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<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>ProFTPD: Filters</title>
</head>

<body bgcolor=white>

<hr>
<center><h2><b>ProFTPD: Filters</b></h2></center>
<hr>

<p>
ProFTPD supports the ability to &quot;filter&quot; the FTP commands it receives
from the client.  These filters are written as
<a href="Regex.html">regular expressions</a>.  This means that while the
filters can be very powerful, they can also be complex and harder to construct.

<p>
First, there are the <a href="../modules/mod_core.html#AllowFilter"><code>AllowFilter</code></a> and <a href="../modules/mod_core.html#DenyFilter"><code>DenyFilter</code></a> configuration directives.  These configuration directives are used
to set filters on <b>every</b> FTP command.  If an <code>AllowFilter</code> is
used, the command parameters <b>must</b> match the given filter, otherwise the
command will be denied.  If a <code>DenyFilter</code> is used, the command
parameters <b>must not</b> match the given filter, otherwise the command will
be denied.  If both <code>AllowFilter</code> and <code>DenyFilter</code> are
used, then the <code>AllowFilter</code> will be checked first.

<p>
Second, there are some special filter configuration directives aimed at those
FTP commands that cause changes to files and directories on the server system: <a href="../modules/mod_core.html#PathAllowFilter"><code>PathAllowFilter</code></a> and <a href="../modules/mod_core.html#PathDenyFilter"><code>PathDenyFilter</code></a>.  Like <code>AllowFilter</code> and <code>DenyFilter</code>, the
<code>Allow</code> filter, if present, is checked first, then a
<code>DenyFilter</code>, if present.  <code>PathAllowFilter</code> and
<code>PathDenyFilter</code> are checked <i>after</i> the
<code>AllowFilter</code> and <code>DenyFilter</code> directives.  These
<code>Path</code> filters are only applied to the following FTP commands:
<code>DELE</code>, <code>MKD/XMKD</code>, <code>RMD/XRMD</code>,
<code>RNFR</code>, <code>RNTO</code>, <code>STOR</code>, <code>STOU</code>,
and to the <code>SITE</code> commands <code>CHGRP</code> and <code>CHMOD</code>.
Note that using both <code>PathAllowFilter</code> and
<code>PathDenyFilter</code> at the same time is not a good idea; only one
filter is generally needed.

<p>
One property that often catches the unwary administrator is the fact that
<code>proftpd</code> only operates on the first <code>Filter</code> directive
defined in the configuration file; it does not cycle through multiple
<code>Filter</code> directives.  This is because multiple regular expressions
can be combined into a single (albeit more complex) regular expression.  The
alternation metacharacter is helpful in creating such combined regular
expressions.  For example, if you had the following in your
<code>proftpd.conf</code>:
<pre>
  PathAllowFilter \.jpg$
  PathAllowFilter \.jpeg$
  PathAllowFilter \.mpeg$
  PathAllowFilter \.mpg$
  PathAllowFilter \.mp3$
</pre>
only the first <code>PathAllowFilter</code> would be enforced.  To enforce
all Filter simultaneously, use:
<pre>
  PathAllowFilter \.(jpg|jpgeg|mpeg|mpg|mp3)$
</pre>
Matches are case-sensitive! Also note that if you surround your regular
expression in quotation (&quot;) marks, any backslash will itself need
to be escaped; ProFTPD's configuration parser interprets backslashes inside
of quoted strings a little differently.  Thus, the example above would look
like this:
<pre>
  PathAllowFilter &quot;\\.(jpg|jpgeg|mpeg|mpg|mp3)$&quot;
</pre>
if using quotation marks.

<p>
Another characteristic to keep in mind is that Filters are only applied to
FTP command <i>parameters</i>, not to the FTP command itself.  Most of the
time, this is not a problem.  It would be useful sometimes, though, to
be able to filter parameters of commands other than those filtered by the
<code>Path</code> filter directives.  It would be an easy change to the
source code; however, there is no feature request for the ability to do this
on <a href="http://bugs.proftpd.org">bugs.proftpd.org</a> with a good
justification for such a feature.  If you can think of one, please open
such a request.

