Last modified: 19 Jun 2006
Access
your control panel
Managing FTP Access
This document considers the following aspects of file transfer process in H-Sphere:
Main FTP User
After signup users are provided with FTP access to their home directory. To
establish an FTP connection, you will need the following pieces of information:
FTP login, FTP password, and FTP host name.
To find this information:
- Select FTP User link in FTP/User Account menu.
- On the page that appears:

- Login - is the login to be used to enter a user directory via
FTP. It is automatically generated on the basis of the account name.
Note: instead of using an FTP client, you may choose here H-Sphere
built-in Web-based file manager WebShell
by clicking the File Manager (HtProtect) link.
- Password - by default is the password associated with your username.
If necessary, you can change
and hence make it different from you CP password.
- Host Name - is a web server domain name to be used to access
files via FTP.
Sharing FTP access to your home directory
There are different ways to allow guest users to download, upload or view files
in dedicated directories of your account:
FTP Subaccounts
(starting with 2.5 version available for Unix and Windows based
accounts;
for versions lower than 2.5 - for Unix based accounts only)
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.
To create a new FTP subaccount:
- Select FTP User link in FTP/User Account menu.
- At the bottom of the page that shows, find FTP sub-accounts (or System
accounts in H-Sphere 2.5.1 and up) and click the Add icon.
- On the next page, enter the FTP login and password that will be used by
this other user, and the directory this user will be restricted to.
The directory must be relative to your home directory. If you leave the directory
field empty, FTP sub-users will have access to your whole home directory.
Notes:
- FTP subaccount's directory can be multi-level nested subdirectory relative
to your home directory.
- For Windows accounts you must use the "\" character as a delimiter in
the path.
- Before H-Sphere 2.5, leading slash is required (e.g., /domain.com/dir/subdir).
In H-Sphere 2.5 and up, you must not add the leading slash (domain.com/dir/subdir
- Unix, domain.com\dir\subdir - Windows).
- In H-Sphere 2.5.1, when creating FTP subaccounts you can also make the FTP
subuser being set up a SharePoint user. For this, on the first step check
Allow sharepoint access as well and enter
SharePoint settings.
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.
Important:
Windows FTP-subaccounts work only if Webshell version is 4.3.2 and up.
Virtual FTP
(available only for Unix based accounts)
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.
To provide Virtual FTP Access to a certain domain, do the following:
- If you are using a dedicated IP, skip this step. Otherwise, switch
to dedicated IP.
- Select FTP in FTP/User Account menu.
- Enable FTP for this domain:

If you have several domains, choose the one to enable virtual FTP for.
- Click the confirmation link to agree with the charges.
- Fill the form that appears:

- Add Name of the Server for the new virtual host. This name will appear
in the welcome message when guest users connect to your server with FTP clients.
- Enter E-mail of the administrator by which FTP users can reach you
with questions or comments.
- Create a new Virtual FTP User by going to the FTP Host page and clicking
Add for Virtual ftp-users

- 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/.
On the same page, specify permissions to this directory:
Read: check to allow file downloads from this directory.
Write: check to allow file uploads to this directory. List:
check to allow viewing / browsing the contents of the directory. It is usually
used jointly with Read.
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 them individually:

If you have chosen to grant the same permissions to all users, you can
skip this step.
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.
To configure Anonymous FTP, do the following:
- Select FTP in FTP/User Account menu.
- If you have several domains, choose the one to enable virtual FTP for. On
the page that appears, switch to dedicated IP.
(Read
more about Shared and Dedicated IPs.)
- Skip this step if you have already enabled Virtual FTP.
Select FTP in FTP/User Account menu. Enable FTP for this domain:

and agree with the charges.
- On your control panel home page, select FTP in FTP/User Account menu.
Enable Anonymous FTP for this domain:

- Agree with the charges if any.
Anonymous FTP Upload Facilities
If you want to allow anonymous FTP users to upload files, enable Anonymous
FTP Upload Facilities by doing the following:
- Enable Anonymous FTP.
- At the bottom of the FTP vhost page you will find a new option to
enable anonymous FTP upload facilities:

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.