm
105from
106.Xr inetd 8
107and is thus useful on busy servers to reduce load.
108.It Fl d
109Debugging information is written to the syslog using
110.Dv LOG_FTP .
111.It Fl E
112Disable the EPSV command.
113This is useful for servers behind older firewalls.
114.It Fl h
115Disable printing host-specific information, such as the
116server software version or hostname, in server messages.
117.It Fl l
118Each successful and failed
119.Xr ftp 1
120session is logged using syslog with a facility of
121.Dv LOG_FTP .
122If this option is specified twice, the retrieve (get), store (put), append,
123delete, make directory, remove directory and rename operations and
124their filename arguments are also logged.
125By default,
126.Xr syslogd 8
127logs these to
128.Pa /var/log/xferlog .
129.It Fl M
130Prevent anonymous users from creating directories.
131.It Fl m
132Permit anonymous users to overwrite or modify
133existing files if allowed by file system permissions.
134By default, anonymous users cannot modify existing files;
135in particular, files to upload will be created under a unique name.
136.It Fl O
137Put server in write-only mode for anonymous users only.
138RETR is disabled for anonymous users, preventing anonymous downloads.
139This has no effect if
140.Fl o
141is also specified.
142.It Fl o
143Put server in write-only mode.
144RETR is disabled, preventing downloads.
145.It Fl P
146When
147.Fl D
148is specified, accept connections at
149.Ar port ,
150specified as a numeric value or service name, instead of at the default
151.Dq ftp
152port.
153.It Fl p
154When
155.Fl D
156is specified, write the daemon's process ID to
157.Ar file
158instead of the default pid file,
159.Pa /var/run/ftpd.pid .
160.It Fl R
161With this option set,
162.Nm
163will revert to historical behavior with regard to security checks on
164user operations and restrictions on PORT requests.
165Currently,
166.Nm
167will only honor PORT commands directed to unprivileged ports on the
168remote user's host (which violates the FTP protocol specification but
169closes some security holes).
170.It Fl r
171Put server in read-only mode.
172All commands which may modify the local file system are disabled.
173.It Fl S
174With this option set,
175.Nm
176logs all anonymous file downloads to the file
177.Pa /var/log/ftpd
178when this file exists.
179.It Fl T
180A client may also request a different timeout period;
181the maximum period allowed may be set to
182.Ar timeout
183seconds with the
184.Fl T
185option.
186The default limit is 2 hours.
187.It Fl t
188The inactivity timeout period is set to
189.Ar timeout
190seconds (the default is 15 minutes).
191.It Fl U
192This option instructs ftpd to use data ports in the range of
193.Dv IP_PORTRANGE_DEFAULT
194instead of in the range of
195.Dv IP_PORTRANGE_HIGH .
196Such a change may be useful for some specific firewall configurations;
197see
198.Xr ip 4
199for more information.
200.Pp
201Note that option is a virtual no-op in
202.Fx 5.0
203and above; both port
204ranges are identical by default.
205.It Fl u
206The default file creation mode mask is set to
207.Ar umask ,
208which is expected to be an octal numeric value.
209Refer to
210.Xr umask 2
211for details.
212This option may be overridden by
213.Xr login.conf 5 .
214.It Fl v
215A synonym for
216.Fl d .
217.It Fl W
218Do not log FTP sessions to the user accounting database.
219.El
220.Pp
221The file
222.Pa /var/run/nologin
223can be used to disable ftp access.
224If the file exists,
225.Nm
226displays it and exits.
227If the file
228.Pa /etc/ftpwelcome
229exists,
230.Nm
231prints it before issuing the
232.Dq ready
233message.
234If the file
235.Pa /etc/ftpmotd
236exists,
237.Nm
238prints it after a successful login.
239Note the motd file used is the one
240relative to the login environment.
241This means the one in
242.Pa ~ftp/etc
243in the anonymous user's case.
244.Pp
245The ftp server currently supports the following ftp requests.
246The case of the requests is ignored.
247Requests marked [RW] are
248disabled if
249.Fl r
250is specified.
