Pure-ftp, alle Kommandos loggen

Hallo alle zusammen,
Ich möchte erreichen, dass in der Log-Datei des FTP-Servers alle
Clientbewegungen sichtbar sind. Bisher ist das so, das nur bei Traffic geloggt
wird.
VerboseLog auf „yes“ zu setzen, hat nichts bewirkt. Ein restart des ftp-Servers
nach Änderung der configdatei ist Pflichtprogramm.
Bei allen drei angebotenen Varianten der Logdatei wird jeweils nur bei Traffic
in die Logdatei geschrieben.
Verwendet wird:
pure ftpd 1.0.18
SLES 9

Kann mir jemand helfen,
Masei1202

pure-ftpd.conf:

ChrootEveryone yes 



# If the previous option is set to "no", members of the following group 
# won't be caged. Others will be. If you don't want chroot()ing anyone, 
# just comment out ChrootEveryone and TrustedGID. 

# TrustedGID 100 



# Turn on compatibility hacks for broken clients 

BrokenClientsCompatibility no 



# Maximum number of simultaneous users 

MaxClientsNumber 10 



# Fork in background 

Daemonize yes 



# Maximum number of sim clients with the same IP address 

MaxClientsPerIP 3 



# If you want to log all client commands, set this to "yes". 
# This directive can be duplicated to also log server responses. 

VerboseLog no 


# Allow dot-files 
AllowDotFiles yes 


# List dot-files even when the client doesn't send "-a". 

DisplayDotFiles yes 



# Don't allow authenticated users - have a public anonymous FTP only. 

AnonymousOnly yes 



# Disallow anonymous connections. Only allow authenticated users. 

NoAnonymous yes 



# Syslog facility (auth, authpriv, daemon, ftp, security, user, local\*) 
# The default facility is "ftp". "none" disables logging. 

SyslogFacility ftp 



# Display fortune cookies 

# FortunesFile /usr/share/fortune/zippy 



# Don't resolve host names in log files. Logs are less verbose, but 
# it uses less bandwidth. Set this to "yes" on very busy servers or 
# if you don't have a working DNS. 

DontResolve yes 



# Maximum idle time in minutes (default = 15 minutes) 

MaxIdleTime 15 



# LDAP configuration file (see README.LDAP) 

# LDAPConfigFile /etc/pure-ftpd/pureftpd-ldap.conf 



# MySQL configuration file (see README.MySQL) 

# MySQLConfigFile /etc/pure-ftpd/pureftpd-mysql.conf 


# Postgres configuration file (see README.PGSQL) 

# PGSQLConfigFile /etc/pure-ftpd/pureftpd-pgsql.conf 


# PureDB user database (see README.Virtual-Users) 

 PureDB /etc/pure-ftpd/pureftpd.pdb 


# Path to pure-authd socket (see README.Authentication-Modules) 

# ExtAuth /var/run/ftpd.sock 



# If you want to enable PAM authentication, uncomment the following line 

PAMAuthentication yes 



# If you want simple Unix (/etc/passwd) authentication, uncomment this 

# UnixAuthentication yes 



# Please note that LDAPConfigFile, MySQLConfigFile, PAMAuthentication and 
# UnixAuthentication can be used only once, but they can be combined 
# together. For instance, if you use MySQLConfigFile, then UnixAuthentication, 
# the SQL server will be asked. If the SQL authentication fails because the 
# user wasn't found, another try # will be done with /etc/passwd and 
# /etc/shadow. If the SQL authentication fails because the password was wrong, 
# the authentication chain stops here. Authentication methods are chained in 
# the order they are given. 



# 'ls' recursion limits. The first argument is the maximum number of 
# files to be displayed. The second one is the max subdirectories depth 

LimitRecursion 2000 8 



# Are anonymous users allowed to create new directories ? 

AnonymousCanCreateDirs no 



# If the system is more loaded than the following value, 
# anonymous users aren't allowed to download. 

MaxLoad 4 



# Port range for passive connections replies. - for firewalling. 

# PassivePortRange 30000 50000 



# Force an IP address in PASV/EPSV/SPSV replies. - for NAT. 
# Symbolic host names are also accepted for gateways with dynamic IP 
# addresses. 

# ForcePassiveIP 192.168.0.1 



# Upload/download ratio for anonymous users. 

# AnonymousRatio 1 10 



# Upload/download ratio for all users. 
# This directive superscedes the previous one. 

# UserRatio 1 10 



# Disallow downloading of files owned by "ftp", ie. 
# files that were uploaded but not validated by a local admin. 

AntiWarez yes 



# IP address/port to listen to (default=all IP and port 21). 

# Bind 127.0.0.1,21 



# Maximum bandwidth for anonymous users in KB/s 

# AnonymousBandwidth 8 



# Maximum bandwidth for \*all\* users (including anonymous) in KB/s 
# Use AnonymousBandwidth \*or\* UserBandwidth, both makes no sense. 

