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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS -------------------------------------------------- * Users can delete root-owned files? -> I have a directory owned by 'john', but I've put some files owned by 'root' (or another user) in it. However, I noticed that John can delete these files! Yes, this is the standard Unix behavior: the owner of a directory can do whatever he likes to do in his directory, regardless of who owns the file in it. If you want to have immutable files, check for such a feature in your operating system. For instance, on Linux filesystems, "chattr +i <file>" does the trick. On BSD systems, try "chflags schg <file>" . * Directories shared by multiple users. -> I have a "public" directory. All users can download and upload files from/to this directory. Permissions are 777 on it. But user 'john' can delete files owned by user 'joe'. How to prevent this? Put the sticky bit on that directory: chmod 1777 public. That way, the directory remains public (read/write), but people can only delete files they own. * Restricting directory visibility. -> I want that people only see their home directory and their own files. I don't want them to look at my systems files. This feature is called "chroot". You can enable this by running pure-ftpd with the "-A" switch to do this with ALL your users (but root) . You can alternatively use "-a <gid>" to have a "trusted group". Everyone will be caged, EXCEPT members of that group. Don't use -a <gid> and -A together. Another way is to selectively choose what users you want to chroot. This can be done with the /./ trick (see the README file about this) or with virtual users. * Shared directories and chroot. -> I have a directory, say /var/incoming, that I want to be shared by every user. But I want my users to be chrooted. So /var/incoming should be visible in 'joe' and 'john' accounts, but those are chrooted. So, how to have the content of /var/incoming visible in these accounts? Making a symbolic link won't work, because when you are chrooted, it means that everything outside a base directory (your user's home directory) won't be reachable, even though a symbolic link. But all modern operating systems can mount local directories to several locations. To have an exact duplicate of your /var/incoming directory available in /home/john/incoming and /home/joe/incoming, use one of these commands: * Linux : mount --bind /var/incoming /home/john/incoming mount --bind /var/incoming /home/joe/incoming * Solaris : mount -F lofs /var/incoming /home/john/incoming mount -F lofs /var/incoming /home/joe/incoming * FreeBSD : mount_null /var/incoming /home/john/incoming mount_null /var/incoming /home/joe/incoming Another alternative is to compile Pure-FTPd with --with-virtualchroot as a ./configure option. With virtual chroot, symbolic links pointing outside a chroot jail *are* followed. Binary packages are compiled with this feature turned on. * Tar and/or gzip on the fly -> Is it possible to use a command like "get directory.tar" as with Wu-FTPd ? (Sven Goldt) Unfortunately, no. Server-side gzip/tar creation is not a present nor a planned feature. It has been responsible of severe security flaws in Wu-ftpd and BSD ftpd, it can take a lot of server resource (denial-of-service) and it's a pain to set up (chrooted environment => need to add /etc /lib /bin directories, /dev on some platforms, etc) . * How to restrict access to dot files ? -> Is there an option to prevent people from accessing "." files/dirs (such as .bash_history, .profile, .ssh ...) EVEN if they are owned by the user ? (William Kern) Yes. '-x' (--prohibitdotfileswrite) denies write/delete/chmod/rename of dot-files, even if they are owned by the user. They can be listed, though, because security through obscurity is dumb and software shouldn't lie to you. But users can't change the content of these files. Alternatively, you can use '-X' (--prohibitdotfilesread) to also prevent users from READING these files and going into directories that begin with "." . * Log files -> Where does logging info go ? How to redirect it to a specific file ? How to suppress logging ? Log messages are sent to the syslog daemon. The syslog daemon is often called syslogd or syslog-ng. He's in charge of dispatching logging events from various programs to log files, according to a "facility" (category) and a "priority" (urgency: debug, info, warning, error, critical...) . Pure-FTPd logging messages are send with the "ftp" facility by default (or "local2" on some older systems without the "ftp" facility) . Unless you told the syslogd to redirect messages with the "ftp" facility to a specific file, the messages will be merged into /var/adm/messages, /var/log/messages, /var/adm/syslog or /var/log/syslog. Check /etc/syslogd.conf. You should have a line like: *.