2011/3/28 Rainer Duffner rainer@ultra-secure.de:
Am 27.03.2011 um 22:57 schrieb John R Pierce:
On 03/27/11 1:03 PM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
If you use sftp, it can be chroot'ed by default (see man-page). (In reasonably recent version of sshd)
I gather thats a sshd somewhat newer than the one included in CentOS 5 ?
I don't know. ;-) I only used it in FreeBSD - but it's included there since at least 7.2. That was released in May 2009. OpenSSH 5.1p1
Looking, sshd in my latest CentOS shows v 4.6p2
rhel / centos contains openssh with backported chroot:
rpm -q --changelog openssh-server | grep chroot - minimize chroot patch to be compatible with upstream (#522141) - tiny change in chroot sftp capability into openssh-server solve ls speed problem (#440240) - add chroot sftp capability into openssh-server (#440240) - enable the subprocess in chroot to send messages to system log
-- Eero
-- Eero