| mailto(rsync-bugs@samba.org) |
| manpage(rsyncd.conf)(5)(21 Dec 2015)()() |
| manpagename(rsyncd.conf)(configuration file for rsync in daemon mode) |
| manpagesynopsis() |
| |
| rsyncd.conf |
| |
| manpagedescription() |
| |
| The rsyncd.conf file is the runtime configuration file for rsync when |
| run as an rsync daemon. |
| |
| The rsyncd.conf file controls authentication, access, logging and |
| available modules. |
| |
| manpagesection(FILE FORMAT) |
| |
| The file consists of modules and parameters. A module begins with the |
| name of the module in square brackets and continues until the next |
| module begins. Modules contain parameters of the form "name = value". |
| |
| The file is line-based -- that is, each newline-terminated line represents |
| either a comment, a module name or a parameter. |
| |
| Only the first equals sign in a parameter is significant. Whitespace before |
| or after the first equals sign is discarded. Leading, trailing and internal |
| whitespace in module and parameter names is irrelevant. Leading and |
| trailing whitespace in a parameter value is discarded. Internal whitespace |
| within a parameter value is retained verbatim. |
| |
| Any line bf(beginning) with a hash (#) is ignored, as are lines containing |
| only whitespace. (If a hash occurs after anything other than leading |
| whitespace, it is considered a part of the line's content.) |
| |
| Any line ending in a \ is "continued" on the next line in the |
| customary UNIX fashion. |
| |
| The values following the equals sign in parameters are all either a string |
| (no quotes needed) or a boolean, which may be given as yes/no, 0/1 or |
| true/false. Case is not significant in boolean values, but is preserved |
| in string values. |
| |
| manpagesection(LAUNCHING THE RSYNC DAEMON) |
| |
| The rsync daemon is launched by specifying the bf(--daemon) option to |
| rsync. |
| |
| The daemon must run with root privileges if you wish to use chroot, to |
| bind to a port numbered under 1024 (as is the default 873), or to set |
| file ownership. Otherwise, it must just have permission to read and |
| write the appropriate data, log, and lock files. |
| |
| You can launch it either via inetd, as a stand-alone daemon, or from |
| an rsync client via a remote shell. If run as a stand-alone daemon then |
| just run the command "bf(rsync --daemon)" from a suitable startup script. |
| |
| When run via inetd you should add a line like this to /etc/services: |
| |
| verb( rsync 873/tcp) |
| |
| and a single line something like this to /etc/inetd.conf: |
| |
| verb( rsync stream tcp nowait root /usr/bin/rsync rsyncd --daemon) |
| |
| Replace "/usr/bin/rsync" with the path to where you have rsync installed on |
| your system. You will then need to send inetd a HUP signal to tell it to |
| reread its config file. |
| |
| Note that you should bf(not) send the rsync daemon a HUP signal to force |
| it to reread the tt(rsyncd.conf) file. The file is re-read on each client |
| connection. |
| |
| manpagesection(GLOBAL PARAMETERS) |
| |
| The first parameters in the file (before a [module] header) are the |
| global parameters. |
| Rsync also allows for the use of a "[global]" module name to indicate the |
| start of one or more global-parameter sections (the name must be lower case). |
| |
| You may also include any module parameters in the global part of the |
| config file in which case the supplied value will override the |
| default for that parameter. |
| |
| You may use references to environment variables in the values of parameters. |
| String parameters will have %VAR% references expanded as late as possible (when |
| the string is used in the program), allowing for the use of variables that |
| rsync sets at connection time, such as RSYNC_USER_NAME. Non-string parameters |
| (such as true/false settings) are expanded when read from the config file. If |
| a variable does not exist in the environment, or if a sequence of characters is |
| not a valid reference (such as an un-paired percent sign), the raw characters |
| are passed through unchanged. This helps with backward compatibility and |
| safety (e.g. expanding a non-existent %VAR% to an empty string in a path could |
| result in a very unsafe path). The safest way to insert a literal % into a |
| value is to use %%. |
| |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(motd file)) This parameter allows you to specify a |
| "message of the day" to display to clients on each connect. This |
| usually contains site information and any legal notices. The default |
| is no motd file. |
| This can be overridden by the bf(--dparam=motdfile=FILE) |
| command-line option when starting the daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(pid file)) This parameter tells the rsync daemon to write |
| its process ID to that file. If the file already exists, the rsync |
| daemon will abort rather than overwrite the file. |
| This can be overridden by the bf(--dparam=pidfile=FILE) |
| command-line option when starting the daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(port)) You can override the default port the daemon will listen on |
| by specifying this value (defaults to 873). This is ignored if the daemon |
| is being run by inetd, and is superseded by the bf(--port) command-line option. |
| |
| dit(bf(address)) You can override the default IP address the daemon |
| will listen on by specifying this value. This is ignored if the daemon is |
| being run by inetd, and is superseded by the bf(--address) command-line option. |
| |
| dit(bf(socket options)) This parameter can provide endless fun for people |
| who like to tune their systems to the utmost degree. You can set all |
| sorts of socket options which may make transfers faster (or |
| slower!). Read the man page for the code(setsockopt()) system call for |
| details on some of the options you may be able to set. By default no |
| special socket options are set. These settings can also be specified |
| via the bf(--sockopts) command-line option. |
| |
| dit(bf(listen backlog)) You can override the default backlog value when the |
| daemon listens for connections. It defaults to 5. |
| |
| ) |
| |
| manpagesection(MODULE PARAMETERS) |
| |
| After the global parameters you should define a number of modules, each |
| module exports a directory tree as a symbolic name. Modules are |
| exported by specifying a module name in square brackets [module] |
| followed by the parameters for that module. |
