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ProFTPD module mod_sql
ProFTPD module mod_sql
The mod_sql module is an authentication and logging module
for ProFTPD. It is comprised of a front end module (mod_sql )
and backend database-specific modules (mod_sql_mysql ,
mod_sql_postgres , mod_sql_sqlite , etc). The
front end module leaves the specifics of handling database connections to the
backend modules.
The mod_sql module is not compiled by default. Installation
instructions are discussed here.
This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the
OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/).
This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young
(eay@cryptsoft.com).
The most current version of mod_sql is distributed with ProFTPD.
Thanks
- Johnie Ingram <johnie at netgod.net> for the original
mod_sqlpw .
- TJ Saunders and Jesse Sipprell for dealing with my inane questions.
- John Morrissey for
mod_ldap , which lit the way, here and
there.
- Zeev Suraski <bourbon at bourbon.netvision.net.il> for the
Apache
mod_auth_mysql module, which informed the
SQLAuthTypes directive.
- Avalon from IRC for doc-fixes and suggestions.
- and many others who've suggested various enhancements or security fixes.
Directives
Syntax: SQLAuthenticate on|off or
Syntax: SQLAuthenticate [users] [groups] [userset[fast]] [groupset[fast]]
Default: on
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The SQLAuthenticate directive configures mod_sql 's
authentication behavior, controlling whether to provide user and/or group
information during authentication, and how that provisioning is performed.
The parameters may appear in any order.
The available parameter values are:
- on
Shorthand for SQLAuthenticate users groups userset groupset .
- off
Disables all mod_sql authentication functions.
- users
If present, mod_sql will do user lookups. If not present,
mod_sql will do no user lookups at all, including the
{set|get|end}pwent() calls (see below).
- groups
If present, mod_sql will do group lookups. If not present,
mod_sql will do no group lookups at all, including the
{set|get|end}grent() calls (see below).
- userset[fast]
If present, mod_sql will process the potentially expensive
{set|get|end}pwent() calls. If not present,
mod_sql will not process these calls. Adding the suffix
"fast" tells mod_sql to process the users as a
single large query, rather than making a query per user. This may
significantly reduce the number of queries against the database at the
expense of increased memory use. This parameter will have no effect if
"users" is not specified.
- groupset[fast]
If present, mod_sql will process the potentially expensive
{set|get|end}grent() calls. If not present,
mod_sql will not process these calls. Adding the suffix
"fast" tells mod_sql to process the groups as a
single large query, rather than making a query per group. This may
significantly reduce the number of queries against the database at the
expense of increased memory use. This parameter will have no effect if
"groups" is not specified.
The SQLLog and SQLShowInfo directives will always be
processed by mod_sql . The SQLAuthenticate directive
only affects the user and group lookup/authentication portions of the module.
Turning off (i.e. by not including) the userset or
groupset parameters affects the functionality of mod_sql .
Not allowing these lookups may remove the ability to control access or control
functionality by group membership, depending on your other authentication
handlers and the data available to them. At the same time, choosing not to
do these lookups may dramatically speed login for many large sites.
The "fast" suffix is not appropriate for every site. Normally,
mod_sql will retrieve a list of users and groups, and get
information from the database on a per-user or per-group basis. This is query
intensive: it requires (nn + 1) queries, where n is the number
of users or groups to lookup. By choosing "fast" lookups,
mod_sql will make a single SELECT query to get
information from the database.
In exchange for the radical reduction in the number of queries, the single
query will increase the memory consumption of the process; all group or user
information will be read at once rather than in discrete chunks.
Group Table Structure
Normally mod_sql allows multiple group members per row, and multiple
rows per group. If you use the "fast" option for groupset,
you must use only one row per group. For example, normally
mod_sql treats the following three tables in exactly the same way:
|--------------------------------------------------|
| GROUPNAME | GID | MEMBERS |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| group1 | 1000 | naomi |
| group1 | 1000 | priscilla |
| group1 | 1000 | gertrude |
|--------------------------------------------------|
|--------------------------------------------------|
| GROUPNAME | GID | MEMBERS |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| group1 | 1000 | naomi, priscilla |
| group1 | 1000 | gertrude |
|--------------------------------------------------|
|--------------------------------------------------|
| GROUPNAME | GID | MEMBERS |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| group1 | 1000 | naomi, priscilla, gertrude |
|--------------------------------------------------|
If you use the "fast" option, mod_sql assumes that all
entries are structured like the last example.
Syntax: SQLAuthTypes ["Backend"|"Crypt"|"Empty"|"OpenSSL"|"Plaintext"] ...
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
The SQLAuthTypes directive specifies which authentication method
are to be allowed, and their order of use. You must specify at least one
authentication method.
The current supported authentication methods are:
- Backend
Allows database-specific backend passwords. Not all backend databases
support this option. For example, MySQL datatabases use this option
to authenticate MySQL 'PASSWORD()' encrypted passwords.
The Postgres backend, however, does nothing. Caveat: if
your MySQL activity log is world-readable, the user password
will be visible. You have been warned.
- Crypt
Allows passwords in the database to be of Unix crypt(3)
form. Note that the traditional Unix crypt(3)
function only uses the first 8 characters of a password. If you have
passwords longer than 8 characters, and some of those passwords have
the same first 8 characters, then those users may be able to log into
each others accounts.