*;mail.none;news.none -/var/log/messages just add ftp.none: *.*;ftp.none;mail.none;news.none -/var/log/messages And if you want FTP info go in a specific file, just add: ftp.* /var/log/ftp and all FTP messages will go in /var/log/ftp . And only there. The facility can be changed if you add the -f <facility> option to pure-ftpd (or --facility=<facility>) . To completely disable logging, use -f none (or --facility=none) . If you don't read your log files, it's recommended: it will improve performance and reduce disk I/O. * How to prevent your partitions to be filled -> Is it possible to forbid new uploads when the disk is almost full ? (Cyberic) Use the "-k" (--maxdiskusagepct) flag. If you add -k 95 , no new upload can occur if your partition if more than 95% full. * Firewalling -> My FTP server is behind a firewall. What ports should I open? First, you have to open port 21 TO the FTP server. You also have to allow connections FROM (not to) ports <= 20 (of the FTP server) to everywhere. That's enough to handle the "active" mode. But that's not enough to handle all types of clients. Most clients will use another mode to transmit data called 'passive' mode. It's a bit more secure than 'active' mode, but you need to open more ports on your firewall to have it work. So, open some ports TO the FTP server. These ports should be > 1023. It's recommended to use at least twice the max number of clients you are expecting. So, if you accept 200 concurrent sessions, opening ports 50000 to 50400 is ok. Then, run pure-ftpd with the '-p' switch followed by the range configured in your firewall. Example: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd -p 50000:50400 & Unlike some popular belief, the MORE opened ports you have for passive FTP, the MORE your FTP server will be secure, because the LESS you are vulnerable to data hijacking. If your firewall also does network translation (NAT), you have to enable port forwarding for all passive ports. On the client side, if a client if behind a firewall, that firewall must understand the FTP protocol. On Linux firewalls (iptables), just load the ip_conntrack_ftp and ip_nat_ftp modules. On OpenBSD, ISOS and FreeBSD 5 firewalls (PF), redirect all traffic to port 21, to ftp-proxy. * Unable to log in (unix authentication) -> I'm using simple Unix authentication. No PAM, no puredb, no MySQL, no LDAP. Anonymous FTP works, but I can't log in as any other user. It keeps saying "authentication failed". To log in, the shell assigned to your users must be listed in the /etc/shells file. The exact path should be there, even for fake shells like /etc or /bin/true. Also double check that you have a carriage return after the last line in /etc/shells. * Network filesystems. -> I have a strange problem on Linux or FreeBSD. Uploading a file works fine, but downloading a file only create 0-byte files. On the server, these files are on NFS/Novell shares/Appletalk shares/Coda/Intermezzo/SMB volumes. By default, pure-ftpd uses zero-copy networking in order to increase throughput and reduce the CPU load. But zero-copy doesn't work with all filesystems, especially network filesystems. You have to disable zero-copy if you want to serve files from a network FS or from a TMPFS virtual disk. To disable zero-copy, recompile pure-ftpd with ./configure --without-sendfile * Solaris and chroot. -> When I ftp to my Solaris server, I get this as an answer to 'ls': "425 Can't create the data socket: Bad file number." On Solaris, to get chroot to work with pure-ftpd you need a dev directory in your new rootdir with these: crw-rw-rw- 1 root other 11, 42 Dec 10 15:02 tcp crw-rw-rw- 1 root other 105, 1 Dec 10 15:02 ticotsord crw-rw-rw- 1 root other 11, 41 Dec 10 15:03 udp crw-rw-rw- 1 root other 13, 12 Dec 10 15:03 zero (Reported by Kenneth Stailey) * Upgrading. -> Can anyone explain how to update Pureftpd (from source), without having to change all my settings etc. (Simon H) 1) get the source code and unpack it. 2) ./configure it with your favorite options 3) make 4) rm -f /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd 5) make install-strip 6) if you run pure-ftpd from inetd,tcpserver,xinetd, etc: nothing left to do. You have it upgraded. 