NAME
tftpd
—
Internet Trivial File Transfer Protocol
server
SYNOPSIS
/usr/libexec/tftpd |
[-cCln ] [-s
directory] [-u
user] [directory ...] |
DESCRIPTION
Thetftpd
utility is a server which supports the
Internet Trivial File Transfer Protocol (RFC 1350). The TFTP server operates
at the port indicated in the ‘tftp
’
service description; see
services(5). The server is normally started by
inetd(8).
The use of
tftp(1) does not require an account or password on the remote system.
Due to the lack of authentication information, tftpd
will allow only publicly readable files to be accessed. Files containing the
string ``/../'' or starting with ``../'' are not allowed.
Files may be written only if they already exist and are publicly writable.
Note that this extends the concept of “public” to include all
users on all hosts that can be reached through the network; this may not be
appropriate on all systems, and its implications should be considered before
enabling tftp service. The server should have the user ID with the lowest
possible privilege.
Access to files may be restricted by invoking
tftpd
with a list of directories by including up to
20 pathnames as server program arguments in
/etc/inetd.conf. In this case access is restricted
to files whose names are prefixed by the one of the given directories. The
given directories are also treated as a search path for relative filename
requests.
The -s
option provides
additional security by changing
tftpd
's root directory,
thereby prohibiting accesses outside of the specified
directory. Because
chroot(2) requires super-user privileges,
tftpd
must be run as root. However, after performing
the
chroot
(),
tftpd
will set its user id to that of the specified
user, or “nobody” if no
-u
option is specified.
The options are:
-c
- Changes the default root directory of a connecting host via chroot based
on the connecting IP address. This prevents multiple clients from writing
to the same file at the same time. If the directory does not exist, the
client connection is refused. The
-s
option is required for-c
and the specified directory is used as a base. -C
- Operates the same as
-c
except it falls back to-s
's directory if a directory does not exist for the client's IP. -l
- Log all requests using
syslog(3) with the facility of
LOG_FTP
. Note: Logging ofLOG_FTP
messages must also be enabled in the syslog configuration file, syslog.conf(5). -n
- Suppress negative acknowledgement of requests for nonexistent relative filenames.
-s
directory- Cause
tftpd
to change its root directory to directory. After changing roots but before accepting commands,tftpd
will switch credentials to an unprivileged user. -u
user- Switch credentials to user (default
“nobody”) when the
-s
option is used. The user must be specified by name, not a numeric UID.
SEE ALSO
tftp(1), chroot(2), inetd(8), syslogd(8)
K. R. Sollins, The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2), July 1992, RFC 1350, STD 33.
HISTORY
The tftpd
utility appeared in
4.2BSD; the -s
option was
introduced in FreeBSD 2.2, the
-u
option was introduced in FreeBSD
4.2, and the -c
option was introduced in
FreeBSD 4.3.
BUGS
Files larger than 33488896 octets (65535 blocks) cannot be transferred without client and server supporting blocksize negotiation (RFC 1783).
Many tftp clients will not transfer files over 16744448 octets (32767 blocks).