- Empty
Allows empty passwords in the database, which match against any
password the user may give. The database field must be a truly
empty string; NULL values are not acceptable as empty
passwords. Be very careful if using this authentication method.
- OpenSSL
Allows passwords in the database to be of the form
'{digest-name}hashed-value' , where hashed-value
is the base64-encoded digest of the passsword. Only available if you
define HAVE_OPENSSL when you compile proftpd
and you link with OpenSSL's libcrypto library; the easiest
way to handle this is to use the --enable-openssl configure
option.
- Plaintext
Allows passwords in the database to be in plaintext.
For example:
SQLAuthTypes Crypt Empty
configures mod_sql to first attempt to verify the password
using the Unix crypt(3) function, then, if that fails, determine
if the password in the database is empty (thus matching any given
password). If all of the configured authentication methods fail,
mod_sql will fail to authenticate the user.
Note that the mod_sql_passwd
module also provides other SQLAuthTypes values.
Syntax: SQLBackend backend
Default: Depends
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.0rc1 and later
In 1.3.0rc1, the mod_sql module gained the ability to be
compiled with multiple backend modules supported, e.g. to have
both mod_sql_mysql and mod_sql_postgres
usable in the same proftpd daemon. The SQLBackend
directive configures which of these different database backends should
be used.
If there is only one backend module compiled in, the SQLBackend
directive is not needed. If there are multiple backend modules compiled
and no SQLBackend directive is specified, then
mod_sql will default to using the first backend module listed.
For instance, if you configured proftpd using a
configure command such as:
./configure --with-modules=mod_sql:mod_sql_postgres:mod_sql_mysql ...
then mod_sql would default to using mod_sql_postgres
as the backend module to use.
You might have multiple <VirtualHost> sections which use
different SQL backends, e.g.:
<VirtualHost 1.2.3.4>
SQLBackend mysql
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 5.6.7.8>
SQLBackend postgres
...
</VirtualHost>
Use "mysql" for the mod_sql_mysql module, and
"postgres" for the mod_sql_postgres module.
Syntax: SQLConnectInfo connection-info [username] [password] [policy] [ssl-ca:<path>] [ssl-cert:<path>] [ssl-key:<path>] [ssl-ciphers:<list>]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
The SQLConnectInfo directive configures the information necessary
to connect to the backend database. The connection-info parameter
specifies the database, host, port, and other backend-specific information.
The optional username and password parameters specify a
username and password to use when connecting to the database. Both default to
NULL , which the backend will treat in some backend-specific
manner. If you specify a password, you must specify a username. If
no SQLConnectInfo directive is specified, mod_sql
will disable itself.
Any given database backend has the opportunity, though not necessarily the
responsibility, to check for syntax errors in the connection-info
field at server startup, but you should not expect semantic errors
(i.e., cannot connect to the database) to be caught until
mod_sql attempts to connect for a given host.
A given database connection is governed by a connection policy that specifies
when a connection should be opened and when it should be closed. There are
three options:
- PERCONNECTION
Open a database connection when the client connects to the server,
and close the database connection when the client disconnects.
- PERSESSION
Open a database connection on first use (e.g. during authentication)
and close the database connection at the end of the session.
- number ("timed")
Timed database connections that close themselves after number
seconds of inactivity.
If a connection policy is not specified, if the policy is not a number or is
a number less than 1, or if the policy is the string "PERSESSION",
the PERSESSION policy will be used.
If the connection policy is any number greater than 0, it specifies the number
of seconds that a connection will be held open without activity. After that
many seconds of database inactivity, the connection to the database will be
closed. As soon as database activity starts again, the connection will be
opened and the timer will restart.
The MySQL and Postgres backends' connection-info is expected to be of
the form:
database[@hostname][:port]
hostname will default to a backend-specific hostname (which happens to
be 'localhost' for both the MySQL and Postgres backends), and port will
default to a backend-specific default port (3306 for the MySQL backend,
5432 for the Postgres backend).
From the MySQL documentation:
the value of host may be either a hostname or an IP address. If host is NULL
or the string "localhost", a connection to the local host is
assumed. If the OS supports sockets (Unix) or named pipes (Windows), they are
used instead of TCP/IP to connect to the server.
(Note: In proftpd-1.3.1rc1 , if hostname starts
with a slash, it is interpreted as the Unix domain socket path by
mod_sql_mysql , similar to how mod_sql_postgres
handles the parameter.)
From the PostgreSQL documentation:
If [the hostname] begins with a slash, it specifies Unix domain communication
rather than TCP/IP communication; the value is the name of the directory in
which the socket file is stored. The default is to connect to a Unix-domain
socket in /tmp .
If you plan to use the "timed" connection policy, consider the
effect of directives such as DefaultRoot on local socket
communication: once a user has been chroot() ed, the local socket
file will probably not be available within the chroot directory
tree, and attempts to reopen communication will fail. One way around this may
be to use hardlinks within the user's directory tree; another is to use
network (e.g. TCP sockets, not Unix domain sockets) connections to
connect to the database. PERSESSION connections are not affected
by this because the database will be opened prior to the chroot()
call, and held open for the life of the session. Network communications are
not affected by this chroot() problem. For example, while
localhost would not work for MySQL since the MySQL client
library will try to use Unix domain socket communications for that host,
127.0.0.1 will work (as long as your database is setup to accept
these connections).