7) if you run it standalone, stop the server: kill $(cat /var/run/pure-ftpd.pid) then launch it again: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd & * FTP over SSH. -> How to run Pure-FTPd over SSH? I want to encrypt all connection data (including passwords) . FTP-over-SSH is a nice alternative over FTP-over-TLS (impossible to securely firewall) and SFTP (which is slower, but only uses one port) . Customers using Windows can use FTP-over-SSH with the excellent Van Dyke's SecureFX client (http://www.vandyke.com) . It doesn't require any special knowledge: just tell your customer to check "FTP-over-SSH2" in the "Protocol" listbox when creating an account for your FTP server. On the server side, here's how to manage FTP-over-SSH accounts: 1) Add /usr/bin/false to your /etc/shells file (on some systems, it's /bin/false) . 2) To create a FTP-over-SSH account, create a system account with /dev/null as a home directory and /usr/bin/false as a shell. You don't need a dedicated uid: the same uid can be reused for every FTP-over-SSH account. 3) Create a virtual user account for that user (either with PureDB, SQL or LDAP) . Give that virtual user a real home directory and only allow connections coming from 127.0.0.1 (all FTP-over-SSH sessions will come from localhost, due to SSH tunneling) . People with no home directory (/dev/null) and no valid shell (/usr/bin/false) won't be able to get a shell nor to run any command on your server. But they will be granted FTP-over-SSH sessions. Here are examples (Linux/OpenBSD/ISOS commands, translate them if necessary) . 1) Creating a regular FTP account: pure-pw useradd customer1 -m -d /home/customer1 -u ftpuser 2) Creating a FTP-over-SSH account (non-encrypted sessions are denied): useradd -u ftpuser -g ftpgroup -d /dev/null -s /usr/bin/false customer2 pure-pw useradd customer2 -m -d /home/customer2 -u ftpuser -r 127.0.0.1/32 3) Creating an account who can use regular (unencrypted) FTP from the internal network (192.168.1.x), but who must use FTP-over-SSH when coming from an external network (internet): useradd -u ftpuser -g ftpgroup -d /dev/null -s /usr/bin/false customer3 pure-pw useradd customer3 -m -d /home/customer3 -u ftpuser \ -r 127.0.0.1/32,192.168.1.0/24 * Virtual users: /etc/pureftpd.pdb . -> I made changes to /etc/pureftpd.passwd but the server doesn't understand them: I can't access any account I just created. The server never reads /etc/pureftpd.passwd directly. Instead, it reads /etc/pureftpd.pdb (or whatever file name you gave after -lpuredb:...) . This file is a copy of /etc/pureftpd.passwd, but in a binary format, optimized for fast lookups. After having made a manual change to /etc/pureftpd.passwd, you must rebuild /etc/pureftpd.pdb with the following commands: pure-pw mkdb If you add/delete/modify user accounts with pure-pw useradd/usermod/userdel/ passwd, don't forget the '-m' option to automatically rebuild /etc/pureftpd.pdb and not only update /etc/pureftpd.passwd . * Giving access to dot-files. -> I don't want my users to read files beginning with a dot. Except one file I'd like to give 'John' read (and maybe write) access to. Create a symbolic link in John's account, pointing to the dot-file. Example: ln -s .bashrc bashrc John will be able to access ".bashrc" through the symbolic link, "bashrc". * Initial banner. -> How do I display a customized message before the login prompt? Compile with --with-cookie and run the server with -F <file name> . In that file, put a nice customized banner message. * Internet Explorer. -> Internet Explorer doesn't show any login box. IE does a very strange trick to detect whether an FTP server does accept anonymous connections or not. Basically, it connects to the server and logs in as 'anonymous'. But if you say 'no' at this point, it drops the connections with an error. You have to say 'ok, anonymous users are allowed' and then, when a dummy password ('IE@') is sent, you say 'ah ehm... finally... no... anonymous users aren't allowed' . Silly. To play that game, you must run pure-ftpd with the -E (non-anonymous server) and -b (compatibility with broken clients) flags. Then, the magic popup will show up. But please note that IE (and browsers at large) are usually bad FTP clients. -> Internet Explorer doesn't want to log in. (Matthew Enger) Check that the max number of connections (either per user or per IP) is at least 2. IE needs two connections to connect to an FTP server. * Passwords and pure-pw scripting. -> I would like to create virtual users with a shell-script. if i us pure-pw useradd ..... it always asks for the new password. is there any command-line option which tells pure-pw the password (like useradd ftp-user ftp-password -m) ? (at1ce) . Giving cleartext (and badly one-way hashed) passwords through command-line switches is a bad idea. Because users could issue a simple 'ps' command and discover these passwords. One way to enter a password (not from the keyboard) is to put the password twice in a temporary file, then redirect that file to stdin. Example: pure-pw useradd john -d /tmp/john -u ftpuser -m < ~/tmp/passfile And in ~/tmp/passfile, have something like: john's password john's password If you really need to avoid a temporary file and if nobody but you can log on the machine, you can always do this: (echo blahblah; echo blahblah) | pure-pw useradd john -d /tmp/john -u ftpuser * Altlog and pure-uploadscript don't work. -> pure-uploadscript doesn't run anything. Alternative logging methods (CLF, stats, W3C...) create a logfile, but it always stays empty. Maybe your operating system has a buggy realpath() implementation. Some old Solaris and Linux versions are known to have such a bug. Try to recompile pure-ftpd, but run ./configure with the --with-brokenrealpath switch first. * The server starts, but doesn't listen to any port? -> The server is properly running, I see it in the process list, but any try to connect to the configured port (or port 21 by default) fails. The socket isn't even open. Check two things : - If you are running a BSD system and you want to listen to IPv4 addresses, check that the "-4" switch ("IPV4Only" in config file) is enabled. - If you upload script are enabled ("-o", or "CallUploadScript"), make sure that the pure-uploadscript is started. Or the FTP server will actually wait until pure-uploadscript is actually ready to process new uploads. If you don't need the uploadscript facility, remove "-o". * Double slash. -> Why do I see double slashes in log files? For instance, the path of a downloaded file looks like /home/john//pictures/zok.jpg . '//' is a symbol for the limit of the chroot jail. In that example, it means that John is caged in /home/john/ . * ftpwho as a non-root user. -> How do I give access to the 'pure-ftpwho' command to non-root users? The 'pure-ftpwho' command is restricted to root by default, because users probably shouldn't be given the ability to spy what other users are doing on the same host. However, it's safe to put the setuid bit on that command, in order to have it work as any user: chmod 4711 /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpwho * Changing bandwidth throttling on-the-fly. -> Is it possible to change the bandwidth allocated to a user during a transfer, so that the change takes place immediately? Unfortunately, no. Or at least not at pure-ftpd level. Doing so would need to re-read user's parameters all the time and it would be horribly slow. Other mechanisms would work, like signals to interrupt transfers, re-read parameters, then resume. But it would introduce a lot of complexity to the code. If you're using a modern operating system like OpenBSD, ISOS or Linux, your kernel already includes a fair TCP/IP traffic shaper. And because it works at kernel-level, you can easily change the bandwidth allowed to IPs or services on-the-fly. Have a look at pf.conf(5) OpenBSD, ISOS and FreeBSD 5, and at tc (or read the Linux networking HOWTO) on Linux. Also see the 'Global bandwidth limitation' section later in this document. * KERBEROS_V4 rejected as an authentication type. -> It works and I can log in, but I receive these strange error messages at log in, even in a non-chrooted environment: 220 FTP server ready. 502 Security extensions not implemented 502 Security extensions not implemented KERBEROS_V4 rejected as an authentication type Why and what do they mean? This is a Linux-specific instllation issue. It means that your command-line FTP client isn't a normal one, but a Kerberos FTP client. You probably installed RPMs for Kerberos, although you don't use it. These messages are harmless as Kerberos clients will fallback to normal FTP (after these errors), but you just have to deinstall Kerberos on your client host to have 'ftp' work without these messages. * Wrong group ownership. -> I have a user called 'john' whose group is 'johngroup'. When John uploads a file, that one belongs to 'john', but to another group like 'wheel' (whose John isn't a member of). What's wrong? This is a BSD standard behavior (verified on OpenBSD, ISOS, DragonflyBSD and FreeBSD): when a new file is created, the group is inherited from the parent directory. On other systems (like GNU/Linux), files are owned by the primary group of the user, unless the directory has the setgid bit set. If you want new files uploaded in John's