251.Bl -column "Request" -offset indent
252.It Sy Request Ta Sy "Description"
253.It ABOR Ta "abort previous command"
254.It ACCT Ta "specify account (ignored)"
255.It ALLO Ta "allocate storage (vacuously)"
256.It APPE Ta "append to a file [RW]"
257.It CDUP Ta "change to parent of current working directory"
258.It CWD Ta "change working directory"
259.It DELE Ta "delete a file [RW]"
260.It EPRT Ta "specify data connection port, multiprotocol"
261.It EPSV Ta "prepare for server-to-server transfer, multiprotocol"
262.It FEAT Ta "give information on extended features of server"
263.It HELP Ta "give help information"
264.It LIST Ta "give list files in a directory" Pq Dq Li "ls -lgA"
265.It LPRT Ta "specify data connection port, multiprotocol"
266.It LPSV Ta "prepare for server-to-server transfer, multiprotocol"
267.It MDTM Ta "show last modification time of file"
268.It MKD Ta "make a directory [RW]"
269.It MODE Ta "specify data transfer" Em mode
270.It NLST Ta "give name list of files in directory"
271.It NOOP Ta "do nothing"
272.It PASS Ta "specify password"
273.It PASV Ta "prepare for server-to-server transfer"
274.It PORT Ta "specify data connection port"
275.It PWD Ta "print the current working directory"
276.It QUIT Ta "terminate session"
277.It REST Ta "restart incomplete transfer"
278.It RETR Ta "retrieve a file"
279.It RMD Ta "remove a directory [RW]"
280.It RNFR Ta "specify rename-from file name [RW]"
281.It RNTO Ta "specify rename-to file name [RW]"
282.It SITE Ta "non-standard commands (see next section)"
283.It SIZE Ta "return size of file"
284.It STAT Ta "return status of server"
285.It STOR Ta "store a file [RW]"
286.It STOU Ta "store a file with a unique name [RW]"
287.It STRU Ta "specify data transfer" Em structure
288.It SYST Ta "show operating system type of server system"
289.It TYPE Ta "specify data transfer" Em type
290.It USER Ta "specify user name"
291.It XCUP Ta "change to parent of current working directory (deprecated)"
292.It XCWD Ta "change working directory (deprecated)"
293.It XMKD Ta "make a directory (deprecated) [RW]"
294.It XPWD Ta "print the current working directory (deprecated)"
295.It XRMD Ta "remove a directory (deprecated) [RW]"
296.El
297.Pp
298The following non-standard or
299.Ux
300specific commands are supported
301by the
302SITE request.
303.Bl -column Request -offset indent
304.It Sy Request Ta Sy Description
305.It UMASK Ta change umask, e.g. ``SITE UMASK 002''
306.It IDLE Ta set idle-timer, e.g. ``SITE IDLE 60''
307.It CHMOD Ta "change mode of a file [RW], e.g. ``SITE CHMOD 755 filename''"
308.It MD5 Ta "report the files MD5 checksum, e.g. ``SITE MD5 filename''"
309.It HELP Ta give help information
310.El
311.Pp
312Note: SITE requests are disabled in case of anonymous logins.
313.Pp
314The remaining ftp requests specified in Internet RFC 959
315are
316recognized, but not implemented.
317MDTM and SIZE are not specified in RFC 959, but will appear in the
318next updated FTP RFC.
319To avoid possible denial-of-service attacks, SIZE requests against
320files larger than 10240 bytes will be denied if the current transfer
321type is ASCII.
322.Pp
323The ftp server will abort an active file transfer only when the
324ABOR
325command is preceded by a Telnet "Interrupt Process" (IP)
326signal and a Telnet "Synch" signal in the command Telnet stream,
327as described in Internet RFC 959.
328If a
329STAT
330command is received during a data transfer, preceded by a Telnet IP
331and Synch, transfer status will be returned.
332.Pp
333The
334.Nm
335utility interprets file names according to the
336.Dq globbing
337conventions used by
338.Xr csh 1 .
339This allows users to utilize the metacharacters
340.Dq Li \&*?[]{}~ .
341.Pp
342The
343.Nm
344utility authenticates users according to six rules.
345.Bl -enum -offset indent
346.It
347The login name must be in the password data base
348and not have a null password.
349In this case a password must be provided by the client before any
350file operations may be performed.
351If the user has an OPIE key, the response from a successful USER
352command will include an OPIE challenge.
353The client may choose to respond with a PASS command giving either
354a standard password or an OPIE one-time password.
355The server will automatically determine which type of
356password it has been given and attempt to authenticate accordingly.
357See
358.Xr opie 4
359for more information on OPIE authentication.
360.It
361The login name must not appear in the file
362.Pa /etc/ftpusers .
363.It
364The login name must not be a member of a group specified in the file
365.Pa /etc/ftpusers .
366Entries in this file interpreted as group names are prefixed by an "at"
367.Ql \&@
368sign.
369.It
370The user must have a standard shell returned by
371.Xr getusershell 3 .
372.It
373If the user name appears in the file
374.Pa /etc/ftpchroot ,
375or the user is a member of a group with a group entry in this file,
376i.e., one prefixed with
377.Ql \&@ ,
378the session's root will be changed to the directory specified
379in this file or to the user's login directory by
380.Xr chroot 2
381as for an
382.Dq anonymous
383or
384.Dq ftp
385account (see next item).
386See
387.Xr ftpchroot 5
388for a detailed description of the format of this file.
389This facility may also be triggered by enabling the boolean "ftp-chroot"
390capability in
391.Xr login.conf 5 .
392However, the user must still supply a password.
393This feature is intended as a compromise between a fully anonymous
394account and a fully privileged account.
395The account should also be set up as for an anonymous account.
396.It
397If the user name is
398.Dq anonymous
399or
400.Dq ftp ,
401an
402anonymous ftp account must be present in the password
403file (user
404.Dq ftp ) .
405In this case the user is allowed
406to log in by specifying any password (by convention an email address for
407the user should be used as the password).
408When the
409.Fl S
410option is set, all transfers are logged as well.
411.El
412.Pp
413In the last case,
414.Nm
415takes special measures to restrict the client's access privileges.
