Date: Wed, 23 May 2001 09:51:51 -0600 From: Peter <fbsdq@yahoo.com> To: lucas@slb.to, "lucas@slb.to" <lucas@slb.to>, "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: ftpd connections viewable via who Message-ID: <SAK.2001.05.23.cnaobbsl@support10>
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Another thing to try is using the 'last |grep ftp' command,
what this will do is show who was logged into ftp, and if they are still logged in.
[at least in Solaris 8, no FBSD box handy, please correct if I'm wrong]
Another note, using the
device snp
[snoop device to spy on other peoples sessions]
Is it possible to spy on an ftp session?
On 05/23/2001 9:02:00 AM, Lucas Bergman is quoted as saying:
. . . .|> In OpenBSD you can supply a switch to view who is connected via ftp
. . . .|> using the who command.
. . . .|
. . . .|Don't use FTP for non-public file transfers. It's not secure.
. . . .|
. . . .|> Is this possible in FreeBSD?
. . . .|
. . . .|No, AFAIK. This works, though:
. . . .|
. . . .| $ ps ax|grep ftpd|grep -v grep|awk -F": " '{print $3}'|egrep -v ^\$
. . . .|
. . . .|If you like, put something like that in a script, and call it
. . . .|'whoftp'.
. . . .|
. . . .|Lucas
. . . .|
. . . .|To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
. . . .|with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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