Provided by: proftpd-basic_1.3.5e-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ftpwho - show current process information for each FTP session

SYNOPSIS

       ftpwho

DESCRIPTION

       The  ftpwho  command  shows  process information for all active proftpd connections, and a
       count of all connected users off of each server.  Proftpd sessions spawned from inetd  are
       counted separately from those created by a master proftpd standalone server.

OPTIONS

       -h,--help   Display a short usage description, including all available options.

       -f,--file scoreboard-file
                   Specify  the  full  path to proftpd's run-time scoreboard file (configured via
                   the  ScoreboardFile  directive  in  proftpd.conf  ).   If  proftpd's   default
                   directory  has  been  changed  via  this  directive,  ftpwho  must  either  be
                   recompiled, or this option must be used in order to find proftpd's scoreboard.

       -o,--outform format
                   Specify an output format.  Currently, two "formats" are supported: compat  and
                   oneline.   The  compat format is used for backward compatibility.  The oneline
                   format causes all of the fields for a session to  be  displayed  on  a  single
                   line, for ease of line-based searches (e.g. grep).

       -v,--verbose
                   Reports  additional  information  for each connection, such as the remote host
                   and current working directory.  -S,--server server-name Specify the ServerName
                   for  a  specific  virtual  host.   If  used,  ftpwho  will  only  show session
                   information for the given virtual host.

FILES

       /usr/bin/ftpwho
       /run/proftpd.scoreboard

AUTHORS

       ProFTPD is written and maintained by a number of people, full  credits  can  be  found  on
       http://www.proftpd.org/credits.html

SEE ALSO

       inetd(8),ftp(1),proftpd(8),ftpcount(1),ftptop(1),ftpshut(8)

       Full  documentation  on  ProFTPD,  including  configuration  and  FAQs,  is  available  at
       http://www.proftpd.org/

       For    help/support,    try     the     ProFTPD     mailing     lists,     detailed     on
       http://www.proftpd.org/lists.html

       Report bugs at http://bugs.proftpd.org/

                                            March 2003                                  ftpwho(1)