| The module name cannot contain a slash or a closing square bracket. If the |
| name contains whitespace, each internal sequence of whitespace will be |
| changed into a single space, while leading or trailing whitespace will be |
| discarded. |
| Also, the name cannot be "global" as that exact name indicates that |
| global parameters follow (see above). |
| |
| As with GLOBAL PARAMETERS, you may use references to environment variables in |
| the values of parameters. See the GLOBAL PARAMETERS section for more details. |
| |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(comment)) This parameter specifies a description string |
| that is displayed next to the module name when clients obtain a list |
| of available modules. The default is no comment. |
| |
| dit(bf(path)) This parameter specifies the directory in the daemon's |
| filesystem to make available in this module. You must specify this parameter |
| for each module in tt(rsyncd.conf). |
| |
| You may base the path's value off of an environment variable by surrounding |
| the variable name with percent signs. You can even reference a variable |
| that is set by rsync when the user connects. |
| For example, this would use the authorizing user's name in the path: |
| |
| verb( path = /home/%RSYNC_USER_NAME% ) |
| |
| It is fine if the path includes internal spaces -- they will be retained |
| verbatim (which means that you shouldn't try to escape them). If your final |
| directory has a trailing space (and this is somehow not something you wish to |
| fix), append a trailing slash to the path to avoid losing the trailing |
| whitespace. |
| |
| dit(bf(use chroot)) If "use chroot" is true, the rsync daemon will chroot |
| to the "path" before starting the file transfer with the client. This has |
| the advantage of extra protection against possible implementation security |
| holes, but it has the disadvantages of requiring super-user privileges, |
| of not being able to follow symbolic links that are either absolute or outside |
| of the new root path, and of complicating the preservation of users and groups |
| by name (see below). |
| |
| As an additional safety feature, you can specify a dot-dir in the module's |
| "path" to indicate the point where the chroot should occur. This allows rsync |
| to run in a chroot with a non-"/" path for the top of the transfer hierarchy. |
| Doing this guards against unintended library loading (since those absolute |
| paths will not be inside the transfer hierarchy unless you have used an unwise |
| pathname), and lets you setup libraries for the chroot that are outside of the |
| transfer. For example, specifying "/var/rsync/./module1" will chroot to the |
| "/var/rsync" directory and set the inside-chroot path to "/module1". If you |
| had omitted the dot-dir, the chroot would have used the whole path, and the |
| inside-chroot path would have been "/". |
| |
| When both "use chroot" and "daemon chroot" are false, OR the inside-chroot path |
| of "use chroot" is not "/", rsync will: (1) munge symlinks by |
| default for security reasons (see "munge symlinks" for a way to turn this |
| off, but only if you trust your users), (2) substitute leading slashes in |
| absolute paths with the module's path (so that options such as |
| bf(--backup-dir), bf(--compare-dest), etc. interpret an absolute path as |
| rooted in the module's "path" dir), and (3) trim ".." path elements from |
| args if rsync believes they would escape the module hierarchy. |
| The default for "use chroot" is true, and is the safer choice (especially |
| if the module is not read-only). |
| |
| When this parameter is enabled, the "numeric-ids" option will also default to |
| being enabled (disabling name lookups). See below for what a chroot needs in |
| order for name lookups to succeed. |
| |
| If you copy library resources into the module's chroot area, you |
| should protect them through your OS's normal user/group or ACL settings (to |
| prevent the rsync module's user from being able to change them), and then |
| hide them from the user's view via "exclude" (see how in the discussion of |
| that parameter). At that point it will be safe to enable the mapping of users |
| and groups by name using the "numeric ids" daemon parameter (see below). |
| |
| Note also that you are free to setup custom user/group information in the |
| chroot area that is different from your normal system. For example, you |
| could abbreviate the list of users and groups. |
| |
| dit(bf(daemon chroot)) This parameter specifies a path to which the daemon will |
| chroot before beginning communication with clients. Module paths (and any "use |
| chroot" settings) will then be related to this one. This lets you choose if you |
| want the whole daemon to be chrooted (with this setting), just the transfers to |
| be chrooted (with "use chroot"), or both. Keep in mind that the "daemon chroot" |
| area may need various OS/lib/etc files installed to allow the daemon to function. |
| By default the daemon runs without any chrooting. |
| |
| dit(bf(numeric ids)) Enabling this parameter disables the mapping |
| of users and groups by name for the current daemon module. This prevents |
| the daemon from trying to load any user/group-related files or libraries. |
| This enabling makes the transfer behave as if the client had passed |
| the bf(--numeric-ids) command-line option. By default, this parameter is |
| enabled for chroot modules and disabled for non-chroot modules. |
| Also keep in mind that uid/gid preservation requires the module to be |
| running as root (see "uid") or for "fake super" to be configured. |
| |
| A chroot-enabled module should not have this parameter enabled unless you've |
| taken steps to ensure that the module has the necessary resources it needs |
| to translate names, and that it is not possible for a user to change those |
| resources. That includes being the code being able to call functions like |
| code(getpwuid()), code(getgrgid()), code(getpwname()), and code(getgrnam()). |
| You should test what libraries and config files are required for your OS |
| and get those setup before starting to test name mapping in rsync. |
| |
| dit(bf(munge symlinks)) This parameter tells rsync to modify |
| all symlinks in the same way as the (non-daemon-affecting) |
| bf(--munge-links) command-line option (using a method described below). |
| This should help protect your files from user trickery when |
| your daemon module is writable. The default is disabled when "use chroot" |