In proftpd-1.3.6rc2 and later, it is possible to configure SSL/TLS
parameters for a given connection, which tells mod_sql to try
to open an SSL session with the database server. Most of the time, all that
is needed for the SSL session is the CA (Certificate Authority) to use, for
verifying the certificate presented by the database server. Thus:
SQLConnectInfo ... ssl-ca:/path/to/cacert.pem
If your database server is configured to require SSL/TLS mutual authentication
(also called "client auth"), you may need the ssl-cert: and
ssl-key: parameters as well:
SQLConnectInfo ... ssl-ca:/path/to/cacert.pem \
ssl-cert:/path/to/client-cert.pem \
ssl-key:/path/to/client-key.pem
Finally, some database clients (such as MySQL) allow you to configure the
specific SSL/TLS ciphersuites that should be used; the ssl-ciphers:
parameter can be used for this:
SQLConnectInfo ... ssl-ca:/path/to/cacert.pem \
ssl-cert:/path/to/client-cert.pem \
ssl-key:/path/to/client-key.pem \
ssl-ciphers:DEFAULT:!EXPORT:!DES
Examples:
# Connect to the database 'ftpusers' via the default port at host
# 'foo.com'. Use a NULL username and NULL password when connecting.
# A connection policy of PERSESSION is used.
SQLConnectInfo ftpusers@foo.com
# Connect to the database 'ftpusers' via port 3000 at host 'localhost'.
# Use the username 'admin' and a NULL password when connecting.
# A connection policy of PERSESSION is used.
SQLConnectInfo ftpusers:3000 admin
# Connect to the database 'ftpusers' via port 3000 at host 'foo.com'.
# Use the username 'admin' and password 'mypassword' when connecting.
# A connection policy of PERSESSION is used.
SQLConnectInfo ftpusers@foo.com:3000 admin mypassword
# Connect to the database 'ftpusers' via port 3000 at host 'foo.com'.
# Use a username of 'admin' and a password of 'mypassword' when
# connecting. A 30 second timer of connection inactivity is activated.
SQLConnectInfo ftpusers@foo.com:3000 admin mypassword 30
# Connect to the database 'ftpusers' via port 3000 at host 'foo.com'.
# Use a username of 'admin' and a password of 'mypassword' when
# connection. A 30 second inactivity/idle timer is used. In addition,
# use SSL for the connection.
SQLConnectInfo ftpusers@foo.com:3000 admin mypassword 30 ssl-ca:/path/to/cacert.pem
Backends may require different information in the connection-info
field; check your backend module for more detailed information.
Syntax: SQLDefaultGID default-gid
Default: 65533
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
The SQLDefaultGID directive configures the default GID for users.
This value must be greater than any configured SQLMinUserGID .
See also: SQLMinUserGID
Syntax: SQLDefaultHomedir path
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The SQLDefaultHomedir directive configures a default home
directory for all users authenticated with this module. If no home directory
is set with either directive, authentication fails. This directive does not
change the data retrieved from the database: if you specify a home directory
field to SQLUserInfo , that field's data will be returned as the
user's home directory, whether that data is a legal directory, or an empty
string, or NULL .
See also: SQLUserInfo
Syntax: SQLDefaultUID default-uid
Default: 65533
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
The SQLDefaultUID directive configures the default UID for users.
This value must be greater than any configured SQLMinUserUID .
See also: SQLMinUserUID
Syntax: SQLEngine on|off|auth|log
Default: SQLEngine on
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global> , <Anonymous>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.0rc1 and later
The SQLEngine directive is used to specify how
mod_sql will operate. By default, SQLEngine is
on, and mod_sql will operate as normal. Setting
SQLEngine to off will effectively disable the module.
In addition to on and off, SQLEngine accepts
two other values: auth and log. If you wish to use
mod_sql for authentication and not for logging (via
SQLLog ), use auth. Conversely,
to do only SQLLog -type logging, and no authentication, use
log.
This directive can be used to have <Anonymous> sections
that do not use mod_sql , e.g.:
<Anonymous ~ftp>
...
SQLEngine off
...
</Anonymous>
Syntax: SQLGroupInfo group-table group-name gid members
Default: "groups groupname gid members"
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The SQLGroupInfo directive configures the group table and fields
that hold group information. The parameters for this directive are
described below:
- grouptable
Specifies the name of the table that holds group information.
- groupname
Specifies the field in the group table that holds the group name.
- gid
Specifies the field in the group table that holds the group's GID.
- members
Specifies the field in the group table that holds the group members.
If you need to change any of these field names from the default, you
need to specify all of them.
