Pure-FTPd
Pure-FTPd is an FTP server designed with security in mind.
Installation
pure-ftpdAUR can be installed from the Arch User Repository.
Start and enable pure-ftpd.service
.
Configuration
Pure-FTPd configuration is completely done with its startup arguments.
There is a wrapper script, which reads /etc/pure-ftpd/pure-ftpd.conf
. It then starts Pure-FTPd with the corresponding arguments.
Set up virtual users
With Pure-FTPd, it is possible to use virtual users instead of real system users.
The available users need to be provided by one ore more backends. See backends.
For simplicity and demonstration purposes, the PureDB backend will be used. Uncomment the following two lines:
# We disable the anonymous account. NoAnonymous yes # We use PureDB as backend and specify its path. PureDB /etc/pureftpd.pdb
Now only authenticated users can connect. To add users to the PureDB we need to create a /etc/passwd
-like file which is then used to create the PureDB.
To create, view, or modify the /etc/pureftpd.passwd
file, we use the pure-pw
command.
# pure-pw useradd someuser -u ftp -d /srv/ftp
This creates the user someuser which runs as the FTP system user. By default, the user is chrooted to /srv/ftp
. In the event that that's undesirable, replace -d
with -D
.
The virtual users running as the FTP system users can not log in by default. To change that behavior, set the option MinUID in /etc/pure-ftpd.conf
to 14 (UID of the ftp user).
We also need to list the shell of the FTP system user in /etc/shells
.
# echo "/bin/false" >> /etc/shells
--with-virtualchroot
. You can use mount --bind source target
as a workaround.Before this account is usable, we need to commit our changes:
# pure-pw mkdb
The virtual user can now access everything in /srv/ftp
.
The command pure-pw mkdb
creates the file mentioned earlier called /etc/pureftpd.pdb
, which houses all information related to your virtual users. There is no need to restart your service when issuing this command as it is updated on the fly and changes take effect immediately.
Changing user password
For example, to change a user's password, type the command:
# pure-pw passwd someuser
Afterwards, commit your changes by updating /etc/pureftpd.pdb
:
# pure-pw mkdb
Removing user
To remove a user, type the command:
# pure-pw userdel someuser
The user's home directory is not removed via this command; therefore, it must be removed manually.
Checking user settings
To check a user's current account settings, type the command:
# pure-pw show someuser
Backends
You need to specify one or more backends. If you specify more than one, Pure-FTPd will respect the order in which they are specified. It will use the first backend which contains the requested user.
Available backends are:
/etc/passwd
- MySQL
- LDAP
- PostgreSQL
- PAM
- PureDB
- Or you can write your own
Set up TLS
Create a certificate
Refer to the documentation for more information. The short version is this:
Create a Self-Signed Certificate:
# mkdir -p /etc/ssl/private # openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 7300 -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -keyout /etc/ssl/private/pure-ftpd.pem -out /etc/ssl/private/pure-ftpd.pem
Make it private:
# chmod 600 /etc/ssl/private/*.pem
Enable TLS
Towards the bottom of /etc/pure-ftpd.conf
you should find a section for TLS. Uncomment and change the TLS setting to 1
to enable both FTP and FTPS:
TLS 1
Now restart the pure-ftpd.service
daemon and you should be able to log in with FTPS-enabled clients, e.g. filezilla or SmartFTP.