Date: Tue, 18 May 2004 11:05:17 -0500 From: Dan Rue <drue@therub.org> To: "David E. Meier" <dev@eth0.ch> Cc: freebsd-security@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Multi-User Security Message-ID: <20040518160517.GA10067@therub.org> In-Reply-To: <4985.217.162.71.141.1084795720.squirrel@serv04.inetworx.ch> References: <4985.217.162.71.141.1084795720.squirrel@serv04.inetworx.ch>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Mon, May 17, 2004 at 02:08:40PM +0200, David E. Meier wrote: > Hello list. > > I would like to get your opinion on what is a safe multi-user environment. > The scenario: > > We would like to offer to some customers of ours some sort of network > backup/archive. They would put daily or weekly backups from their local > machine on our server using rsync and SSH. Therefore, they all have a user > account on our server. However, we must ensure that they would absolutely > not be able to access any data of each other at all. > > What is the "best and safest" way to do so? Regular UNIX permission > settings? File system ACL's? User jails? Restricting commands in their > path environment? Or would it even make sense to encrypt the file system? > How would some of the solutions affect data backups/restore on our side? You generally would like to avoid giving people shell (ssh) access if you can avoid it. If you must give shell access, it is best to set up a jail. However, if you're just doing backup/file access - shell access isn't necessary. You can do ftps, (ports/ftp/bsdftpd-ssl), and easily use that to chroot users. You can do sftp (without ssh shell access), but that's trickier to set up. One popular solution these days is WebDAV. You use it along with apache, run it over https, and users can access their files with IE or other clients. dan
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20040518160517.GA10067>