Custom Queries
As of 1.3.3rc1 , the SQLGroupInfo directive accepts
an alternate syntax:
SQLGroupInfo custom:/get-group-by-name/get-group-by-id/get-group-by-member
where get-group-by-name refers to a configured SELECT
SQLNamedQuery . This named query must return one row, and
return the following columns, in this order: groupname, gid,
members . The configured query may make use of the variables mentioned
in the SQLLog description. The %{0} variable will
be populated with the group name for which info is being retrieved. The
get-group-by-id here refers to a SQLNamedQuery which is
just like the lookup given a group name, only the get-group-by-id
query needs to return group information given a GID. For the
get-group-by-id query, the %{0} variable is populated with
the GID in question. Last, the get-group-by-member query returns group
information given a user member; again, the %{0} will contain
the member/user name by which to look up the group information.
If your custom get-group-by-name query references a table
other than the default groups table, then you must also supply a
custom get-group-by-id query as well. Otherwise, mod_sql
will fail with a "Table not found" error, and disconnect the client, whenever
the client asks for a directory listing.
Note, however, that if you use the groupset or
groupsetfast SQLAuthenticate
options, you will need to supply some additional SQLNamedQuery
names in your custom SQLGroupInfo directive. The
SQLGroupInfo directive supports:
SQLGroupInfo custom:/lookup-by-name/lookup-by-id/lookup-by-member/[/groupset-lookup[/groupsetfast-lookup]]
where groupset-lookup is the name of a SELECT
SQLNamedQuery that returns the names (and only the names)
of all groups, and the groupsetfast-lookup refers to a SELECT
SQLNamedQuery that returns all the fields (i.e.
groupname, gid, members in that order) for all groups.
To provide a concrete example:
SQLAuthenticate users groups groupsetfast
SQLGroupInfo custom:/get-group-by-name/get-group-by-id/get-group-by-member/get-all-groupnames/get-all-groups
SQLNamedQuery get-group-by-name SELECT "groupname, gid, members FROM ftpgroups WHERE groupname = '%{0}'"
SQLNamedQuery get-group-by-id SELECT "groupname, gid, members FROM ftpgroups WHERE gid = %{0}"
SQLNamedQuery get-group-by-member SELECT "groupname, gid, members FROM ftpgroups WHERE (members LIKE '%%,%{0},%%' OR members LIKE '%{0},%%' OR members LIKE '%%,%{0}')"
SQLNamedQuery get-all-groupnames SELECT "groupname FROM ftpgroups"
SQLNamedQuery get-all-groups SELECT "groupname, gid, members FROM ftpgroups"
With a configuration similar to these, using either of the groupset or
groupsetfast in your SQLAuthenticate directive will
work as expected.
Another consideration when using custom SQLGroupInfo queries
is their relationship to the "useNormalizedGroupSchema" SQLOption .
I.e. does using the "useNormalizedGroupSchema" option affect how
the results of custom SQLGroupInfo queries are handled? No.
If custom SQLGroupInfo queries are used, mod_sql
automatically assumes that the custom group members query will return
N rows, where each row contains 3 columns: group name, group ID,
and member name. That is, the custom SQLGroupInfo queries act as
if "useNormalizedGroupSchema" is always in effect. (When support for custom
SQLGroupInfo queries was added, there was no good reason for
supporting the old, inefficient comma-delimited format for the members column.)
See Also:
SQLAuthenticate ,
SQLLog ,
SQLNamedQuery ,
SQLUserInfo
Syntax: SQLGroupPrimaryKey column | "custom:/"named-query
Default: gid
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.5rc3 and later
The SQLGroupPrimaryKey directive configures the column name
that is used as the "primary key" for group data; this primary key can
then be used in other SQL tables via foreign key constraints. The
SQL howto covers using this
directive in more details.
See also: SQLUserPrimaryKey
Syntax: SQLGroupWhereClause where-clause
Default: off
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The directive is used to configure a WHERE clause that is added to every group
query. The WHERE clause must contain all relevant punctuation, and
must not contain a leading "and".
As an example of a possible use for this directive, imagine if your group table
included a "LoginAllowed" field:
SQLGroupWhereClause "LoginAllowed = 'true'"
would be appended to every group-related query as the string:
" WHERE (LoginAllowed = 'true')"
Note that if custom group SQLNamedQuery are configured,
those custom queries will be used as is; any configured
SQLGroupWhereClause will not be appended. Custom queries
can be of any format/syntax, and thus simply appending a
SQLGroupWhereClause to a custom query may be syntactically invalid.
As of ProFTPD 1.3.1rc2, the configured SQLGroupWhereClause
parameter can use the same set of variables as supported by the
SQLNamedQuery directive.
Syntax: SQLKeepAlive interval [stmt]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.7rc4 and later
The SQLKeepAlive directive configures a periodic stmt to
be executed on a timer, every interval seconds, as way of keeping
the connection between mod_sql and the backend database server
alive.
Note that the default stmt used is:
SELECT 1
This SQL statement works for MySQL, Postgres, and SQLite.
Examples:
# Schedule a "keepalive" query every 30 seconds
SQLKeepAlive 30
# Schedule a "keepalive" query every 30 seconds, using our custom SQL
SQLKeepAlive 30 "SELECT foo FROM bar"
The stmt used does not have to suceed; the important behavior
is the sending (and receiving) of bytes across the network to the database
server, so that any networking gear in between, such as firewalls and load
balancers, know that the connection is not idle, is still in use.
