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202 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
202 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
= Tahoe FTP and SFTP Frontends =
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1. FTP/SFTP Background
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2. Tahoe Support
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3. Creating an Account File
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4. Configuring FTP Access
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5. Configuring SFTP Access
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6. Dependencies
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7. Immutable and mutable files
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== FTP/SFTP Background ==
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FTP is the venerable internet file-transfer protocol, first developed in
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1971. The FTP server usually listens on port 21. A separate connection is
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used for the actual data transfers, either in the same direction as the
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initial client-to-server connection (for PORT mode), or in the reverse
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direction (for PASV) mode. Connections are unencrypted, so passwords, file
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names, and file contents are visible to eavesdroppers.
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SFTP is the modern replacement, developed as part of the SSH "secure shell"
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protocol, and runs as a subchannel of the regular SSH connection. The SSH
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server usually listens on port 22. All connections are encrypted.
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Both FTP and SFTP were developed assuming a UNIX-like server, with accounts
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and passwords, octal file modes (user/group/other, read/write/execute), and
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ctime/mtime timestamps.
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== Tahoe Support ==
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All Tahoe client nodes can run a frontend FTP server, allowing regular FTP
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clients (like /usr/bin/ftp, ncftp, and countless others) to access the
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virtual filesystem. They can also run an SFTP server, so SFTP clients (like
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/usr/bin/sftp, the sshfs FUSE plugin, and others) can too. These frontends
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sit at the same level as the webapi interface.
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Since Tahoe does not use user accounts or passwords, the FTP/SFTP servers
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must be configured with a way to first authenticate a user (confirm that a
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prospective client has a legitimate claim to whatever authorities we might
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grant a particular user), and second to decide what root directory cap should
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be granted to the authenticated username. FTP uses a username and password
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for this purpose. SFTP can either use a username and password, or a username
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and an RSA or DSA public key (SSH servers are frequently configured to
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require public key logins and reject passwords, to remove the threat of
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password-guessing attacks, at the expense of requiring users to carry their
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private keys around with them).
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Tahoe provides two mechanisms to perform this user-to-rootcap mapping. The
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first is a simple flat file with one account per line. The second is an
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HTTP-based login mechanism, backed by simple PHP script and a database. The
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latter form is used by allmydata.com to provide secure access to customer
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rootcaps.
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== Creating an Account File ==
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To use the first form, create a file (probably in
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BASEDIR/private/ftp.accounts) in which each non-comment/non-blank line is a
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space-separated line of (USERNAME, PASSWORD/PUBKEY, ROOTCAP), like so:
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% cat BASEDIR/private/ftp.accounts
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# This is a password line, (username, password, rootcap)
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alice password URI:DIR2:ioej8xmzrwilg772gzj4fhdg7a:wtiizszzz2rgmczv4wl6bqvbv33ag4kvbr6prz3u6w3geixa6m6a
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bob sekrit URI:DIR2:6bdmeitystckbl9yqlw7g56f4e:serp5ioqxnh34mlbmzwvkp3odehsyrr7eytt5f64we3k9hhcrcja
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# and this is a public key line (username, pubkey, rootcap)
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carol ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEAv2xHRVBoXnwxHLzthRD1wOWtyZ08b8n9cMZfJ58CBdBwAYP2NVNXc0XjRvswm5hnnAO+jyWPVNpXJjm9XllzYhODSNtSN+TXuJlUjhzA/T+ZwdgsgSAeHuuMQBoWt4Qc9HV6rHCdAeMhcnyqm6Q0sRAsfA/wfwiIgbvE7+cWpFa2anB6WeAnvK8+dMN0nvnkPE7GNyf/WFR1Ffuh9ifKdRB6yDNp17bQAqA3OWSFjch6fGPhp94y4g2jmTHlEUTyVsilgGqvGOutOVYnmOMnFijugU1Vu33G39GGzXWla6+fXwTk/oiVPiCYD7A7WFKes3nqMg8iVN6a6sxujrhnHQ== warner@fluxx URI:DIR2:6bdmeitystckbl9yqlw7g56f4e:serp5ioqxnh34mlbmzwvkp3odehsyrr7eytt5f64we3k9hhcrcja
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[TODO: the PUBKEY form is not yet supported]
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Note that if the second word of the line is "ssh-rsa" or "ssh-dss", the rest
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of the line is parsed differently, so users cannot have a password equal to
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either of these strings.
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Then add an 'accounts.file' directive to your tahoe.cfg file, as described
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in the next sections.
