Yo, mit proftpd gings viel einfacher, zumindest die Installation war ein Klacks.
Nun muss ich bloss noch die proftpd.conf Datei editieren. Der Dienst an sich läuft, bzw. der Server reagiert schonmal auf ftp.
Jetzt muss ich nur noch die Authentifizierung hinkriegen. Im Grunde reicht EIN User, der in nem Ordner per FTP lesen und schreiben können soll. Hintergrund: Ich will die Funktion "Frei/Gebucht" testen, dazu kann man Outlook Kalendertermine auf nen ftp ablegen, und andere Leut können diese dann einlesen bzw. ihre Termine abgleichen...
Hatte ich schon erwähnt dass Linux sche... ist?
Okok ich geb auch gleich morgen mein vor Jahren erschlichenes Zertifikat ab...
# This is the ProFTPD configuration file
# $Id: proftpd.conf,v 1.6 2003/09/24 10:51:11 dude Exp $
ServerName "ProFTPD server"
ServerIdent on "FTP Server ready."
ServerAdmin root@localhost
ServerType standalone
#ServerType inetd
DefaultServer on
AccessGrantMsg "User %u logged in."
DisplayConnect /etc/ftpissue
DisplayLogin /etc/ftpmotd
DisplayGoAway /etc/ftpgoaway
DeferWelcome on
# Use this to excude users from the chroot
DefaultRoot ~ !adm
# Use pam to authenticate by default
AuthPAMAuthoritative on
# Do not perform ident nor DNS lookups (hangs when the port is filtered)
IdentLookups off
UseReverseDNS off
# Port 21 is the standard FTP port.
Port 21
# Umask 022 is a good standard umask to prevent new dirs and files
# from being group and world writable.
Umask 022
# Default to show dot files in directory listings
ListOptions "-a"
# See Configuration.html for these (here are the default values)
#MultilineRFC2228 off
#RootLogin off
LoginPasswordPrompt on
#MaxLoginAttempts 3
MaxClientsPerHost 100
AllowForeignAddress on # For FXP
# Allow to resume not only the downloads but the uploads too
AllowRetrieveRestart on
AllowStoreRestart on
# To prevent DoS attacks, set the maximum number of child processes
# to 30. If you need to allow more than 30 concurrent connections
# at once, simply increase this value. Note that this ONLY works
# in standalone mode, in inetd mode you should use an inetd server
# that allows you to limit maximum number of processes per service
# (such as xinetd)
MaxInstances 20
# Set the user and group that the server normally runs at.
User nobody
Group nobody
# This is where we want to put the pid file
ScoreboardFile /var/run/proftpd.score
# Normally, we want users to do a few things.
<Global>
AllowOverwrite yes
<Limit ALL SITE_CHMOD>
AllowAll yes
</Limit>
</Global>
# Define the log formats
LogFormat default "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %s %b"
LogFormat auth "%v [%P] %h %t \"%r\" %s"
# TLS
# Explained at
http://www.castaglia.org/proftpd/modules/mod_tls.html
#TLSEngine on
#TLSRequired on
#TLSRSACertificateFile /usr/share/ssl/certs/proftpd.pem
#TLSRSACertificateKeyFile /usr/share/ssl/certs/proftpd.pem
#TLSCipherSuite ALL:!ADH:!DES
#TLSOptions NoCertRequest
#TLSVerifyClient off
##TLSRenegotiate ctrl 3600 data 512000 required off timeout 300
#TLSLog /var/log/proftpd/tls.log
# A basic anonymous configuration, with an upload directory.
#<Anonymous ~ftp>
User ftp
Group ftp
AccessGrantMsg "Anonymous login ok, restrictions apply."
#
# # We want clients to be able to login with "anonymous" as well as "ftp"
UserAlias anonymous ftp
#
# # Limit the maximum number of anonymous logins
MaxClients 10 "Sorry, max %m users -- try again later"
#
# Put the user into /pub right after login
DefaultChdir /pub
#
# # We want 'welcome.msg' displayed at login, '.message' displayed in
# # each newly chdired directory and tell users to read README* files.
DisplayLogin /welcome.msg
DisplayFirstChdir .message
DisplayReadme README*
#
# # Some more cosmetic and not vital stuff
# DirFakeUser on ftpadm
# DirFakeGroup on ftpadm
#
# # Limit WRITE everywhere in the anonymous chroot
# <Limit WRITE SITE_CHMOD>
# DenyAll
# </Limit>
#
# # An upload directory that allows storing files but not retrieving
# # or creating directories.
# <Directory freebusy/*>
# AllowOverwrite no
# <Limit READ>
# DenyAll
# </Limit>
#
# <Limit STOR>
# AllowAll
# </Limit>
# </Directory>
#
# # Don't write anonymous accesses to the system wtmp file (good idea!)
# WtmpLog off
#
# # Logging for the anonymous transfers
# ExtendedLog /var/log/proftpd/access.log WRITE,READ default
# ExtendedLog /var/log/proftpd/auth.log AUTH auth
#
#</Anonymous>