directory to belong to group 'johngroup', have that directory (and probably also subdirectories) belong to 'johngroup': chgrp -R johngroup /home/john * Compilation with MySQL. -> I can't compile with MySQL. ./configure says that MySQL libraries aren't properly installed. The libmysqlclient.so file should be in a path known by your dynamic linker. For instance, on a GNU/Linux system, add the path to libmysqlclient.so file (only the path, not the file itself) to /etc/ld.so.conf . Then, run 'ldconfig' . * "Sorry, I can't trust you". -> When a user tries to log in, he gets "Sorry, I can't trust you". But his login/password pair is right. What wrong? That message can means two things: - The user has a shell that isn't listed in /etc/shells. You must add it, even if it's a fake shell like /bin/false . Also make sure that you have a carriage return after the last entry in /etc/shells. - You are using the -u <uid> option to deny access to users whose uid is below <uid> . But the user you are trying to log in as, has an uid in the forbidden range. * Customer-friendly configuration. -> What switches do you recommend to start the server, for an hosting service? Here's a good start: --chrooteveryone \ --maxclientsperip=5 \ --displaydotfiles \ --noanonymous \ --minuid=100 \ --umask=022:022 \ --limitrecursion=10000:3 \ --customerproof * Anonymous FTP with virtual users. -> I successfully created a virtual user called 'ftp' or 'anonymous', but anonymous FTP doesn't work. Pure-FTPd never fetch any info from the virtual users backends (puredb, MySQL, LDAP, etc) for anonymous sessions. There are three reasons not to do so: - Speed: do we need to query a database just to get the anonymous user's home directory? We don't need to retrieve any password for anonymous sessions. - Consistency: with the virtual hosting mechanism. To run an anonymous FTP server you must have a *system* account called 'ftp'. Don't give it any valid shell, just a home directory. That home directory is the anonymous area. * A basic setup. -> I'm trying to set up a ftp server just for me and my family so we can get and upload files when on the road. How can I make two users, say Jane and Joe, who share the directory /home/ftp and /home/ftp/incoming. In /home/ftp they only have read privs. and in /home/ftp/incoming they have read and write privs. Add a group for all FTP users (not mandatory, but more secure): groupadd ftpgroup Add an uid for all FTP users (idem, not mandatory, but better): useradd -g ftpgroup -d /dev/null -s /etc ftpuser Now, let's create /home/ftp and /home/ftp/incoming: mkdir -p /home/ftp/incoming chown -R root:ftpgroup /home/ftp/incoming chmod -R 755 /home/ftp chmod -R 1775 /home/ftp/incoming Let's add Jane: pure-pw useradd jane -m -u ftpuser -d /home/ftp Let's add Joe: pure-pw useradd joe -m -u ftpuser -d /home/ftp Let's start the FTP server: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd -lpuredb:/etc/pureftpd.pdb -H -B Everything should be ok now. For more info about how to create new users, change passwords, etc.: http://www.pureftpd.org/README.Virtual-Users * Slow pure-ftpwho or slow login. -> Sometimes, pure-ftpwho is slow to show the result. And sometimes, when an user logs in, the session stucks a bit before he can get a directory listing. This is probably caused by a slow DNS resolver. In order to display full host names, pure-ftpd has indeed to make DNS queries that can be slow if you link is slow, or if the client link is slow. You can speed up pure-ftpwho and pure-ftpd with the -H switch. Names won't be resolved, you will see IP addresses instead. * Chrooted users can follow symlinks outside the chroot jail? -> People can create symbolic links to '/' and escape their home directory! There are two chroot implementations in pure-ftpd: - The traditional one, based upon your kernel chroot() system call. This is the default. With that one, symbolic links can only point inside the chroot jail, or they won't be followed. - The 'virtual chroot' implementation. With that feature, users *can* follow all symbolic links, even when they don't point inside the jail. This is very handy to set up directories shared by multiple users. Binary packages are compiled with virtual chroot by default. To enable the virtual chroot feature when you are compiling the server, use the --with-virtualchroot with ./configure . If you want a restricted chroot, don't include --with-virtualchroot. Please note that the FTP server will never let people create new symbolic links. Symbolic links have to be already there to be followed. Or if your users can create symbolic links