Thanks to everyone who has responded with suggestions. I am going to
start testing Proftpd today if all goes well. I have a new question in
regards to setting it up. I went to the Proftpd website and it stated
that it was included with fink, which I downloaded. The ProFTPD
package
is listed on the fink website as included but I can not find the
package. I have downloaded the source code and now need some help with
resources to figure out what I am doing being the UNIX neophyte that I
am. I am assuming that I need to compile the package using Xcode since
the package is not included in fink. What are some good resources to
learn about using Xcode and learning to compile? I am not sure if I am
using the correct language. I am going to start with the Xcode
documentation but any other helpful resources that you could recommend
would be appreciated.
Jon Hough
Systems Administrator
FASTSIGNS International
email@hidden
800-827-7446 ext. 234
For Technical Support Call 877-378-3241
-----Original Message-----
From: macos-x-server-bounces+jon.hough=email@hidden
[mailto:macos-x-server-bounces+jon.hough=email@hidden]
On Behalf Of Dan Shoop
Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2004 6:45 PM
To: Chuck Theobald; email@hidden
Subject: Re: Xserve, FTP Server solution.
At 11:16 AM -0700 10/27/04, Chuck Theobald wrote:
Jon,
We had problems making the stock OS X ftp server actually work, it
would crash on each connect attempt. Also, since it (xftpd) is based
on wu-ftpd, known for past security problems, we had security
concerns.
We replaced the stock xftpd with PureFTPD. In retrospect, I probably
would have gone with proftpd instead for more product maturity and
richer configuration options. The downside is that the GUI seems
hardwired for xftpd, so configuration will need to be done with an
actual text editor (your favorite, or vi ;-) ).
It can be made to start on demand by editing the file
/etc/xinetd.d/ftp.
If you plan on supporting a lot of FTP traffic you'll do best to run
the
FTPd server stand alone.
The upside is proftpd can be made to authenticate against Open
Directory (OpenLDAP with Apple mods) via pam, so you can manage user
accounts in the Workgroup Manager.
ProFTP can authenticate MANY different ways. In ISP scenarios RADIUS
gets a lot of attention too.
The setup you describe could easily be replicated with some shell
scripting to create the directories and set permissions and/or
restoring from your backups to the OS X server.
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