| is on with an inside-chroot path of "/", OR if "daemon chroot" is on, |
| otherwise it is enabled. |
| |
| If you disable this parameter on a daemon that is not read-only, there |
| are tricks that a user can play with uploaded symlinks to access |
| daemon-excluded items (if your module has any), and, if "use chroot" |
| is off, rsync can even be tricked into showing or changing data that |
| is outside the module's path (as access-permissions allow). |
| |
| The way rsync disables the use of symlinks is to prefix each one with |
| the string "/rsyncd-munged/". This prevents the links from being used |
| as long as that directory does not exist. When this parameter is enabled, |
| rsync will refuse to run if that path is a directory or a symlink to |
| a directory. When using the "munge symlinks" parameter in a chroot area |
| that has an inside-chroot path of "/", you should add "/rsyncd-munged/" |
| to the exclude setting for the module so that |
| a user can't try to create it. |
| |
| Note: rsync makes no attempt to verify that any pre-existing symlinks in |
| the module's hierarchy are as safe as you want them to be (unless, of |
| course, it just copied in the whole hierarchy). If you setup an rsync |
| daemon on a new area or locally add symlinks, you can manually protect your |
| symlinks from being abused by prefixing "/rsyncd-munged/" to the start of |
| every symlink's value. There is a perl script in the support directory |
| of the source code named "munge-symlinks" that can be used to add or remove |
| this prefix from your symlinks. |
| |
| When this parameter is disabled on a writable module and "use chroot" is off |
| (or the inside-chroot path is not "/"), |
| incoming symlinks will be modified to drop a leading slash and to remove ".." |
| path elements that rsync believes will allow a symlink to escape the module's |
| hierarchy. There are tricky ways to work around this, though, so you had |
| better trust your users if you choose this combination of parameters. |
| |
| dit(bf(charset)) This specifies the name of the character set in which the |
| module's filenames are stored. If the client uses an bf(--iconv) option, |
| the daemon will use the value of the "charset" parameter regardless of the |
| character set the client actually passed. This allows the daemon to |
| support charset conversion in a chroot module without extra files in the |
| chroot area, and also ensures that name-translation is done in a consistent |
| manner. If the "charset" parameter is not set, the bf(--iconv) option is |
| refused, just as if "iconv" had been specified via "refuse options". |
| |
| If you wish to force users to always use bf(--iconv) for a particular |
| module, add "no-iconv" to the "refuse options" parameter. Keep in mind |
| that this will restrict access to your module to very new rsync clients. |
| |
| dit(bf(max connections)) This parameter allows you to |
| specify the maximum number of simultaneous connections you will allow. |
| Any clients connecting when the maximum has been reached will receive a |
| message telling them to try later. The default is 0, which means no limit. |
| A negative value disables the module. |
| See also the "lock file" parameter. |
| |
| dit(bf(log file)) When the "log file" parameter is set to a non-empty |
| string, the rsync daemon will log messages to the indicated file rather |
| than using syslog. This is particularly useful on systems (such as AIX) |
| where code(syslog()) doesn't work for chrooted programs. The file is |
| opened before code(chroot()) is called, allowing it to be placed outside |
| the transfer. If this value is set on a per-module basis instead of |
| globally, the global log will still contain any authorization failures |
| or config-file error messages. |
| |
| If the daemon fails to open the specified file, it will fall back to |
| using syslog and output an error about the failure. (Note that the |
| failure to open the specified log file used to be a fatal error.) |
| |
| This setting can be overridden by using the bf(--log-file=FILE) or |
| bf(--dparam=logfile=FILE) command-line options. The former overrides |
| all the log-file parameters of the daemon and all module settings. |
| The latter sets the daemon's log file and the default for all the |
| modules, which still allows modules to override the default setting. |
| |
| dit(bf(syslog facility)) This parameter allows you to |
| specify the syslog facility name to use when logging messages from the |
| rsync daemon. You may use any standard syslog facility name which is |
| defined on your system. Common names are auth, authpriv, cron, daemon, |
| ftp, kern, lpr, mail, news, security, syslog, user, uucp, local0, |
| local1, local2, local3, local4, local5, local6 and local7. The default |
| is daemon. This setting has no effect if the "log file" setting is a |
| non-empty string (either set in the per-modules settings, or inherited |
| from the global settings). |
| |
| dit(bf(syslog tag)) This parameter allows you to specify the syslog |
| tag to use when logging messages from the rsync daemon. The default is |
| "rsyncd". This setting has no effect if the "log file" setting is a |
| non-empty string (either set in the per-modules settings, or inherited |
| from the global settings). |
| |
| For example, if you wanted each authenticated user's name to be |
| included in the syslog tag, you could do something like this: |
| |
| verb( syslog tag = rsyncd.%RSYNC_USER_NAME%) |
| |
| dit(bf(max verbosity)) This parameter allows you to control |
| the maximum amount of verbose information that you'll allow the daemon to |
| generate (since the information goes into the log file). The default is 1, |
| which allows the client to request one level of verbosity. |
| |
| This also affects the user's ability to request higher levels of bf(--info) and |
| bf(--debug) logging. If the max value is 2, then no info and/or debug value |
| that is higher than what would be set by bf(-vv) will be honored by the daemon |
| in its logging. To see how high of a verbosity level you need to accept for a |
| particular info/debug level, refer to "rsync --info=help" and "rsync --debug=help". |
| For instance, it takes max-verbosity 4 to be able to output debug TIME2 and FLIST3. |
| |
| dit(bf(lock file)) This parameter specifies the file to use to |
| support the "max connections" parameter. The rsync daemon uses record |
| locking on this file to ensure that the max connections limit is not |
| exceeded for the modules sharing the lock file. |