Syntax: SQLLog cmd-set query-name ["IGNORE_ERRORS"]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.1 and later
This directive is used to log information to a database table. Multiple
SQLLog directives can be in effect for any command; for example,
a user changing directories can trigger multiple logging statements.
Note that this logging occurs at the end of command processing.
The first parameter to SQLLog , the cmd-set, is a
comma-separated (no spaces) list of FTP commands for which this log
command will trigger. The list of commands is too long to list in entirety;
commands include CWD, DELE, HELP, LIST, MKD, MODE, NLST, PASS, PASV,
PORT and many more. For the complete list check the FTP RFCs.
Normally mod_sql will log events after they have completed
successfully; in the case of the QUIT command,
mod_sql logs prior to the server's processing of the command.
(Note, however, that the client may not issue a QUIT
before logging out; in this case, use a command of EXIT rather
than QUIT . EXIT is not a real FTP command, but
it is used here to provide a means for having SQLLog work
whenever a session ends.)
FTP commands in the command set will only be logged if they complete
successfully. Prefixing any command with "ERR_" will cause logging
to occur only if there was an error in the command's processing. To log both
errors and successful completion of a given command X, therefore,
you'll need both "X" and "ERR_X" in your
cmd-set.
The special command "*" matches all FTP commands, while
"ERR_*" matches all errors.
The second parameter is the name of a query defined by a
SQLNamedQuery directive. The query must be an
UPDATE , INSERT , or FREEFORM type
query; explicit SELECT queries will not be processed.
The third parameter is optional. If you add "IGNORE_ERRORS" as the
third parameter, SQLLog will not check for errors
in the processing of the named query. Any value for this parameter other than
the string "IGNORE_ERRORS" (case-insensitive) will not cause errors
to be ignored.
Normally, SQLLog directives are considered important enough that
errors in their processing will cause mod_sql to abort the client
session. References to non-existent named queries will not abort the
client session, but may result in database corruption (in the sense that the
expected database UPDATE or INSERT will not occur).
Check your directives carefully.
Examples:
SQLLog PASS updatecount
SQLNamedQuery updatecount UPDATE "count=count+1 WHERE userid='%u'" users
If the current user was "joe", this would translate into the query
"UPDATE users SET count=count+1 WHERE userid='joe'". This query
would run whenever a user was first authenticated.
SQLLog CWD updatedir
SQLNamedQuery updatedir UPDATE "cwd='%d' where userid='%u'" users
If the current user was "joe" and the current working directory were
/tmp , this would translate into the query "UPDATE users SET cwd='/tmp' WHERE userid='joe'". This query would run whenever a user
changed directories.
SQLLog RETR,STOR insertfileinfo
SQLNamedQuery insertfileinfo INSERT "'%f', %b, '%u@%v', now()" filehistory
would log the name of any file stored or retrieved, the number of bytes
transferred, the user and host doing the transfer, and the time of transfer
(at least in MySQL). This would translate into a query like:
"INSERT INTO filehistory VALUES ('somefile', 12345, 'joe@joe.org', '21-05-2001 20:01:00')"
Syntax: SQLLogFile file
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.8rc2 and later
The SQLLogFile directive is used to specify a log file for
mod_sql reporting and debugging, and can be done a per-server
basis. The file parameter must be the full path to the file to use for
logging. Note that this path must not be to a world-writeable
directory and, unless AllowLogSymlinks is explicitly set to
on (generally a bad idea), the path must not be a symbolic
link.
If file is "none", no logging will be done at all; this
setting can be used to override a SQLLogFile setting inherited from
a <Global> context.
Syntax: SQLLogOnEvent event query-name ["IGNORE_ERRORS"]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.5rc2 and later
The SQLLogOnEvent directive is used to log information to database
tables via query-name. Multiple SQLLogOnEvent directives
can be in effect for any event.
The first parameter is the name of an event.
The second parameter is the name of a query defined by a
SQLNamedQuery directive. The query must be an
UPDATE , INSERT , or FREEFORM type
query; explicit SELECT queries will not be processed.
The third parameter is optional. If you add "IGNORE_ERRORS" as the
third parameter, SQLLogOnEvent will not check for
errors in the processing of the named query. Any value for this parameter
other than the string "IGNORE_ERRORS" (case-insensitive) will not
cause errors to be ignored.
Examples:
SQLNamedQuery update_max_logins UPDATE "max_login_attempts=max_login_attempts+1 WHERE userid='%u'" users
SQLLogOnEvent mod_auth.max-login-attempts update_max_logins
In this example, a users.max_login_attempts column is updated
for the user trying to login, whenever that user exceeds a
MaxLoginAttempts limit.
SQLNamedQuery add_banned_host INSERT "host = '%a'" bans
SQLLogOnEvent mod_ban.ban-host add_banned_host
Here, whenever mod_ban bans a host, we add a row to a
bans table.
Syntax: SQLMinID minimum-id
Default: 999
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
SQLMinID is a quick way of setting both SQLMinUserGID
and SQLMinUserUID . These values are checked whenever retrieving
a user's GID or UID.
See also: SQLMinUserGID ,
SQLMinUserUID
Syntax: SQLMinUserGID minimum-gid
Default: 999
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
SQLMinUserGID is checked whenever retrieving a user's GID. If the
retrieved value for GID is less than the value of SQLMinUserGID ,
it is reported as the value of SQLDefaultGID .