through Perl or PHP scripts, your hosting platform is really badly configured. People can install any web file browser, they don't need FTP to look at your system files. Recompile PHP without POSIX functions and run all Perl scripts chrooted. * How to start Pure-FTPd in background. -> I start 'pure-ftpd' from an X terminal and the server properly answers. However, as soon as I close the terminal, the server stops. This is a shell dependent issue. Your shell is configured to close all background jobs when leaving. You can change your shell options (probably with a 'set' directive) or detach background jobs with the 'disown' keyword. Alternatively, you can just start pure-ftpd with the -B switch in order to have it detach at startup time: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd -B * Windows command-line FTP client and 'ls'. -> With the command-line Windows FTP client, 'ls -la' doesn't return any file. The 'ls' command of an FTP client has nothing to do with the 'ls' command started from an Unix shell. With the command-line Windows client, typing 'ls' really sends the FTP command 'NLST'. So when you type 'ls -la', it doesn't mean 'verbosely list all files'. According to RFCs, it means 'list the file called -la' . So you get what you asked for. If no file is called '-la', you get nothing. If you want to play with regular expressions and switches, you should type 'dir' (which is translated to 'LIST') instead. 'dir -la' is ok. This is a bit illogical and that brain damage is specific to Microsoft's command-line FTP client. If you really want 'ls' to parse options, you can start pure-ftpd with the -b (broken) switch. * Global bandwidth limitation. -> How do I limit the *total* bandwidth for FTP? Pure-FTPd can limit bandwidth usage of every session. But limiting the total bandwidth is intentionally not implemented, because most operating systems already have very efficient algorithms to handle bandwidth throttling. Here's an example with Linux. 1) Have a look at /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range. You will see two numbers: this is the interval of local ports your Linux kernel will use for regular outgoing connections. The FTP ports you have to reserve for passive FTP must *not* be in this range. So if: "cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range" returns "32768-61000", you can reserve ports 10000 to 20000 for your FTP server, but not 30000 to 40000. (alternatively, you can change the local port range) . 2) Change the first lines and save the following script: ---------------------------- Cut here ---------------------------- #! /bin/sh # Simple bandwidth limiter - <j at pureftpd.org> # Change this to your link bandwidth # (for cable modem, DSL links, etc. put the maximal bandwidth you can # get, not the speed of a local Ethernet link) REAL_BW='10Mbit' # Change this to the bandwidth you want to allocate to FTP. # We're talking about megabits, not megabytes, so 80Kbit is # 10 Kilobytes/s FTP_BW='80Kbit' # Change this to your physical network device (or 'ppp0') NIC='eth0' # Change this to the ports you assigned for passive FTP FTP_PORT_LOW="10000" FTP_PORT_HIGH="20000" tc qdisc add dev "$NIC" root handle 1: cbq \ bandwidth "$REAL_BW" avpkt 1000 tc class add dev "$NIC" parent 1: classid 1:1 cbq bandwidth "$REAL_BW" \ rate "$REAL_BW" maxburst 5 avpkt 1000 tc class add dev "$NIC" parent 1:1 classid 1:10 cbq \ bandwidth "$REAL_BW" rate "$FTP_BW" maxburst 5 avpkt 1000 bounded tc qdisc add dev "$NIC" parent 1:10 sfq quantum 1514b tc filter add dev "$NIC" parent 1: protocol ip handle 1 fw flowid 1:10 iptables -t mangle -A OUTPUT -p tcp --sport 20:21 -j MARK --set-mark 1 iptables -t mangle -A OUTPUT -p tcp \ --sport "$FTP_PORT_LOW":"$FTP_PORT_HIGH" -j MARK --set-mark 1 ---------------------------- Cut here ---------------------------- 3) Make sure that you have the 'tc' command installed. If your Linux distro doesn't ship 'ip' and 'tc' commands, it really sucks and you must install a package called 'iproute2' to get them. 4) Start Pure-FTPd with the passive port range you assigned: /usr/local/sbin/pure-ftpd -p 10000:20000 -HBA 5) Run the script you created in step 2. It it doesn't work, check that QOS support was compiled in your Linux kernel. 