# UserBandwidth 8 



# File creation mask. : . 
# 177:077 if you feel paranoid. 

Umask 177:077 



# Minimum UID for an authenticated user to log in. 

MinUID 100 



# Allow FXP transfers for authenticated users only. 

AllowUserFXP yes 



# Allow anonymous FXP for anonymous and non-anonymous users. 

AllowAnonymousFXP no 



# Users can't delete/write files beginning with a dot ('.') 
# even if they own them. If TrustedGID is enabled, this group 
# will have access to dot-files, though. 

ProhibitDotFilesWrite yes 



# Prohibit \*reading\* of files beginning with a dot (.history, .ssh...) 

ProhibitDotFilesRead no 



# Never overwrite files. When a file whoose name already exist is uploaded, 
# it get automatically renamed to file.1, file.2, file.3, ... 

AutoRename yes 



# Disallow anonymous users to upload new files (no = upload is allowed) 

AnonymousCantUpload yes 



# Only connections to this specific IP address are allowed to be 
# non-anonymous. You can use this directive to open several public IPs for 
# anonymous FTP, and keep a private firewalled IP for remote administration. 
# You can also only allow a non-routable local IP (like 10.x.x.x) to 
# authenticate, and keep a public anon-only FTP server on another IP. 

#TrustedIP 10.1.1.1 



# If you want to add the PID to every logged line, uncomment the following 
# line. 

#LogPID yes 



# Create an additional log file with transfers logged in a Apache-like format : 
# fw.c9x.org - jedi [13/Dec/1975:19:36:39] "GET /ftp/linux.tar.bz2" 200 
21809338 
# This log file can then be processed by www traffic analyzers. 

 AltLog clf:/var/log/pureftpd.log 



# Create an additional log file with transfers logged in a format optimized 
# for statistic reports. 

# AltLog stats:/var/log/pureftpd.log 



# Create an additional log file with transfers logged in the standard W3C 
# format (compatible with most commercial log analyzers) 

# AltLog w3c:/var/log/pureftpd.log 



# Disallow the CHMOD command. Users can't change perms of their files. 

#NoChmod yes 



# Allow users to resume and upload files, but \*NOT\* to delete them. 

#KeepAllFiles yes 



# Automatically create home directories if they are missing 

#CreateHomeDir yes 



# Enable virtual quotas. The first number is the max number of files. 
# The second number is the max size of megabytes. 
# So 1000:10 limits every user to 1000 files and 10 Mb. 

#Quota 1000:10 



# If your pure-ftpd has been compiled with standalone support, you can change 
# the location of the pid file. The default is /var/run/pure-ftpd.pid 

#PIDFile /var/run/pure-ftpd.pid 



# If your pure-ftpd has been compiled with pure-uploadscript support, 
# this will make pure-ftpd write info about new uploads to 
# /var/run/pure-ftpd.upload.pipe so pure-uploadscript can read it and 
# spawn a script to handle the upload. 

#CallUploadScript yes 



# This option is useful with servers where anonymous upload is 
# allowed. As /var/ftp is in /var, it save some space and protect 
# the log files. When the partition is more that X percent full, 
# new uploads are disallowed. 

MaxDiskUsage 99 



# Set to 'yes' if you don't want your users to rename files. 

NoRename yes 



# Be 'customer proof' : workaround against common customer mistakes like 
# 'chmod 0 public\_html', that are valid, but that could cause ignorant 
# customers to lock their files, and then keep your technical support busy 
# with silly issues. If you're sure all your users have some basic Unix 
# knowledge, this feature is useless. If you're a hosting service, enable it. 

CustomerProof yes 



# Per-user concurrency limits. It will only work if the FTP server has 
# been compiled with --with-peruserlimits (and this is the case on 
# most binary distributions) . 
# The format is : : 
# For instance, 3:20 means that the same authenticated user can have 3 active 
# sessions max. And there are 20 anonymous sessions max. 

# PerUserLimits 3:20 



# When a file is uploaded and there is already a previous version of the file 
# with the same name, the old file will neither get removed nor truncated. 
# Upload will take place in a temporary file and once the upload is complete, 
# the switch to the new version will be atomic. For instance, when a large PHP 
# script is being uploaded, the web server will still serve the old version and 
# immediatly switch to the new one as soon as the full file will have been 
# transfered. This option is incompatible with virtual quotas. 

# NoTruncate yes 



# This option can accept three values : 
# 0 : disable SSL/TLS encryption layer (default). 
# 1 : accept both traditional and encrypted sessions. 
# 2 : refuse connections that don't use SSL/TLS security mechanisms, 
# including anonymous sessions. 
# Do \_not\_ uncomment this blindly. Be sure that : 
# 1) Your server has been compiled with SSL/TLS support (--with-tls), 
# 2) A valid certificate is in place, 
# 3) Only compatible clients will log in. 

# TLS 1 



# Listen only to IPv4 addresses in standalone mode (ie. disable IPv6) 
# By default, both IPv4 and IPv6 are enabled. 

# IPV4Only yes 



# Listen only to IPv6 addresses in standalone mode (ie. disable IPv4) 
# By default, both IPv4 and IPv6 are enabled. 

# IPV6Only yes