Hi, Found something which looks like it might do the trick:
http://www.sublimation.org/scponly/ Haven't tried it myself, though... Regards, Bennet On Thu, 2002-01-10 at 05:51, Jeff Norman wrote: > > Now, the trick is to replace bob's shell with a (perl?) script that > takes -c argument passed and checks if scp is the intended command. > If scp *isn't* the intended command, it merely exits, thus closing the > remote connection and effectively denying access to other commands. > If scp *is* what was requested, the script could just exec scp with the > requested options in place of itself and everything should continue as > normal. If you wanted to, you could even get really fancy and have the > script deny access to certain directories or types of files. > > Of course, I don't imagine that the ssh/scp combo was intended to be > used like this, so one should be careful while implementing, but other > than that, the only downside I can think of is that the user on the > remote system becomes useless for any purpose other than scp-ing. > > > Hope that makes sense. > Later, > > Jeff > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]