416The server performs a
417.Xr chroot 2
418to the home directory of the
419.Dq ftp
420user.
421As a special case if the
422.Dq ftp
423user's home directory pathname contains the
424.Pa /./
425separator,
426.Nm
427uses its left-hand side as the name of the directory to do
428.Xr chroot 2
429to, and its right-hand side to change the current directory to afterwards.
430A typical example for this case would be
431.Pa /usr/local/ftp/./pub .
432In order that system security is not breached, it is recommended
433that the
434.Dq ftp
435subtree be constructed with care, following these rules:
436.Bl -tag -width "~ftp/pub" -offset indent
437.It Pa ~ftp
438Make the home directory owned by
439.Dq root
440and unwritable by anyone.
441.It Pa ~ftp/etc
442Make this directory owned by
443.Dq root
444and unwritable by anyone (mode 555).
445The files pwd.db (see
446.Xr passwd 5 )
447and
448.Xr group 5
449must be present for the
450.Xr ls 1
451command to be able to produce owner names rather than numbers.
452The password field in
453.Xr passwd 5
454is not used, and should not contain real passwords.
455The file
456.Pa ftpmotd ,
457if present, will be printed after a successful login.
458These files should be mode 444.
459.It Pa ~ftp/pub
460This directory and the subdirectories beneath it should be owned
461by the users and groups responsible for placing files in them,
462and be writable only by them (mode 755 or 775).
463They should
464.Em not
465be owned or writable by
466.Dq ftp
467or its group, otherwise guest users
468can fill the drive with unwanted files.
469.El
470.Pp
471If the system has multiple IP addresses,
472.Nm
473supports the idea of virtual hosts, which provides the ability to
474define multiple anonymous ftp areas, each one allocated to a different
475internet address.
476The file
477.Pa /etc/ftphosts
478contains information pertaining to each of the virtual hosts.
479Each host is defined on its own line which contains a number of
480fields separated by whitespace:
481.Bl -tag -offset indent -width hostname
482.It hostname
483Contains the hostname or IP address of the virtual host.
484.It user
485Contains a user record in the system password file.
486As with normal anonymous ftp, this user's access uid, gid and group
487memberships determine file access to the anonymous ftp area.
488The anonymous ftp area (to which any user is chrooted on login)
489is determined by the home directory defined for the account.
490User id and group for any ftp account may be the same as for the
491standard ftp user.
492.It statfile
493File to which all file transfers are logged, which
494defaults to
495.Pa /var/log/ftpd .
496.It welcome
497This file is the welcome message displayed before the server ready
498prompt.
499It defaults to
500.Pa /etc/ftpwelcome .
501.It motd
502This file is displayed after the user logs in.
503It defaults to
504.Pa /etc/ftpmotd .
505.El
506.Pp
507Lines beginning with a '#' are ignored and can be used to include
508comments.
509.Pp
510Defining a virtual host for the primary IP address or hostname
511changes the default for ftp logins to that address.
512The 'user', 'statfile', 'welcome' and 'motd' fields may be left
513blank, or a single hyphen '-' used to indicate that the default
514value is to be used.
515.Pp
516As with any anonymous login configuration, due care must be given
517to setup and maintenance to guard against security related problems.
518.Pp
519The
520.Nm
521utility has internal support for handling remote requests to list
522files, and will not execute
523.Pa /bin/ls
524in either a chrooted or non-chrooted environment.
525The
526.Pa ~/bin/ls
527executable need not be placed into the chrooted tree, nor need the
528.Pa ~/bin
529directory exist.
530.Sh FILES
531.Bl -tag -width ".Pa /var/run/ftpd.pid" -compact
532.It Pa /etc/ftpusers
533List of unwelcome/restricted users.
534.It Pa /etc/ftpchroot
535List of normal users who should be chroot'd.
536.It Pa /etc/ftphosts
537Virtual hosting configuration file.
538.It Pa /etc/ftpwelcome
539Welcome notice.
540.It Pa /etc/ftpmotd
541Welcome notice after login.
542.It Pa /var/run/ftpd.pid
543Default pid file for daemon mode.
544.It Pa /var/run/nologin
545Displayed and access refused.
546.It Pa /var/log/ftpd
547Log file for anonymous transfers.
548.It Pa /var/log/xferlog
549Default place for session logs.
550.El
551.Sh SEE ALSO
552.Xr ftp 1 ,
553.Xr umask 2 ,
554.Xr getusershell 3 ,
555.Xr opie 4 ,
556.Xr ftpchroot 5 ,
557.Xr login.conf 5 ,
558.Xr inetd 8 ,
559.Xr syslogd 8
560.Sh HISTORY
561The
562.Nm
563utility appeared in
564.Bx 4.2 .
565IPv6 support was added in WIDE Hydrangea IPv6 stack kit.
566.Sh BUGS
567The server must run as the super-user
568to create sockets with privileged port numbers.
569It maintains
570an effective user id of the logged in user, reverting to
571the super-user only when binding addresses to sockets.
572The
573possible security holes have been extensively
574scrutinized, but are possibly incomplete.
575