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2008-10-29 11:55:47


  This example shows how you might set up a (possibly large) internet facing
  FTP site.
  The emphasis will be on security and performance.
  We will see how by integrating vsftpd with xinetd, we get a powerful
  combination.
  Step 1) Set up your xinetd configuration file.
  An example xinetd configuration file "vsftpd.xinetd" is supplied.
  To install it:
  cp vsftpd.xinetd /etc/xinetd.d/vsftpd
  Let's look at the important content in this file and see what it does:
  disable = no
  socket_type = stream
  wait = no
  This says that the service is active, and it is using standard TCP sockets.
  user = root
  server = /usr/local/sbin/vsftpd
  The server program /usr/local/sbin/vsftpd is used to handle incoming FTP
  requests, and the program is started as root (vsftpd will of course quickly
  drop as much privilege as possible). NOTE! Make sure that you have the vsftpd
  binary installed in /usr/local/sbin (or change the file path in the xinetd
  file).
  per_source = 5
  instances = 200
  For security, the maximum allowed connections from a single IP address is 5.
  The total maximum concurrent connections is 200.
  no_access = 192.168.1.3
  As an example of how to ban certain sites from connecting, 192.168.1.3 will
  be denied access.
  banner_fail = /etc/vsftpd.busy_banner
  This is the file to display to users if the connection is refused for whatever
  reason (too many users, IP banned).
  Example of how to populate it:
  echo "421 Server busy, please try later." > /etc/vsftpd.busy_banner
  log_on_success += PID HOST DURATION
  log_on_failure += HOST
  This will log the IP address of all connection attempts - successful or not,
  along with the time. If an FTP server is launched for the connection, it's
  process ID and usage duration will be logged too. If you are using RedHat
  like me, this log information will appear in /var/log/secure.
  Step 2) Set up your vsftpd configuration file.
  An example file is supplied. Install it like this:
  cp vsftpd.conf /etc
  Let's example the contents of the file:
  # Access rights
  anonymous_enable=YES
  local_enable=NO
  write_enable=NO
  anon_upload_enable=NO
  anon_mkdir_write_enable=NO
  anon_other_write_enable=NO
  This makes sure the FTP server is in anonymous-only mode and that all write
  and upload permissions are disabled. Note that most of these settings are
  the same as the default values anyway - but where security is concerned, it
  is good to be clear.
  # Security
  anon_world_readable_only=YES
  connect_from_port_20=YES
  hide_ids=YES
  pasv_min_port=50000
  pasv_max_port=60000
  These settings, in order
  - Make sure only world-readable files and directories are served.
  - Originates FTP port connections from a secure port - so users on the FTP
  server cannot try and fake file content.
  - Hide the FTP server user IDs and just display "ftp" in directory listings.
  This is also a performance boost.
  - Set a 50000-60000 port range for passive connections - may enable easier
  firewall setup!
  # Features
  xferlog_enable=YES
  ls_recurse_enable=NO
  ascii_download_enable=NO
  async_abor_enable=YES
  In order,
  - Enables recording of transfer stats to /var/log/vsftpd.log
  - Disables "ls -R", to prevent it being used as a DoS attack. Note - sites
  wanting to be copied via the "mirror" program might need to enable this.
  - Disables downloading in ASCII mode, to prevent it being used as a DoS
  attack (ASCII downloads are CPU heavy).
  - Enables older FTP clients to cancel in-progress transfers.
  # Performance
  one_process_model=YES
  idle_session_timeout=120
  data_connection_timeout=300
  accept_timeout=60
  connect_timeout=60
  anon_max_rate=50000
  In order,
  - Activates a faster "one process per connection" model. Note! To maintain
  security, this feature is only available on systems with capabilities - e.g.
  Linux kernel 2.4.
  - Boots off idle users after 2 minutes.
  - Boots off idle downloads after 5 minutes.
  - Boots off hung passive connects after 1 minute.
  - Boots off hung active connects after 1 minute.
  - Limits a single client to ~50kbytes / sec download speed.
  Step 3) Restart xinetd.
  (on RedHat)
  /etc/rc.d/init.d/xinetd restart
  If you run into problems, check:
  1) Your /etc/xinetd.d directory only has one FTP service.
  vsftpd.conf
  # Access rights
  anonymous_enable=YES
  local_enable=NO
  write_enable=NO
  anon_upload_enable=NO
  anon_mkdir_write_enable=NO
  anon_other_write_enable=NO
  # Security
  anon_world_readable_only=YES
  connect_from_port_20=YES
  hide_ids=YES
  pasv_min_port=50000
  pasv_max_port=60000
  # Features
  xferlog_enable=YES
  ls_recurse_enable=NO
  ascii_download_enable=NO
  async_abor_enable=YES
  # Performance
  one_process_model=YES
  idle_session_timeout=120
  data_connection_timeout=300
  accept_timeout=60
  connect_timeout=60
  anon_max_rate=50000
  vsftpd.xinetd
  # vsftpd is the secure FTP server.
  service ftp
  {
  disable = no
  socket_type = stream
  wait = no
  user = root
  server = /usr/local/sbin/vsftpd
  per_source = 5
  instances = 200
  no_access = 192.168.1.3
  banner_fail = /etc/vsftpd.busy_banner
  log_on_success += PID HOST DURATION
  log_on_failure += HOST
  }
  
  
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