ProFTPD mini-HOWTO Index
The following is a collection of mini-HOWTOs that cover most of the common
questions asked about ProFTPD and how to configure it.
Recommended order of reading:
- The
proftpd.conf
file
- Covers the location and format of ProFTPD's configuration file, and
some of the basic functionality
- On configuring the
ServerType
- Covers how to configure ProFTPD to operate as a standalone daemon or
one run via inetd/xinetd
- On how clients are authenticated
- Covers the steps taken in authenticating a user, and how authentication
involves PAM, chroots, shells, etc.
- On
DefaultRoot
and chroots
- Covers the
DefaultRoot
configuration directive, chroots,
and why symlinks do not work as expected when chroots are in effect
- On
AuthUserFiles
- Covers the use of
AuthUserFile
and
AuthGroupFile
- On the
Umask
directive
- Covers how
Umask
works, including a basic introduction
to Unix filesystem permissions
- On debugging
- Covers how to configure the daemon so that it produces debugging
output, which greatly helps in diagnosing problems
- On upgrading
- Covers the best way to perform an upgrade of ProFTPD
- On
<VirtualHost>
sections
- Covers how to configure virtual servers, listening on only one IP
address, and how the daemon handles client connections to its
virtual servers
- On virtual users
- Covers what virtual users are, how
proftpd
can be
configured to handle virtual users from various sources
(i.e. SQL, flat files, LDAP, etc).
- On using
proftpd
in a firewall/NAT
environment
- Covers how NAT and passive FTP data transfers work, how to configure
proftpd
to operate in such environments
- On ProFTPD quotas
- Covers how the
mod_quotatab
module can be used for implementing quotas
- On the
ListOptions
directive
- Covers how the
ListOptions
directive can be used to
specify the directory listing options for clients, including showing
hidden files and disabling recursive directory listings
- On DSO modules
- Covers what DSO modules are, and how to use them properly
- On ASCII transfers
- Covers ASCII mode for data transfers, and the affected FTP commands
- On FXP, also known as site-to-site transfers
- Covers why allowing site-to-site transfers is considered a bad idea,
and how to configure
proftpd
to allow them
- On DNS usage
- Covers when and how
proftpd
uses the DNS
- On
<Directory>
sections
- Covers how
<Directory>
sections should be configured,
and how the configured paths are matched
- On
<Limit>
sections
- Covers how
<Limit>
sections should be configured,
and how different <Limit>
s interact
- On the
FTP
commands supported
- Provides descriptions of the FTP commands supported by the daemon,
including some common
SITE
commands
- On the various forms of logging
- Covers the various log files that ProFTPD can generate, and how
logging capabilities can be extended
- On SQL configurations
- Covers configuring
mod_sql
and how to set up your SQL
tables, and some of the common questions about using mod_sql
- On using FTP over SSH
- Covers tunneling FTP over SSH
- On SSL/TLS configurations
- Covers configuring the daemon to handle FTP over SSL/TLS (also known
as FTPS), including some of the common questions about FTPS.
- On starting/stopping the daemon
- Covers how the daemon is commonly started, stopped, and restarted,
and includes an example
init
script
- On the ScoreboardFile
- Covers what the scoreboard does, and some of the common questions
about scoreboards
- On Classes
- Covers defining and using classes
- On
Display
files
- Covers the various
Display
directives
- On Controls
- Covers Controls and
mod_ctrls
- On Filters
- Covers the various
Filter
directives, and how to write
regular expressions that match what you want
- On Regular Expressions
- Covers POSIX regular expressions
- On globbing
- Covers what globbing is, how it can cause problems, and how to
configure the daemon to defend against globbing attacks
- On best common practices
- Covers some of the best common and recommended practices for
configuring and running
proftpd
If your question or issue is not covered by any of these pages, please
send a request to the ProFTPD documentation list. Directions for subscribing
to the docs list, as well as the other ProFTPD mailing lists, are at:
http://www.proftpd.org/lists.html
If you are looking to see if ProFTPD supports a particular feature, the
first place to look as the complete list of configuration directives:
http://www.proftpd.org/docs/directives/linked/by-name.html
The list may be intimidatingly long, but it is well worth scanning through
all of the directives to see everything that ProFTPD is capable of supporting.
Last Updated: $Date: 2006/01/11 13:55:36 $