Hi Corina,

I agree with you on the fact that it's difficult to have full protection from 
Cygwin for ssh login.

But my main concern is SFTP. What can a user do with SFTP if he is jailed in 
Cygwin? He can only see, upload, download files in the allowed directories 
using SFTP and can't execute anything. So in my opinion the risk is very low to 
enable jailed SFTP in Cygwin.

The strange fact is that, Cygwin does allow jailed SSH but not jailed SFTP. 
Shouldn't it be the other way around if security is a big concern?


------------ Corinna Vinschen wrote: --------------------

Cygwin, being just another application layer, requires OS support for
certain functionality.  chroot is one of them.  chrooting isn't
supported by Windows.  All Cygwin is doing is to fake chroot for Cygwin
applications, as long as they are playing nice and only use POSIX
functions for file access.  As soon as they use Win32 functions, the
fake is uncovered.

Bottom line, you don't get any additional security by using chroot on
Cygwin.  You're just adding complexity to your setup.  Most of the time
you can use other measures to restrict the user anyway.



      

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