Provided by: rssh_2.3.4-7ubuntu0.1_amd64 

NAME
/etc/rssh.conf - configuration file for rssh
OVERVIEW
rssh.conf is the configuration file for rssh. It allows the system administrator to control the behavior
of the shell. Configuration keywords are either used by themselves on a line, or followed by an equal
sign ('=') and a configuration value. Comments start with a hash ('#') and can occur anywhere on the
line. Configuration options are case insensitive. Spaces at the beginning or end of line, or between the
equal sign and the configuration keywords or values are ignored. If the value of a configuration option
contains spaces, it (or at least the space) must be enclosed in either single or double quotes.
A default configuration file is provided with the source distribution of rssh. If the configuration file
is missing or contains errors, ssh will lock out all users. If a config file is present, the default is
to lock out users if no services have been explicitly allowed.
New in v2.1 is the ability to configure options on a per-user basis, using the user keyword. More
details are below.
CONFIGURATION KEYWORDS
allowscp
Tells the shell that scp is allowed.
allowsftp
Tells the shell that sftp is allowed.
allowcvs
Tells the shell that cvs is allowed.
allowrdist
Tells the shell that rdist is allowed.
allowrsync
Tells the shell that rsync is allowed.
allowsvnserve
Tells the shell that svnserve is allowed.
umask
Sets the umask value for file creations in the scp/sftp session. This is normally set at login
time by the user's shell. In order not to use the system default, rssh must set the umask.
logfacility
Allows the system administrator to control what syslog facility rssh logs to. The facilities are
the same as those used by syslogd.conf(5), or the C macros for the facilities can be used instead.
For example:
logfacility=user
logfacility=LOG_USER
are equivalent, and tell rssh to use the user facility for logging to syslog.
chrootpath
Causes rssh (actually a helper program) to call the chroot() system call, changing the root of the
file system to whatever directory is specified. Note that the value on the right hand side of the
equal sign is the name of a directory, not a command. For example:
chrootpath=/usr/chroot
will change the root of the virtual file system to /usr/chroot, preventing the user from being
able to access anything below /usr/chroot in the file system, and making /usr/chroot appear to be
the root directory. Care must be taken to set up a proper chroot jail; see the file CHROOT in the
rssh source distribution for hints about how to do this. See also the chroot(2) man page.
If the user's home directory (as specified in /etc/passwd) is underneath the path specified by
this keyword, then the user will be chdir'd into their home directory. If it is not, then they
will be chdir'd to the root of the chroot jail.
In other words, if the jail is /chroot, and your user's home directory is /chroot/home/user, then
once rssh_chroot_helper changes the root of the system, it will cd into /home/user inside the
jail. However, if your user's home directory is given as /home/user in /etc/passwd, then even if
that directory exists in the jail, the chroot helper will not try to cd there. The user's normal
home directory must live inside the jail for this to work.
user
The user keyword allows for the configuration of options on a per-user basis. THIS KEYWORD
OVERRIDES ALL OTHER KEYWORDS FOR THE SPECIFIED USER. That is, if you use a user keyword for user
foo, then foo will use only the settings in that user line, and not any of the settings set with
the keywords above. The user keyword's argument consists of a group of fields separated by a
colon (':'), as shown below. The fields are, in order:
username
The username of the user for whom the entry provides options
umask
The umask for this user, in octal, just as it would be specified to the shell
access bits
Six binary digits, which indicate whether the user is allowed to use rsync, rdist, cvs,
sftp, scp and svnserve, in that order. One means the command is allowed, zero means it is
not.
path
The directory to which this user should be chrooted (this is not a command, it is a
directory name). See chroot_path above for complete details.
For example, you might have something like this:
user = luser:022:000010:
This does the following: for the user with the username "luser", set the umask to 022, disallow
sftp, and allow scp. Because there is no chroot path specified, the user will not be chrooted,
regardless of default options set with the keywords above. If you wanted this user to be
chrooted, you would need to specify the chroot path explicitly, even if it should be the same as
that set using the chrootpath keyword. Remember that if there are spaces in the path, you need to
quote it, something like this:
user = "luser:022:000010:/usr/local/chroot dir"
See the default rssh.conf file for more examples.
SEE ALSO
rssh(1), sshd(8), ssh(1), scp(1), sftp(1), svnserve(8), syslogd.conf(5), chroot(2).
man pages 7 Jul 2003 RSSH.CONF(5)