| The default is tt(/var/run/rsyncd.lock). |
| |
| dit(bf(read only)) This parameter determines whether clients |
| will be able to upload files or not. If "read only" is true then any |
| attempted uploads will fail. If "read only" is false then uploads will |
| be possible if file permissions on the daemon side allow them. The default |
| is for all modules to be read only. |
| |
| Note that "auth users" can override this setting on a per-user basis. |
| |
| dit(bf(write only)) This parameter determines whether clients |
| will be able to download files or not. If "write only" is true then any |
| attempted downloads will fail. If "write only" is false then downloads |
| will be possible if file permissions on the daemon side allow them. The |
| default is for this parameter to be disabled. |
| |
| Helpful hint: you probably want to specify "refuse options = delete" for a |
| write-only module. |
| |
| ) |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(list)) This parameter determines whether this module is |
| listed when the client asks for a listing of available modules. In addition, |
| if this is false, the daemon will pretend the module does not exist |
| when a client denied by "hosts allow" or "hosts deny" attempts to access it. |
| Realize that if "reverse lookup" is disabled globally but enabled for the |
| module, the resulting reverse lookup to a potentially client-controlled DNS |
| server may still reveal to the client that it hit an existing module. |
| The default is for modules to be listable. |
| |
| dit(bf(uid)) This parameter specifies the user name or user ID that |
| file transfers to and from that module should take place as when the daemon |
| was run as root. In combination with the "gid" parameter this determines what |
| file permissions are available. The default when run by a super-user is to |
| switch to the system's "nobody" user. The default for a non-super-user is to |
| not try to change the user. See also the "gid" parameter. |
| |
| The RSYNC_USER_NAME environment variable may be used to request that rsync run |
| as the authorizing user. For example, if you want a rsync to run as the same |
| user that was received for the rsync authentication, this setup is useful: |
| |
| verb( uid = %RSYNC_USER_NAME% |
| gid = * ) |
| |
| dit(bf(gid)) This parameter specifies one or more group names/IDs that will be |
| used when accessing the module. The first one will be the default group, and |
| any extra ones be set as supplemental groups. You may also specify a "*" as |
| the first gid in the list, which will be replaced by all the normal groups for |
| the transfer's user (see "uid"). The default when run by a super-user is to |
| switch to your OS's "nobody" (or perhaps "nogroup") group with no other |
| supplementary groups. The default for a non-super-user is to not change any |
| group attributes (and indeed, your OS may not allow a non-super-user to try to |
| change their group settings). |
| |
| dit(bf(daemon uid)) This parameter specifies a uid under which the daemon will |
| run. The daemon usually runs as user root, and when this is left unset the user |
| is left unchanged. See also the "uid" parameter. |
| |
| dit(bf(daemon gid)) This parameter specifies a gid under which the daemon will |
| run. The daemon usually runs as group root, and when this is left unset, the |
| group is left unchanged. See also the "gid" parameter. |
| |
| dit(bf(fake super)) Setting "fake super = yes" for a module causes the |
| daemon side to behave as if the bf(--fake-super) command-line option had |
| been specified. This allows the full attributes of a file to be stored |
| without having to have the daemon actually running as root. |
| |
| dit(bf(filter)) The daemon has its own filter chain that determines what files |
| it will let the client access. This chain is not sent to the client and is |
| independent of any filters the client may have specified. Files excluded by |
| the daemon filter chain (bf(daemon-excluded) files) are treated as non-existent |
| if the client tries to pull them, are skipped with an error message if the |
| client tries to push them (triggering exit code 23), and are never deleted from |
| the module. You can use daemon filters to prevent clients from downloading or |
| tampering with private administrative files, such as files you may add to |
| support uid/gid name translations. |
| |
| The daemon filter chain is built from the "filter", "include from", "include", |
| "exclude from", and "exclude" parameters, in that order of priority. Anchored |
| patterns are anchored at the root of the module. To prevent access to an |
| entire subtree, for example, "/secret", you em(must) exclude everything in the |
| subtree; the easiest way to do this is with a triple-star pattern like |
| "/secret/***". |
| |
| The "filter" parameter takes a space-separated list of daemon filter rules, |
| though it is smart enough to know not to split a token at an internal space in |
| a rule (e.g. "- /foo - /bar" is parsed as two rules). You may specify one or |
| more merge-file rules using the normal syntax. Only one "filter" parameter can |
| apply to a given module in the config file, so put all the rules you want in a |
| single parameter. Note that per-directory merge-file rules do not provide as |
| much protection as global rules, but they can be used to make bf(--delete) work |
| better during a client download operation if the per-dir merge files are |
| included in the transfer and the client requests that they be used. |
| |
| dit(bf(exclude)) This parameter takes a space-separated list of daemon |
| exclude patterns. As with the client bf(--exclude) option, patterns can be |
| qualified with "- " or "+ " to explicitly indicate exclude/include. Only one |
| "exclude" parameter can apply to a given module. See the "filter" parameter |
| for a description of how excluded files affect the daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(include)) Use an "include" to override the effects of the "exclude" |
| parameter. Only one "include" parameter can apply to a given module. See the |
| "filter" parameter for a description of how excluded files affect the daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(exclude from)) This parameter specifies the name of a file |
| on the daemon that contains daemon exclude patterns, one per line. Only one |
| "exclude from" parameter can apply to a given module; if you have multiple |