<p>
When developing your Filter directives, it often helps to keep an eye on the
server <a href="Debugging.html">debugging</a> output, to see how well your
filters are being applied.

<p>
<b>Examples</b><br>
To prevent clients from using paths which may contain non-printable characters
(<i>e.g.</i> CR, LF, VB, <i>etc</i>), you can use the following
<code>PathDenyFilter</code> pattern:
<pre>
  PathDenyFilter [^[:print:]]
</pre>
Alternatively, you could use a <code>PathAllowFilter</code> which only
<i>allows</i> printable characters in paths:
<pre>
  PathAllowFilter [[:print:]]
</pre>
And if you want to prevent spaces and tabs from appearing in paths, you
can use:
<pre>
  PathDenyFilter [[:blank:]]
</pre>

<p>
What if you want to prevent clients from uploading so-called "dot files",
<i>i.e.</i> files whose names start with a period ('.'), so that they are
"hidden"?  To prevent uploading of all dot files, you can use the following
<code>PathDenyFilter</code> configuration:
<pre>
  PathDenyFilter \.[^/]*$
</pre>

<p>
In ProFTPD 1.3.3rc1 and later, you can use the <code>AllowFilter</code> and
<code>DenyFilter</code> configuration directives inside of
<code>&lt;Limit&gt;</code> sections, so that those <code>Filter</code>
directives only apply to the FTP commands listed in the
<code>&lt;Limit&gt;</code> section.  This means you can specify regular
expression filters for the arguments for specific commands.  For example,
you may want to configure a directory that only allows uploads of files with
specific extensions.  You <i>could</i> use <code>PathAllowFilter</code> for
this -- but <code>PathAllowFilter</code> also applies to the <code>MKD</code>
command, and you might want to allow users to create subdirectories in your
special directory.  Thus you only want your regular expression to apply
to the <code>STOR</code> command in your directory.  Below is an example
of how to do this using <code>AllowFilter</code>:
<pre>
  &lt;Directory <i>/path/to/dir</i>&gt;
    &lt;Limit STOR&gt;
      Order deny, allow
      AllowFilter \.<i>ext</i>$
    &lt;/Limit&gt;
  &lt;/Directory&gt;
</pre>
The key is the <code>Order</code> directive; without it, the configuration
will not work as you expect.

<p><a name="FAQ">
<b>Frequently Asked Questions</b><br>
<font color=red>Question</font>: How can I prevent <code>SITE CHMOD</code>
commands which use the mode 777, but allow other <code>SITE CHMOD</code>
commands?<br>
<font color=blue>Answer</font>: For this, you would use the
<code>DenyFilter</code> directive, like so:
<pre>
  &lt;Limit SITE_CHMOD&gt;
    DenyFilter 777
  &lt;/Limit&gt;
</pre>
However, the desired mode can also be expressed <i>symbolically</i>, using
<i>e.g.</i> "SITE CHMOD a+rwx <i>file</i>".  So our filter should take this into
account, as well as some variants:
<pre>
  &lt;Limit SITE_CHMOD&gt;
    DenyFilter (777|a+rwx|u=rwx,g=rwx,o=rwx)
  &lt;/Limit&gt;
</pre>
Looking better, but still not perfect.  A determined user could still work
around our filter by using a series of <code>SITE CHMOD</code> commands
like this:
<pre>
  SITE CHMOD u+rwx <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD g+rwx <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD o+rwx <i>file</i>
</pre>
Or the determined user could make the change even more granular:
<pre>
  SITE CHMOD u+r <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD u+w <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD u+x <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD g+r <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD g+w <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD g+x <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD o+r <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD o+w <i>file</i>
  SITE CHMOD o+x <i>file</i>
</pre>
Another trap is that the numbers "777" might appear in a legitimate file name,
and thus the following allowed command would fail unnecessarily:
<pre>
  SITE CHMOD 644 ServiceOrder777.doc
</pre>

<p>
In short, it is possible to create filters for portions of commands, but you
do need to be very careful to not inadvertently cause commands to fail that
should succeed.

<p>
<hr>
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