Securely share your files
SFTP

Supported tags and respective Dockerfile links
Securely share your files
Easy to use SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) server with OpenSSH.
Usage
- Define users in (1) command arguments, (2)
SFTP_USERSenvironment variable
/etc/sftp/users.conf (syntax:
user:pass[:e][:uid[:gid[:dir1[,dir2]...]]] ..., see below for examples)
- Set UID/GID manually for your users if you want them to make changes to
your mounted volumes with permissions matching your host filesystem.
- Directory names at the end will be created under user's home directory with
write permission, if they aren't already present.
- Mount volumes
/etc/ssh/sshhost*)
Examples
Simplest docker run example
docker run -p 22:22 -d atmoz/sftp foo:pass:::upload
User "foo" with password "pass" can login with sftp and upload files to a folder called "upload". No mounted directories or custom UID/GID. Later you can inspect the files and use --volumes-from to mount them somewhere else (or see next example).
Sharing a directory from your computer
Let's mount a directory and set UID:
docker run \
-v <host-dir>/upload:/home/foo/upload \
-p 2222:22 -d atmoz/sftp \
foo:pass:1001
Using Docker Compose:
sftp:
image: atmoz/sftp
volumes:
- <host-dir>/upload:/home/foo/upload
ports:
- "2222:22"
command: foo:pass:1001
Logging in
The OpenSSH server runs by default on port 22, and in this example, we are forwarding the container's port 22 to the host's port 2222. To log in with the OpenSSH client, run: sftp -P 2222 foo@<host-ip>
Store users in config
docker run \
-v <host-dir>/users.conf:/etc/sftp/users.conf:ro \
-v mySftpVolume:/home \
-p 2222:22 -d atmoz/sftp
foo:123:1001:100
bar:abc:1002:100
baz:xyz:1003:100
Encrypted password
Add :e behind password to mark it as encrypted. Use single quotes if using terminal.
docker run \
-v <host-dir>/share:/home/foo/share \
-p 2222:22 -d atmoz/sftp \
'foo:$1$0G2g0GSt$ewU0t6GXG15.0hWoOX8X9.:e:1001'
Tip: you can use this Python code to generate encrypted passwords: docker run --rm python:alpine python -c "import crypt; print(crypt.crypt('YOUR_PASSWORD'))"
Logging in with SSH keys
Mount public keys in the user's .ssh/keys/ directory. All keys are automatically appended to .ssh/authorized_keys (you can't mount this file directly, because OpenSSH requires limited file permissions). In this example, we do not provide any password, so the user foo can only login with his SSH key.
docker run \
-v <host-dir>/idrsa.pub:/home/foo/.ssh/keys/idrsa.pub:ro \
-v <host-dir>/idother.pub:/home/foo/.ssh/keys/idother.pub:ro \
-v <host-dir>/share:/home/foo/share \
-p 2222:22 -d atmoz/sftp \
foo::1001
Providing your own SSH host key (recommended)
This container will generate new SSH host keys at first run. To avoid that your users get a MITM warning when you recreate your container (and the host keys changes), you can mount your own host keys.
docker run \
-v <host-dir>/sshhosted25519key:/etc/ssh/sshhosted25519key \
-v <host-dir>/sshhostrsakey:/etc/ssh/sshhostrsakey \
-v <host-dir>/share:/home/foo/share \
-p 2222:22 -d atmoz/sftp \
foo::1001
Tip: you can generate your keys with these commands:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f sshhosted25519_key < /dev/null
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -f sshhostrsa_key < /dev/null
Execute custom scripts or applications
Put your programs in /etc/sftp.d/ and it will automatically run when the container starts. See next section for an example.
Bindmount dirs from another location
If you are using --volumes-from or just want to make a custom directory available in user's home directory, you can add a script to /etc/sftp.d/ that bindmounts after container starts.
#!/bin/bash
File mounted as: /etc/sftp.d/bindmount.sh
Just an example (make your own)
function bindmount() { if [ -d "$1" ]; then mkdir -p "$2" fi mount --bind $3 "$1" "$2" }
Remember permissions, you may have to fix them:
chown -R :users /data/common
bindmount /data/admin-tools /home/admin/tools bindmount /data/common /home/dave/common bindmount /data/common /home/peter/common bindmount /data/docs /home/peter/docs --read-only
NOTE: Using mount requires that your container runs with the CAPSYSADMIN capability turned on. See this answer for more information.
What's the difference between Debian and Alpine?
The biggest differences are in size and OpenSSH version. Alpine is 10 times smaller than Debian. OpenSSH version can also differ, as it's two different teams maintaining the packages. Debian is generally considered more stable and only bugfixes and security fixes are added after each Debian release (about 2 years). Alpine has a faster release cycle (about 6 months) and therefore newer versions of OpenSSH. As I'm writing this, Debian has version 7.4 while Alpine has version 7.5. Recommended reading: Comparing Debian vs Alpine for container & Docker apps
What version of OpenSSH do I get?
It depends on which linux distro and version you choose (see available images at the top). You can see what version you get by checking the distro's packages online. I have provided direct links below for easy access.
Daily builds
Images are automatically built daily to get the newest version of OpenSSH provided by the package managers.