| exclude-from files, you can specify them as a merge file in the "filter" |
| parameter. See the "filter" parameter for a description of how excluded files |
| affect the daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(include from)) Analogue of "exclude from" for a file of daemon include |
| patterns. Only one "include from" parameter can apply to a given module. See |
| the "filter" parameter for a description of how excluded files affect the |
| daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(incoming chmod)) This parameter allows you to specify a set of |
| comma-separated chmod strings that will affect the permissions of all |
| incoming files (files that are being received by the daemon). These |
| changes happen after all other permission calculations, and this will |
| even override destination-default and/or existing permissions when the |
| client does not specify bf(--perms). |
| See the description of the bf(--chmod) rsync option and the bf(chmod)(1) |
| manpage for information on the format of this string. |
| |
| dit(bf(outgoing chmod)) This parameter allows you to specify a set of |
| comma-separated chmod strings that will affect the permissions of all |
| outgoing files (files that are being sent out from the daemon). These |
| changes happen first, making the sent permissions appear to be different |
| than those stored in the filesystem itself. For instance, you could |
| disable group write permissions on the server while having it appear to |
| be on to the clients. |
| See the description of the bf(--chmod) rsync option and the bf(chmod)(1) |
| manpage for information on the format of this string. |
| |
| dit(bf(auth users)) This parameter specifies a comma and/or space-separated |
| list of authorization rules. In its simplest form, you list the usernames |
| that will be allowed to connect to |
| this module. The usernames do not need to exist on the local |
| system. The rules may contain shell wildcard characters that will be matched |
| against the username provided by the client for authentication. If |
| "auth users" is set then the client will be challenged to supply a |
| username and password to connect to the module. A challenge response |
| authentication protocol is used for this exchange. The plain text |
| usernames and passwords are stored in the file specified by the |
| "secrets file" parameter. The default is for all users to be able to |
| connect without a password (this is called "anonymous rsync"). |
| |
| In addition to username matching, you can specify groupname matching via a '@' |
| prefix. When using groupname matching, the authenticating username must be a |
| real user on the system, or it will be assumed to be a member of no groups. |
| For example, specifying "@rsync" will match the authenticating user if the |
| named user is a member of the rsync group. |
| |
| Finally, options may be specified after a colon (:). The options allow you to |
| "deny" a user or a group, set the access to "ro" (read-only), or set the access |
| to "rw" (read/write). Setting an auth-rule-specific ro/rw setting overrides |
| the module's "read only" setting. |
| |
| Be sure to put the rules in the order you want them to be matched, because the |
| checking stops at the first matching user or group, and that is the only auth |
| that is checked. For example: |
| |
| verb( auth users = joe:deny @guest:deny admin:rw @rsync:ro susan joe sam ) |
| |
| In the above rule, user joe will be denied access no matter what. Any user |
| that is in the group "guest" is also denied access. The user "admin" gets |
| access in read/write mode, but only if the admin user is not in group "guest" |
| (because the admin user-matching rule would never be reached if the user is in |
| group "guest"). Any other user who is in group "rsync" will get read-only |
| access. Finally, users susan, joe, and sam get the ro/rw setting of the |
| module, but only if the user didn't match an earlier group-matching rule. |
| |
| If you need to specify a user or group name with a space in it, start your list |
| with a comma to indicate that the list should only be split on commas (though |
| leading and trailing whitespace will also be removed, and empty entries are |
| just ignored). For example: |
| |
| verb( auth users = , joe:deny, @Some Group:deny, admin:rw, @RO Group:ro ) |
| |
| See the description of the secrets file for how you can have per-user passwords |
| as well as per-group passwords. It also explains how a user can authenticate |
| using their user password or (when applicable) a group password, depending on |
| what rule is being authenticated. |
| |
| See also the section entitled "USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE |
| SHELL CONNECTION" in bf(rsync)(1) for information on how handle an |
| rsyncd.conf-level username that differs from the remote-shell-level |
| username when using a remote shell to connect to an rsync daemon. |
| |
| dit(bf(secrets file)) This parameter specifies the name of a file that contains |
| the username:password and/or @groupname:password pairs used for authenticating |
| this module. This file is only consulted if the "auth users" parameter is |
| specified. The file is line-based and contains one name:password pair per |
| line. Any line has a hash (#) as the very first character on the line is |
| considered a comment and is skipped. The passwords can contain any characters |
| but be warned that many operating systems limit the length of passwords that |
| can be typed at the client end, so you may find that passwords longer than 8 |
| characters don't work. |
| |
| The use of group-specific lines are only relevant when the module is being |
| authorized using a matching "@groupname" rule. When that happens, the user |
| can be authorized via either their "username:password" line or the |
| "@groupname:password" line for the group that triggered the authentication. |
| |
| It is up to you what kind of password entries you want to include, either |
| users, groups, or both. The use of group rules in "auth users" does not |
| require that you specify a group password if you do not want to use shared |
| passwords. |
| |
| There is no default for the "secrets file" parameter, you must choose a name |
| (such as tt(/etc/rsyncd.secrets)). The file must normally not be readable |
| by "other"; see "strict modes". If the file is not found or is rejected, no |
| logins for a "user auth" module will be possible. |
| |
| dit(bf(strict modes)) This parameter determines whether or not |