6) Enjoy :) Also have a look at : http://www.docum.org http://www.shorewall.net/traffic_shaping.htm and http://talk.trekweb.com/~jasonb/articles/linux_tc_minihowto.shtml * Linux, NTFS and Pure-FTPd. -> On Linux, I can't transfer files from an NTFS partition. Keep in mind that the NTFS filesystem is still an experimental beast in Linux. Some basic operations are not implemented yet. Fortunately, a big effort is being made and Linux 2.5 has a new NTFS implementation that fully works with Pure-FTPd (try ./configure --without-sendfile, though) . And it is more reliable and really faster than the old one. And even more fortunately, the new NTFS implementation has been backported to recent 2.4.x kernels. Have a look at http://linux-ntfs.sf.net/ . * Slowdowns and lags. -> Some users complains that transferring large files doesn't work. Transfers are starting as expected, with a decent rate. But then, the speed dramatically decreases, there are some serious lags and they often must disconnect (or the client force them to do it, after a timeout) . The server is behind a firewall that filters incoming ICMP, but let FTP ports in. Don't, don't, don't filter ICMP. At least not blindly without understanding what you are filtering. ICMP is part of the TCP/IP specifications. Filtering it can have nasty side effects with no real win. If you even filter ICMP types 3 and 4, your firewall is definitely broken and this is probably why you have such troubles with transfers of large files. Please read these documents about ICMP filtering : http://www.phildev.net/mss/index.html http://alive.znep.com/~marcs/mtu/ http://www.freelabs.com/~whitis/isp_mistakes.html Also some hardware routers don't properly handle window scaling. Try to turn it off, for instance on Linux: sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_window_scaling=0 sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_bic=0 * Firewalls and TLS. -> My client is behind a stateful firewall doing applicative filtering (like IPTables with ip_conntrack_ftp or ip_nat_ftp) . Connections to an TLS enabled server doesn't work. Authentication works, but I'm unable to download files nor list directories. First, try to force your client to use the passive mode. In active mode, the server has to connect to the client (or the NAT gateway) on a dynamic port that is negotiated on the connection socket. But when TLS is used, that connection socket is encrypted, therefore no man-in-the middle can see what ports will be used to transfer data, including the firewall. There are some proposals to work around this problem, but neither popular clients nor common firewalls are aware of these tricks. Therefore, use the passive mode or switch to SSH. * TLS and error 00000000. -> My TLS-enabled client doesn't work. It outputs something like : "SSL connect: error:00000000:lib(0):func(0):reason(0)". What does it mean? This error is not very explicit. You get it from some Unix clients like LFTP. It actually means that there is a firewall or a NAT box between a TLS-enabled server and a TLS-enabled client, but that firewall is unable to handle encrypted FTP sessions. Unfortunately, there's no simple workaround against this. Try to switch your client to active mode and use 1:1 NAT, but TLS, firewalls and FTP don't mix very well. * Slow TLS operations. -> When clients connect with TLS encryption, listing directories and downloading files are slow operations. Nothing happens after a command is sent, things only start moving after a 5 secondes delay. Check the host name of your certificate. It should be a fully-qualified host name and if possible, it shouldn't be a CNAME entry. Also check your DNS cache servers. * Files getting renamed automatically (submitted by C. Jon Larsen) -> Sometimes when files get uploaded they are getting renamed to something like "pureftpd.3f3300d2.33.0001". What is causing this ? The ftp client that is being used to upload the files is using the STOU (Store Unique) FTP command instead of the STOR FTP command. If you check the ftp logfile you should see something like this in the logs: (user@a.b.c.d) [DEBUG] Command [stou] [file_name_from_the_client.ext] /var/ftp/ftpcustomer/pureftpd.3f3300d2.33.0001 uploaded (218168 bytes, 127.79KB/sec) The STOU command tells the ftp client to begin the transmission of the file to the remote site; the remote filename picked by the ftp server will be unique within in the current directory that the ftp client is using. The response from the server will include the filename. The ftp client has an option like "create unique files" or "upload file with a temporary name" enabled. You should have the ftp user uncheck this option. Trying to disable the STOU command on the server side is not a good idea or solution as some ftp clients will use STOU to upload a file with the temporary, unique name, and then rename the file once the upload is complete. This helps prevent failed uploads from leaving partial files around.