08-25-2008
I guess I should clarify some things...
when I said chroot wasn't an acceptable solution - I only meant by itself.
I do, in fact, use chroot; which limits the user ONLY to sftp.
In fact, my chroot jail, is about as lean as you can possibly have one. - the whole jail (excluding the home directory) contains only 20 files in total (~ 4M in size) - in only 3 directory's: /dev; /lib; and /usr (and /dev only contains null)
I guess in the ideal - if I could have a user chroot'd to their home directory (without the need for them to see those 3 directories), and if sftp existed in some "rsftp" version, where I could eliminate the 'cd' command (or restrict) it, and if I could have all of this in a form that's easy enough to delagate user maintenance, I would be perfectly happy.
It doesn't seem to me that, that's asking for alot...
I suppose the easy/delagate part may simply be me writing a bash script - I'm ok w/ that. But the rest seems to be very difficult to attain - which surprises me.
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
chroot
CHROOT(8) BSD System Manager's Manual CHROOT(8)
NAME
chroot -- change root directory
SYNOPSIS
chroot [-u user] [-g group] [-G group,group,...] newroot [command]
DESCRIPTION
The chroot utility changes its current and root directories to the supplied directory newroot and then exec's command, if supplied, or an
interactive copy of the user's login shell.
If the -u, -g or -G options are given, the user, group and group list of the process are set to these values after the chroot has taken
place.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variable is referenced by chroot:
SHELL If set, the string specified by SHELL is interpreted as the name of the shell to exec. If the variable SHELL is not set, /bin/sh is
used.
SEE ALSO
chdir(2), chroot(2), setgid(2), setgroups(2), setuid(2), getgrnam(3), environ(7), jail(8)
HISTORY
The chroot utility first appeared in 4.4BSD.
BSD
June 7, 2003 BSD