| the permissions on the secrets file will be checked. If "strict modes" is |
| true, then the secrets file must not be readable by any user ID other |
| than the one that the rsync daemon is running under. If "strict modes" is |
| false, the check is not performed. The default is true. This parameter |
| was added to accommodate rsync running on the Windows operating system. |
| |
| ) |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(hosts allow)) This parameter allows you to specify a list of comma- |
| and/or whitespace-separated patterns that are matched against a connecting |
| client's hostname and IP address. If none of the patterns match, then the |
| connection is rejected. |
| |
| Each pattern can be in one of five forms: |
| |
| quote(itemization( |
| it() a dotted decimal IPv4 address of the form a.b.c.d, or an IPv6 address |
| of the form a:b:c::d:e:f. In this case the incoming machine's IP address |
| must match exactly. |
| it() an address/mask in the form ipaddr/n where ipaddr is the IP address |
| and n is the number of one bits in the netmask. All IP addresses which |
| match the masked IP address will be allowed in. |
| it() an address/mask in the form ipaddr/maskaddr where ipaddr is the |
| IP address and maskaddr is the netmask in dotted decimal notation for IPv4, |
| or similar for IPv6, e.g. ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: instead of /64. All IP |
| addresses which match the masked IP address will be allowed in. |
| it() a hostname pattern using wildcards. If the hostname of the connecting IP |
| (as determined by a reverse lookup) matches the wildcarded name (using the |
| same rules as normal unix filename matching), the client is allowed in. This |
| only works if "reverse lookup" is enabled (the default). |
| it() a hostname. A plain hostname is matched against the reverse DNS of the |
| connecting IP (if "reverse lookup" is enabled), and/or the IP of the given |
| hostname is matched against the connecting IP (if "forward lookup" is |
| enabled, as it is by default). Any match will be allowed in. |
| )) |
| |
| Note IPv6 link-local addresses can have a scope in the address specification: |
| |
| quote( |
| tt( fe80::1%link1)nl() |
| tt( fe80::%link1/64)nl() |
| tt( fe80::%link1/ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff::)nl() |
| ) |
| |
| You can also combine "hosts allow" with a separate "hosts deny" |
| parameter. If both parameters are specified then the "hosts allow" parameter is |
| checked first and a match results in the client being able to |
| connect. The "hosts deny" parameter is then checked and a match means |
| that the host is rejected. If the host does not match either the |
| "hosts allow" or the "hosts deny" patterns then it is allowed to |
| connect. |
| |
| The default is no "hosts allow" parameter, which means all hosts can connect. |
| |
| dit(bf(hosts deny)) This parameter allows you to specify a list of comma- |
| and/or whitespace-separated patterns that are matched against a connecting |
| clients hostname and IP address. If the pattern matches then the connection is |
| rejected. See the "hosts allow" parameter for more information. |
| |
| The default is no "hosts deny" parameter, which means all hosts can connect. |
| |
| dit(bf(reverse lookup)) Controls whether the daemon performs a reverse lookup |
| on the client's IP address to determine its hostname, which is used for |
| "hosts allow"/"hosts deny" checks and the "%h" log escape. This is enabled by |
| default, but you may wish to disable it to save time if you know the lookup will |
| not return a useful result, in which case the daemon will use the name |
| "UNDETERMINED" instead. |
| |
| If this parameter is enabled globally (even by default), rsync performs the |
| lookup as soon as a client connects, so disabling it for a module will not |
| avoid the lookup. Thus, you probably want to disable it globally and then |
| enable it for modules that need the information. |
| |
| dit(bf(forward lookup)) Controls whether the daemon performs a forward lookup |
| on any hostname specified in an hosts allow/deny setting. By default this is |
| enabled, allowing the use of an explicit hostname that would not be returned |
| by reverse DNS of the connecting IP. |
| |
| dit(bf(ignore errors)) This parameter tells rsyncd to |
| ignore I/O errors on the daemon when deciding whether to run the delete |
| phase of the transfer. Normally rsync skips the bf(--delete) step if any |
| I/O errors have occurred in order to prevent disastrous deletion due |
| to a temporary resource shortage or other I/O error. In some cases this |
| test is counter productive so you can use this parameter to turn off this |
| behavior. |
| |
| dit(bf(ignore nonreadable)) This tells the rsync daemon to completely |
| ignore files that are not readable by the user. This is useful for |
| public archives that may have some non-readable files among the |
| directories, and the sysadmin doesn't want those files to be seen at all. |
| |
| dit(bf(transfer logging)) This parameter enables per-file |
| logging of downloads and uploads in a format somewhat similar to that |
| used by ftp daemons. The daemon always logs the transfer at the end, so |
| if a transfer is aborted, no mention will be made in the log file. |
| |
| If you want to customize the log lines, see the "log format" parameter. |
| |
| dit(bf(log format)) This parameter allows you to specify the |
| format used for logging file transfers when transfer logging is enabled. |
| The format is a text string containing embedded single-character escape |
| sequences prefixed with a percent (%) character. An optional numeric |
| field width may also be specified between the percent and the escape |
| letter (e.g. "bf(%-50n %8l %07p)"). |
| In addition, one or more apostrophes may be specified prior to a numerical |
| escape to indicate that the numerical value should be made more human-readable. |
| The 3 supported levels are the same as for the bf(--human-readable) |
| command-line option, though the default is for human-readability to be off. |
| Each added apostrophe increases the level (e.g. "bf(%''l %'b %f)"). |
| |
| The default log format is "%o %h [%a] %m (%u) %f %l", and a "%t [%p] " |
| is always prefixed when using the "log file" parameter. |
| (A perl script that will summarize this default log format is included |
| in the rsync source code distribution in the "support" subdirectory: |
| rsyncstats.) |
| |
| The single-character escapes that are understood are as follows: |
