Tuesday 30 June 2015

Active FTP vs. Passive FTP

FTP

  • FTP is a TCP based service exclusively. 
  • There is no UDP component to FTP. 
  • FTP is an unusual service that it utilizes two ports, a 'data' port and a 'command' port (also known as the control port). 
  • Traditionally these are port 21 for the command port and port 20 for the data port. 
  • The confusion begins however, when we find that depending on the mode, the data port is not always on port 20.


Active FTP
  • In active mode FTP the client connects from a random unprivileged port (N > 1023) to the FTP server's command port, port 21. 
  • Then, the client starts listening to port N+1 and sends the FTP command PORT N+1 to the FTP server. 
  • The server will then connect back to the client's specified data port from its local data port, which is port 20.

From the server-side firewall's standpoint, to support active mode FTP the following communication channels need to be opened:
  • FTP server's port 21 from anywhere (Client initiates connection)
  • FTP server's port 21 to ports > 1023 (Server responds to client's control port)
  • FTP server's port 20 to ports > 1023 (Server initiates data connection to client's data port)
  • FTP server's port 20 from ports > 1023 (Client sends ACKs to server's data port)
When drawn out, the connection appears as follows:
  • In Step 1, The client's command port contacts the server's command port and sends the command PORT 1027
  • The server then sends an ACK back to the client's command port in step 2. 
  • In step 3 the server initiates a connection on its local data port to the data port the client specified earlier. 
  • Finally, the client sends an ACK back as shown in step 4.
  • The main problem with active mode FTP actually falls on the client side. The FTP client doesn't make the actual connection to the data port of the server--it simply tells the server what port it is listening on and the server connects back to the specified port on the client. From the client side firewall this appears to be an outside system initiating a connection to an internal client--something that is usually blocked.

Passive FTP
In order to resolve the issue of the server initiating the connection to the client a different method for FTP connections was developed. This was known as passive mode, or PASV, after the command used by the client to tell the server it is in passive mode.
  • In passive mode FTP the client initiates both connections to the server, solving the problem of firewalls filtering the incoming data port connection to the client from the server. 
  • When opening an FTP connection, the client opens two random unprivileged ports locally  (N > 1023 and N+1). 
  • The first port contacts the server on port 21, but instead of then issuing a PORTcommand and allowing the server to connect back to its data port, the client will issue the PASV command.
  • The result of this is that the server then opens a random unprivileged port (P > 1023) and sends P back to the client in response to the PASV command. 
  • The client then initiates the connection from port N+1 to port P on the server to transfer data.

From the server-side firewall's standpoint, to support passive mode FTP the following communication channels need to be opened:
  • FTP server's port 21 from anywhere (Client initiates connection)
  • FTP server's port 21 to ports > 1023 (Server responds to client's control port)
  • FTP server's ports > 1023 from anywhere (Client initiates data connection to random port specified by server)
  • FTP server's ports > 1023 to remote ports > 1023 (Server sends ACKs (and data) to client's data port)
When drawn, a passive mode FTP connection looks like this:
  • In step 1, the client contacts the server on the command port and issues the PASV command.
  • The server then replies in step 2 with PORT 2024, telling the client which port it is listening to for the data connection. 
  • In step 3 the client then initiates the data connection from its data port to the specified server data port. 
  • Finally, the server sends back an ACK in step 4 to the client's data port.
  • While passive mode FTP solves many of the problems from the client side, it opens up a whole range of problems on the server side. The biggest issue is the need to allow any remote connection to high numbered ports on the server. Fortunately, many FTP daemons, including the popular WU-FTPD allow the administrator to specify a range of ports which the FTP server will use.
  • The second issue involves supporting and troubleshooting clients which do (or do not) support passive mode. As an example, the command line FTP utility provided with Solaris does not support passive mode, necessitating a third-party FTP client, such as ncftp. 
  • NOTE: This is no longer the case--use the -p option with the Solaris FTP client to enable passive mode!
  • With the massive popularity of the World Wide Web, many people prefer to use their web browser as an FTP client. Most browsers only support passive mode when accessing ftp:// URLs. This can either be good or bad depending on what the servers and firewalls are configured to support.

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