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== Configuring FTP Access ==
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To enable the FTP server with an accounts file, add the following lines to
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the BASEDIR/tahoe.cfg file:
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[ftpd]
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enabled = true
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port = 8021
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accounts.file = private/ftp.accounts
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The FTP server will listen on the given port number. The "accounts.file"
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pathname will be interpreted relative to the node's BASEDIR.
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To enable the FTP server with an account server instead, provide the URL of
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that server in an "accounts.url" directive:
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[ftpd]
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enabled = true
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port = 8021
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accounts.url = https://example.com/login
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You can provide both accounts.file and accounts.url, although it probably
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isn't very useful except for testing.
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== Configuring SFTP Access ==
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The Tahoe SFTP server requires a host keypair, just like the regular SSH
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server. It is important to give each server a distinct keypair, to prevent
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one server from masquerading as different one. The first time a client
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program talks to a given server, it will store the host key it receives, and
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will complain if a subsequent connection uses a different key. This reduces
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the opportunity for man-in-the-middle attacks to just the first connection.
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You will use directives in the tahoe.cfg file to tell the SFTP code where to
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find these keys. To create one, use the ssh-keygen tool (which comes with the
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standard openssh client distribution):
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% cd BASEDIR
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% ssh-keygen -f private/ssh_host_rsa_key
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Then, to enable the SFTP server with an accounts file, add the following
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lines to the BASEDIR/tahoe.cfg file:
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[sftpd]
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enabled = true
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port = 8022
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host_pubkey_file = private/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub
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host_privkey_file = private/ssh_host_rsa_key
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accounts.file = private/ftp.accounts
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The SFTP server will listen on the given port number. The "accounts.file"
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pathname will be interpreted relative to the node's BASEDIR.
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Or, to use an account server instead, do this:
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[sftpd]
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enabled = true
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port = 8022
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host_pubkey_file = private/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub
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host_privkey_file = private/ssh_host_rsa_key
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accounts.url = https://example.com/login
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You can provide both accounts.file and accounts.url, although it probably
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isn't very useful except for testing.
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For further information on SFTP compatibility and known issues with various
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clients and with the sshfs filesystem, see
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<http://tahoe-lafs.org/trac/tahoe-lafs/wiki/SftpFrontend>.
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== Dependencies ==
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The Tahoe SFTP server requires the Twisted "Conch" component (a "conch" is a
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twisted shell, get it?). Many Linux distributions package the Conch code
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separately: debian puts it in the "python-twisted-conch" package. Conch
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requires the "pycrypto" package, which is a Python+C implementation of many
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cryptographic functions (the debian package is named "python-crypto").
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Note that "pycrypto" is different than the "pycryptopp" package that Tahoe
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uses (which is a Python wrapper around the C++ -based Crypto++ library, a
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library that is frequently installed as /usr/lib/libcryptopp.a, to avoid
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problems with non-alphanumerics in filenames).
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The FTP server requires code in Twisted that enables asynchronous closing of
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file-upload operations. This code was landed to Twisted's SVN trunk in r28453
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on 23-Feb-2010, slightly too late for the Twisted-10.0 release, but it should
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be present in the next release after that. To use Tahoe's FTP server with
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Twisted-10.0 or earlier, you will need to apply the patch attached to
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http://twistedmatrix.com/trac/ticket/3462 . The Tahoe node will refuse to
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start the FTP server unless it detects the necessary support code in Twisted.
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This patch is not needed for SFTP.
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== Immutable and mutable files ==
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All files created via SFTP (and FTP) are immutable files. However, files
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can only be created in writeable directories, which allows the directory
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entry to be relinked to a different file. Normally, when the path of an
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immutable file is opened for writing by SFTP, the directory entry is
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relinked to another file with the newly written contents when the file
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handle is closed. The old file is still present on the grid, and any other
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caps to it will remain valid. (See docs/garbage-collection.txt for how to
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reclaim the space used by files that are no longer needed.)
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The 'no-write' metadata field of a directory entry can override this
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behaviour. If the 'no-write' field holds a non-empty string (typically
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"true"), then a permission error will occur when trying to write to the
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file, even if it is in a writeable directory. This does not prevent the
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directory entry from being unlinked or replaced.
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When using sshfs, the 'no-write' field can be set by clearing the 'w'
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bits in the Unix permissions, for example using the command
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'chmod 444 path/to/file'. Note that this does not mean that arbitrary
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combinations of Unix permissions are supported. If the 'w' bits are
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cleared on a link to a mutable file or directory, that link will become
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read-only.
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If SFTP is used to write to an existing mutable file, it will publish a
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new version when the file handle is closed.
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Mutable files are not supported by the FTP frontend.
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