| |
| quote(itemization( |
| it() %a the remote IP address (only available for a daemon) |
| it() %b the number of bytes actually transferred |
| it() %B the permission bits of the file (e.g. rwxrwxrwt) |
| it() %c the total size of the block checksums received for the basis file (only when sending) |
| it() %C the full-file checksum if it is known for the file. For older rsync protocols/versions, the checksum was salted, and is thus not a useful value (and is not displayed when that is the case). For the checksum to output for a file, either the bf(--checksum) option must be in-effect or the file must have been transferred without a salted checksum being used. See the bf(--checksum-choice) option for a way to choose the algorithm. |
| it() %f the filename (long form on sender; no trailing "/") |
| it() %G the gid of the file (decimal) or "DEFAULT" |
| it() %h the remote host name (only available for a daemon) |
| it() %i an itemized list of what is being updated |
| it() %l the length of the file in bytes |
| it() %L the string " -> SYMLINK", " => HARDLINK", or "" (where bf(SYMLINK) or bf(HARDLINK) is a filename) |
| it() %m the module name |
| it() %M the last-modified time of the file |
| it() %n the filename (short form; trailing "/" on dir) |
| it() %o the operation, which is "send", "recv", or "del." (the latter includes the trailing period) |
| it() %p the process ID of this rsync session |
| it() %P the module path |
| it() %t the current date time |
| it() %u the authenticated username or an empty string |
| it() %U the uid of the file (decimal) |
| )) |
| |
| For a list of what the characters mean that are output by "%i", see the |
| bf(--itemize-changes) option in the rsync manpage. |
| |
| Note that some of the logged output changes when talking with older |
| rsync versions. For instance, deleted files were only output as verbose |
| messages prior to rsync 2.6.4. |
| |
| ) |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(timeout)) This parameter allows you to override the |
| clients choice for I/O timeout for this module. Using this parameter you |
| can ensure that rsync won't wait on a dead client forever. The timeout |
| is specified in seconds. A value of zero means no timeout and is the |
| default. A good choice for anonymous rsync daemons may be 600 (giving |
| a 10 minute timeout). |
| |
| dit(bf(refuse options)) This parameter allows you to |
| specify a space-separated list of rsync command line options that will |
| be refused by your rsync daemon. |
| You may specify the full option name, its one-letter abbreviation, or a |
| wild-card string that matches multiple options. |
| For example, this would refuse bf(--checksum) (bf(-c)) and all the various |
| delete options: |
| |
| quote(tt( refuse options = c delete)) |
| |
| The reason the above refuses all delete options is that the options imply |
| bf(--delete), and implied options are refused just like explicit options. |
| As an additional safety feature, the refusal of "delete" also refuses |
| bf(remove-source-files) when the daemon is the sender; if you want the latter |
| without the former, instead refuse "delete-*" -- that refuses all the |
| delete modes without affecting bf(--remove-source-files). |
| |
| When an option is refused, the daemon prints an error message and exits. |
| To prevent all compression when serving files, |
| you can use "dont compress = *" (see below) |
| instead of "refuse options = compress" to avoid returning an error to a |
| client that requests compression. |
| |
| dit(bf(dont compress)) This parameter allows you to select |
| filenames based on wildcard patterns that should not be compressed |
| when pulling files from the daemon (no analogous parameter exists to |
| govern the pushing of files to a daemon). |
| Compression is expensive in terms of CPU usage, so it |
| is usually good to not try to compress files that won't compress well, |
| such as already compressed files. |
| |
| The "dont compress" parameter takes a space-separated list of |
| case-insensitive wildcard patterns. Any source filename matching one |
| of the patterns will not be compressed during transfer. |
| |
| See the bf(--skip-compress) parameter in the bf(rsync)(1) manpage for the list |
| of file suffixes that are not compressed by default. Specifying a value |
| for the "dont compress" parameter changes the default when the daemon is |
| the sender. |
| |
| ) |
| description( |
| |
| dit(bf(pre-xfer exec), bf(post-xfer exec)) You may specify a command to be run |
| before and/or after the transfer. If the bf(pre-xfer exec) command fails, the |
| transfer is aborted before it begins. Any output from the script on stdout (up |
| to several KB) will be displayed to the user when aborting, but is NOT |
| displayed if the script returns success. Any output from the script on stderr |
| goes to the daemon's stderr, which is typically discarded (though see |
| --no-detatch option for a way to see the stderr output, which can assist with |
| debugging). |
| |
| The following environment variables will be set, though some are |
| specific to the pre-xfer or the post-xfer environment: |
| |
| quote(itemization( |
| it() bf(RSYNC_MODULE_NAME): The name of the module being accessed. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_MODULE_PATH): The path configured for the module. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_HOST_ADDR): The accessing host's IP address. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_HOST_NAME): The accessing host's name. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_USER_NAME): The accessing user's name (empty if no user). |
| it() bf(RSYNC_PID): A unique number for this transfer. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_REQUEST): (pre-xfer only) The module/path info specified |
| by the user. Note that the user can specify multiple source files, |
| so the request can be something like "mod/path1 mod/path2", etc. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_ARG#): (pre-xfer only) The pre-request arguments are set |
| in these numbered values. RSYNC_ARG0 is always "rsyncd", followed by |
| the options that were used in RSYNC_ARG1, and so on. There will be a |
| value of "." indicating that the options are done and the path args |
| are beginning -- these contain similar information to RSYNC_REQUEST, |
| but with values separated and the module name stripped off. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_EXIT_STATUS): (post-xfer only) the server side's exit value. |