See also: SQLDefaultGID
Syntax: SQLMinUserUID minimum-uid
Default: 999
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.0 and later
SQLMinUserUID is checked whenever retrieving a user's UID. If the
retrieved value for UID is less than the value of SQLMinUserUID ,
it is reported as the value of SQLDefaultUID .
See also: SQLDefaultUID
Syntax: SQLNamedConnectInfo connection-name sql-backend connection-info [username] [password] [policy] [ssl-ca:<path>] [ssl-cert:<path>] [ssl-key:<path>] [ssl-ciphers:<list>]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.4rc2 and later
The SQLNamedConnectInfo directive configures the information
necessary to connect to the backend database. This connection will be given
the name connection-name; this named connection can then be referenced
by that name in e.g. a SQLNamedQuery . The
sql-backend name configures the backend SQL module to use for this
connection; see SQLBackend . The
connection-info parameter specifies the database, host, port, and
other backend-specific information. The optional username and
password parameters specify a username and password to use when
connecting to the database. Both default to NULL , which the
backend will treat in some backend-specific manner. If you specify a password,
you must specify a username. Multiple SQLNamedConnectInfo
directives may be configured.
Note that SQLNamedConnectInfo directives will only be
honored if a SQLConnectInfo
directive is configured.
See also: SQLBackend ,
SQLConnectInfo
Syntax: SQLNamedQuery name type query-string [table] [connection-name]
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.4 and later
SQLNamedQuery specifies a query and an identifier (name) for later use by
SQLShowInfo and SQLLog .
It is strongly recommended that you read documentation on the
LogFormat and ExtendedLog directives, as the
meta-sequences available to SQLNamedQuery are largely equivalent.
The first parameter, name, should be unique across all named queries
and must not contain spaces. The result of re-using a name is undefined.
The second parameter, type, is the type of query, either
"SELECT", "UPDATE", "INSERT", or
"FREEFORM". See the note below for information on FREEFORM type
queries.
The third parameter is the substance of the database query itself; this should
match the form of the second parameter. The meta-sequences accepted are
exactly equivalent to the LogFormat directive except
the following are not accepted:
and the following is in addition to the LogFormat
meta-sequences:
%d
The current working directory or "-" if none.
%{n}
This meta-sequence is used internally by mod_sql and other
third-party modules and patches to pass information to the database.
Using this meta-sequence in anything other than an INSERT or
UPDATE query is an error, and using this meta-sequence unless
directed to by a third-party module or patch is also an error.
The correct form of a query will be built from the directive arguments, except
in the case of FREEFORM queries which will be sent directly to the
database. The examples below show the way queries are built from the
arguments.
The fourth parameter, table, is only necessary for
UPDATE or INSERT type queries, but is
required for those types.
The last parameter, connection-name, is only necessary for telling
mod_sql to use the specified connection name (from
SQLNamedConnectInfo ), rather
than the default connection, for executing the query/statement.
Note: FREEFORM queries are a necessary evil; the
simplistic query semantics of the UPDATE , INSERT ,
and SELECT type queries do not sufficiently expose the
capabilities of most backend databases. At the same time, using a
FREEFORM query makes it impossible for mod_sql to
check whether the query type is appropriate, making sure that a
SELECT query is not used in a SQLLog directive, for
instance. Wherever possible, it is recommended that a specific query type be
used.
Examples:
SQLNamedQuery count SELECT "count from users where userid='%u'"
creates a query named "count" which could be used by
SQLShowInfo to inform a user of their login count. The actual
query would look something like "SELECT count FROM users WHERE
userid='matilda'" for user "matilda".
SQLNamedQuery updatecount UPDATE "count=count+1 WHERE userid='%u'" users
creates a query named "updatecount" which could be used by
SQLLog to update a user login counter in the table
users . The actual query would look something like "UPDATE
users SET count=count+1 WHERE userid='persephone'" for user
"persephone".
SQLNamedQuery accesslog INSERT "now(), '%u'" accesslog
creates a query named "accesslog" which could be used by
SQLLog to track access times by clients. The actual query would
look something like "INSERT INTO accesslog VALUES (now(), 'pandora')"
for user "pandora". Note that this may be too simplistic for your
table structure, since most databases require data for all columns to be
provided in an INSERT statement of this form. See the following
FREEFORM query for an example of something which may suit your
needs better.
SQLNamedQuery accesslog FREEFORM "INSERT INTO accesslog(date, user) VALUES (now(), '%u')"
creates a query named "accesslog" which could be used by
SQLLog to track access times by clients. The actual query would
look something like
"INSERT INTO accesslog(date, user) VALUES (now(), 'tilda')" for
user "tilda".
Syntax: SQLNegativeCache on|off
Default: off
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.7rc1 and later
SQLNegativeCache specifies whether or not to cache negative
responses from SQL lookups when using SQL for UID/GID lookups. Depending on
your SQL tables, there can be a significant delay when a directory listing is
performed as the UIDs not in the SQL database are repeatedly looked up in an
attempt to present usernames instead of UIDs in directory listings. With
SQLNegativeCache set to on, negative
("not found") responses from SQL queries will be cached and speed
will improve on directory listings that contain many users not present in the
SQL database.
