5 FTP: Sharing Access to Your Home Directory With Others 5 FTP: Sharing Access to Your Home Directory
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5.1 FTP Subaccounts (available only for Unix based accounts) The simplest way to authorize your friends or colleagues to work with particular directories of your account is to create FTP subaccounts. An FTP subaccount is a combination of a username and a password, which gives full FTP permissions to a single directory, without giving access to the root directory, other directories or the control panel. No dedicated IP is required for FTP subaccounts. Although each FTP subaccount has a login which is different from yours, both have the same ID in the system.
FTP subaccount traffic is a part of the Total/Summary traffic, but you can always see how much FTP traffic has been run up by an individual FTP subaccount by going to the FTP Manager page and clicking the Edit icon next to the subaccount login. 5.2 Virtual FTP Virtual FTP provides ampler possibilities than FTP sub-accounts. You can give your authorized Virtual FTP users access to more than one directory and specify a different set of permissions for each directory. Virtual FTP users log right into your root, but can enter only those directories you allow them to enter. The Virtual FTP functionality is only avaialable at linux-based servers.
To provide Virtual FTP Access to a certain domain, do the following: Skip this step if you are already using a dedicated IP.
Click the Add icon for Virtual FTP Directories and enter the name for the new Virtual FTP Directory: End it with a slash, e.g.: Dir1/. The location must be specified
relative to root. To create a virtual FTP directory inside a
different directory, include the path, for example UserDirs/Dir1/. Read: check to allow file downloads from this directory. Grant Permissions to all users: check to grant these permissions to all your Virtual FTP users. If you leave this property unchecked, you will have to define permissions on this directory individually for each Virtual FTP User. Click the Edit icon next to the directory you have just created.
If you haven't granted the same permissions to all your Virtual
FTP Users, you can specify permissions for each of 5.3 Anonymous FTP This feature allows you to give public FTP access to a dedicated directory in your account. A special directory is created in your root, and its content can be viewed and downloaded, but not uploaded. Anonymous FTP becomes available only after you create a Virtual FTP server.
Skip this step if you are already using a dedicated IP.
Skip this step if you have already enabled Virtual FTP.
5.4 Anonymous FTP Upload Facilities If you want to allow anonymous FTP users to upload files, enable Anonymous FTP Upload Facilities by doing the following:
Turn it on. This will create a dedicated directory inside the Anonymous FTP directory. * The Uploads (Windows based plans) / Incoming (Unix based plans) directory have only 'upload' permissions, so it will allow neither downloading nor viewing its content.
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