| This will be 0 for a successful run, a positive value for an error that the |
| server generated, or a -1 if rsync failed to exit properly. Note that an |
| error that occurs on the client side does not currently get sent to the |
| server side, so this is not the final exit status for the whole transfer. |
| it() bf(RSYNC_RAW_STATUS): (post-xfer only) the raw exit value from code(waitpid()). |
| )) |
| |
| Even though the commands can be associated with a particular module, they |
| are run using the permissions of the user that started the daemon (not the |
| module's uid/gid setting) without any chroot restrictions. |
| |
| ) |
| |
| manpagesection(CONFIG DIRECTIVES) |
| |
| There are currently two config directives available that allow a config file to |
| incorporate the contents of other files: bf(&include) and bf(&merge). Both |
| allow a reference to either a file or a directory. They differ in how |
| segregated the file's contents are considered to be. |
| |
| The bf(&include) directive treats each file as more distinct, with each one |
| inheriting the defaults of the parent file, starting the parameter parsing |
| as globals/defaults, and leaving the defaults unchanged for the parsing of |
| the rest of the parent file. |
| |
| The bf(&merge) directive, on the other hand, treats the file's contents as |
| if it were simply inserted in place of the directive, and thus it can set |
| parameters in a module started in another file, can affect the defaults for |
| other files, etc. |
| |
| When an bf(&include) or bf(&merge) directive refers to a directory, it will read |
| in all the bf(*.conf) or bf(*.inc) files (respectively) that are contained inside |
| that directory (without any |
| recursive scanning), with the files sorted into alpha order. So, if you have a |
| directory named "rsyncd.d" with the files "foo.conf", "bar.conf", and |
| "baz.conf" inside it, this directive: |
| |
| verb( &include /path/rsyncd.d ) |
| |
| would be the same as this set of directives: |
| |
| verb( &include /path/rsyncd.d/bar.conf |
| &include /path/rsyncd.d/baz.conf |
| &include /path/rsyncd.d/foo.conf ) |
| |
| except that it adjusts as files are added and removed from the directory. |
| |
| The advantage of the bf(&include) directive is that you can define one or more |
| modules in a separate file without worrying about unintended side-effects |
| between the self-contained module files. |
| |
| The advantage of the bf(&merge) directive is that you can load config snippets |
| that can be included into multiple module definitions, and you can also set |
| global values that will affect connections (such as bf(motd file)), or globals |
| that will affect other include files. |
| |
| For example, this is a useful /etc/rsyncd.conf file: |
| |
| verb( port = 873 |
| log file = /var/log/rsync.log |
| pid file = /var/lock/rsync.lock |
| |
| &merge /etc/rsyncd.d |
| &include /etc/rsyncd.d ) |
| |
| This would merge any /etc/rsyncd.d/*.inc files (for global values that should |
| stay in effect), and then include any /etc/rsyncd.d/*.conf files (defining |
| modules without any global-value cross-talk). |
| |
| manpagesection(AUTHENTICATION STRENGTH) |
| |
| The authentication protocol used in rsync is a 128 bit MD4 based |
| challenge response system. This is fairly weak protection, though (with |
| at least one brute-force hash-finding algorithm publicly available), so |
| if you want really top-quality security, then I recommend that you run |
| rsync over ssh. (Yes, a future version of rsync will switch over to a |
| stronger hashing method.) |
| |
| Also note that the rsync daemon protocol does not currently provide any |
| encryption of the data that is transferred over the connection. Only |
| authentication is provided. Use ssh as the transport if you want |
| encryption. |
| |
| Future versions of rsync may support SSL for better authentication and |
| encryption, but that is still being investigated. |
| |
| manpagesection(EXAMPLES) |
| |
| A simple rsyncd.conf file that allow anonymous rsync to a ftp area at |
| tt(/home/ftp) would be: |
| |
| verb( |
| [ftp] |
| path = /home/ftp |
| comment = ftp export area |
| ) |
| |
| A more sophisticated example would be: |
| |
| verb( |
| uid = nobody |
| gid = nobody |
| use chroot = yes |
| max connections = 4 |
| syslog facility = local5 |
| pid file = /var/run/rsyncd.pid |
| |
| [ftp] |
| path = /var/ftp/./pub |
| comment = whole ftp area (approx 6.1 GB) |
| |
| [sambaftp] |
| path = /var/ftp/./pub/samba |
| comment = Samba ftp area (approx 300 MB) |
| |
| [rsyncftp] |
| path = /var/ftp/./pub/rsync |
| comment = rsync ftp area (approx 6 MB) |
| |
| [sambawww] |
| path = /public_html/samba |
| comment = Samba WWW pages (approx 240 MB) |
| |
| [cvs] |
| path = /data/cvs |
| comment = CVS repository (requires authentication) |
| auth users = tridge, susan |
| secrets file = /etc/rsyncd.secrets |
| ) |
| |
| The /etc/rsyncd.secrets file would look something like this: |
| |
| quote( |
| tt(tridge:mypass)nl() |
| tt(susan:herpass)nl() |
| ) |
| |
| manpagefiles() |
| |
| /etc/rsyncd.conf or rsyncd.conf |
| |
| manpageseealso() |
| |
| bf(rsync)(1) |
| |
| manpagediagnostics() |
| |
| manpagebugs() |
| |
| Please report bugs! The rsync bug tracking system is online at |
| url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/) |
| |
| manpagesection(VERSION) |
| |
| This man page is current for version 3.1.2 of rsync. |
| |
| manpagesection(CREDITS) |
| |
| rsync is distributed under the GNU General Public License. See the file |
| COPYING for details. |
| |
| The primary ftp site for rsync is |
| url(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync)(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync). |
| |
| A WEB site is available at |
| url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/) |
| |
| We would be delighted to hear from you if you like this program. |
| |
| This program uses the zlib compression library written by Jean-loup |
| Gailly and Mark Adler. |
| |
| manpagesection(THANKS) |
| |
| Thanks to Warren Stanley for his original idea and patch for the rsync |
| daemon. Thanks to Karsten Thygesen for his many suggestions and |
| documentation! |
| |
| manpageauthor() |
| |
| rsync was written by Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras. |
| Many people have later contributed to it. |
| |
| Mailing lists for support and development are available at |
| url(http://lists.samba.org)(lists.samba.org) |