SFTP-SERVER(8) | System Manager's Manual | SFTP-SERVER(8) |
sftp-server
—
sftp-server |
[-ehR ]
[-d start_directory]
[-f log_facility]
[-l log_level]
[-P blacklisted_requests]
[-p whitelisted_requests]
[-u umask] |
sftp-server |
-Q protocol_feature |
sftp-server
is a program that speaks the server side of
SFTP protocol to stdout and expects client requests from stdin.
sftp-server
is not intended to be called directly, but
from sshd(8) using the Subsystem
option.
Command-line flags to sftp-server
should
be specified in the Subsystem
declaration. See
sshd_config(5) for more information.
Valid options are:
-d
start_directoryChrootDirectory
option.-e
sftp-server
to print logging information to
stderr instead of syslog for debugging.-f
log_facilitysftp-server
. The possible values are: DAEMON,
USER, AUTH, LOCAL0, LOCAL1, LOCAL2, LOCAL3, LOCAL4, LOCAL5, LOCAL6,
LOCAL7. The default is AUTH.-h
sftp-server
usage information.-l
log_levelsftp-server
. The possible values are: QUIET,
FATAL, ERROR, INFO, VERBOSE, DEBUG, DEBUG1, DEBUG2, and DEBUG3. INFO and
VERBOSE log transactions that sftp-server
performs
on behalf of the client. DEBUG and DEBUG1 are equivalent. DEBUG2 and
DEBUG3 each specify higher levels of debugging output. The default is
ERROR.-P
blacklisted_requestssftp-server
will reply to any
blacklisted request with a failure. The -Q
flag
can be used to determine the supported request types. If both a blacklist
and a whitelist are specified, then the blacklist is applied before the
whitelist.-p
whitelisted_requestsCare must be taken when using this feature to ensure that requests made implicitly by SFTP clients are permitted.
-Q
protocol_featuresftp-server
.
At present the only feature that may be queried is
“requests”, which may be used for black or whitelisting
(flags -P
and -p
respectively).-R
sftp-server
into a
read-only mode. Attempts to open files for writing, as well as other
operations that change the state of the filesystem, will be denied.-u
umaskOn some systems, sftp-server
must be able
to access /dev/log for logging to work, and use of
sftp-server
in a chroot configuration therefore
requires that syslogd(8) establish a logging socket inside
the chroot directory.
T. Ylonen and S. Lehtinen, SSH File Transfer Protocol, draft-ietf-secsh-filexfer-02.txt, October 2001, work in progress material.
sftp-server
first appeared in OpenBSD
2.8.
December 11, 2014 | BSD |