Actually, I found a how-to dealing with a OSX server, which pointed me in the right direction. Seems to be working now.
Thanks!
Curtis
On Thursday, Sep 4, 2003, at 14:40 US/Pacific, Mark Roach wrote:
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 17:25, Curtis Vaughan wrote:After editing /etc/pam.d/proftpd do I need to restart proftp?
No
It doesn't seem to work: i.e., for whatever reason I am the only one allowed to log in. I can't log in under any other user period. Now, this may be due to the fact that I have a home directory on this server, no one else does.
It could be, I know that proftpd will allow you to "chroot" ftp sessions
to the user's home dir. I think you have to do that on purpose though.
Have you tested your pam_ldap setup with other services to make sure it
is correct? I think the default setup requires the user to have a valid
shell (listed in /etc/shells) did you check that? What does "getent
passwd username" show for a user who can't log on. Also, make sure that
"AuthPAM on" is in your config file.
As for the default path for users to see (mentioned in another message) I believe that all you need is a section like this: "DefaultRoot /home/ftp" or whatever path.
It sounds like you really need to take a few minutes to go through the
manpage for proftpd.conf to get a general overview of the options before
you start trying to wrangle the config file.
-Mark
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