Syntax: SQLOptions opt1 ...
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.1rc1 and later
The SQLOptions directive is used to tweak various optional
behavior of mod_sql .
Example:
SQLOptions NoDisconnectOnError
The currently implemented options are:
IgnoreConfigfile
If the database client library in use has its own configuration file
(e.g. my.cnf for the MySQL client library), then
the mod_sql sub-module will read that file. There are some
cases, however, where access to that config file is restricted. For
such cases, use "IgnoreConfigFile" to tell mod_sql to not
attempt to read that client library configuration file.
Note that this option first appeared in
proftpd-1.3.5rc4 .
NoDisconnectOnError
By default, mod_sql will automatically disconnect the client
whenever there is a database error. If this option is enabled,
mod_sql will attempt to continue functioning despite
database errors.
NoReconnect
If supported by the database client library, mod_sql will
try to automatically reconnect once, if it determines that the
connection to the database server was lost. Use "NoReconnect" to disable
this auto-reconnection attempt.
UseNormalizedGroupSchema
If this option is enabled, then mod_sql , when retrieving all
of the groups for a user, will use a SQL statement like:
SELECT groupname, groupid, member FROM grouptable WHERE member = $userName
rather than the statement it uses by default, which is:
SELECT groupname, groupid, member FROM grouptable WHERE member = $userName OR
member LIKE '%,$userName' OR member LIKE '$username,%' OR
member LIKE '%,$userName,%'
To put it another way, when this SQLOption is used,
mod_sql will not treat the member column of the group
table as a comma-delimited list of user names, but rather as a single
user name. Thus, to have a user belong in multiple groups with this
normalized schema, the group table would have individual rows for each
user/group pair.
Syntax:
Default: None
Context:
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility:
Syntax:
Default: None
Context:
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility:
Syntax: SQLShowInfo cmd-set numeric query-string
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
This directive creates a message to be sent to the user after any successful
command.
The first parameter, the cmd-set, is a comma separated (no
spaces) list of FTP commands for which this log command will trigger.
The list of commands is too long to list in entirety; commands include:
CWD, DELE, HELP, LIST, MKD, MODE, NLST, PASS, PASV, PORT and many
more. For the complete list check the FTP RFCs.
FTP commands in the command set will only be triggered if they complete
successfully. Prefixing any command with "ERR_" will show
information only if there was an error in command processing. To send a
message on both errors and successful completion of a given command X,
therefore, you'll need both "X" and "ERR_X"
in your cmd-set.
The special command "*" matches all FTP commands, while
"ERR_*" matches all errors.
The second parameter, numeric, specifies the numeric value of the
message returned to the FTP client. Do not choose a number
blindly: message numbers may be parsed by clients. In most cases you will
want to use 214 , the "Help message" numeric. It
specifies that the information is only meant to be human readable. Note
that FTP clients can be very picky about these response codes; choosing
the wrong code can cause clients not to work. Section 5.4 of RFC959 defines the acceptable response codes
for each FTP command.
The third parameter, query-string, is exactly equivalent to the
query-string parameter to the SQLLog directive, with one
addition:
%{name}
The first return value from the SQLNamedQuery
identified by "name". There is currently no way to retrieve more
than one value from the database at a time.
Any references to non-existent named queries, non-SELECT or
-FREEFORM type queries, or references to queries which return a
NULL first value, will be replaced with the string "{null}".
For example:
SQLNamedQuery count SELECT "count from users where userid='%u'"
SQLShowInfo PASS 230 "You've logged on %{count} times, %u"
As long as the information is in the database, these two directives specify
that the user will be greeted with their login count each time they
successfully login. Note the use of the "230" numeric, which means
"User logged in, proceed". "230" is appropriate in this
case because the message will be sent immediately after their password has
been accepted and the session has started.
Syntax: SQLUserInfo user-table user-name passwd uid gid home-dir shell
Default: "users userid passwd uid gid homedir shell"
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The SQLUserInfo directive configures the user table and fields
that hold user information. If you need to change any of these
field names from the default, you must specify all of them,
whether NULL or not. The parameters are described below:
- usertable
Specifies the name of the table that holds user information.
- username
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the username.
- passwd
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the user's password.
- uid
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the user's UID. When a
UID is retrieved from the database it is checked against the value of
SQLMinUserUID . If the field name is specified as
"NULL" the database will not be queried for this value and the
user's UID will be set to the value of SQLDefaultUID .
- gid
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the user's GID. When a
GID is retrieved from the database it is checked against the value of
SQLMinUserGID . If the field name is specified as
"NULL" the database will not be queried for this value and the
user's GID will be set to the value of SQLDefaultGID .
- homedir
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the user's home directory.
If the fieldname is specified as "NULL" the database will not be
queried for this value and the user's home directory will be set to the
value of SQLDefaultHomedir . If no home directory is set with
either directive, user authentication will be automatically turned off.
- shell
Specifies the field in the user table that holds the user's shell. If the
fieldname is specified as "NULL" the database will not be
queried and the shell will be reported as an empty string
("").
Custom Queries
As of 1.2.9rc1 , the SQLUserInfo directive accepts
an alternate syntax:
SQLUserInfo custom:/name
where name refers to a configured SELECT SQLNamedQuery .
This named query must return one row, and return the following columns,
in this order: username, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell . The
configured query may make use of the variables mentioned in the
SQLLog description. This syntax allows the administrator
a flexible way of constructing queries as needed. Note that if you want
use the given USER name, you should use the %U
variable, not %u ; the latter requires the locally authenticated
user name, which is exactly what SQLUserInfo is meant to
provide.
Starting with 1.3.3rc1 , you can supply other queries as well.
You can supply a SELECT SQLNamedQuery for returning the
same information as above, only this query is given a UID instead of
a user name. For example:
SQLNamedQuery get-user-by-name SELECT "userid, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell FROM ftpusers WHERE userid = '%U'"
SQLNamedQuery get-user-by-id SELECT "userid, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell FROM ftpusers WHERE uid = %{0}"
SQLUserInfo custom:/get-user-by-name/get-user-by-id
If your custom get-user-by-name query references a table
other than the default users table, then you must also supply a
custom get-user-by-id query as well. Otherwise, mod_sql
will fail with a "Table not found" error, and disconnect the client, whenever
the client asks for a directory listing.
Note, however, that if you use the userset or
usersetfast SQLAuthenticate
options, you will need to supply some additional SQLNamedQuery
names in your custom SQLUserInfo directive. The
SQLUserInfo directive supports:
SQLUserInfo custom:/lookup-by-name[/lookup-by-id[/userset-lookup[/usersetfast-lookup]]]
where userset-lookup is the name of a SELECT SQLNamedQuery
that returns the names (and only the names) of all users, and the
usersetfast-lookup refers to a SELECT SQLNamedQuery
that returns all the fields (i.e. username, passwd, uid, gid,
homedir, shell in that order) for all users.
To provide a concrete example:
SQLAuthenticate users groups usersetfast
SQLUserInfo custom:/get-user-by-name/get-user-by-id/get-user-names/get-all-users
SQLNamedQuery get-user-by-name SELECT "userid, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell FROM users WHERE userid = '%U'"
SQLNamedQuery get-user-by-id SELECT "userid, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell FROM users WHERE uid = %{0}"
SQLNamedQuery get-user-names SELECT "userid FROM users"
SQLNamedQuery get-all-users SELECT "userid, passwd, uid, gid, homedir, shell FROM users"
With a configuration similar to these, using either of the userset or
usersetfast in your SQLAuthenticate directive will
work as expected.
See Also:
SQLAuthenticate ,
SQLGroupInfo ,
SQLLog ,
SQLNamedQuery
Syntax: SQLUserPrimaryKey column | "custom:/"named-query
Default: uid
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.3.5rc3 and later
The SQLUserPrimaryKey directive configures the column name
that is used as the "primary key" for user data; this primary key can
then be used in other SQL tables via foreign key constraints. The
SQL howto covers using this
directive in more details.
See also: SQLGroupPrimaryKey
Syntax: SQLUserWhereClause where-clause
Default: None
Context: server config, <VirtualHost> , <Global>
Module: mod_sql
Compatibility: 1.2.5rc1 and later
The directive is used to configure a WHERE clause that is added to every user
query. The WHERE clause must contain all relevant punctuation, and
must not contain a leading "and".
As an example of a possible use for this directive, imagine if your user table
included a "LoginAllowed" field:
SQLUserWhereClause "LoginAllowed = 'true'"
would be appended to every user-related query as the string:
" WHERE (LoginAllowed = 'true')"
Note that if custom user SQLNamedQuery are configured,
those custom queries will be used as is; any configured
SQLUserWhereClause will not be appended. Custom queries
can be of any format/syntax, and thus simply appending a
SQLUserWhereClause to a custom query may be syntactically invalid.
As of ProFTPD 1.3.1rc2, the configured SQLUserWhereClause
parameter can use the same set of variables as supported by the
SQLNamedQuery directive.
The mod_sql module is distributed with ProFTPD. Simply
follow the normal steps for using third-party modules in ProFTPD:
$ ./configure --with-modules=sql-module-opts
where the specific sql-module-opts depend on your database needs. For
example, if using MySQL, sql-module-opts would be
"mod_sql:mod_sql_mysql". mod_sql is the main
SQL-processing engine, and mod_sql_mysql is the backend
sub-module that handles MySQL-specific details. If Postgres is your
database of choice, sql-module-opts would be
"mod_sql:mod_sql_postgres".
You will also need to tell configure how to find the
database-specific libraries and header files:
$ ./configure --with-modules=sql-module-opts \
--with-includes=/path/to/db/header/file/dir \
--with-libraries=/path/to/db/library/file/dir
Complete the build with the following standard commands:
$ make
$ make install
Logging
The mod_sql module supports trace logging, via the module-specific log channels:
Thus for trace logging, to aid in debugging, you would use the following in
your proftpd.conf :
TraceLog /path/to/ftpd/trace.log
Trace sql:20
This trace logging can generate large files; it is intended for debugging use
only, and should be removed from any production configuration.
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