I hope this is the right section. Anyway, I am trying to set up an ftp on my computer. I would like to do this as simply as possible and without a static IP address or file transfer software. I used to rent a game server to which I would connect via FTP. I remember I would just use Windows explorer to navigate the files on the server. I never used and file transfer software or anything. That's how I would like to do it; nice and simple.
So, I just enabled the ISS/FTP in windows last night following various tutorials I found on the web. Problem is: none of them seem to go any further than enabling the IIS/FTP. When I open the manager in windows, everything seems to be ready. The status of the site is active. The thing is, I don't know how to access the site from another computer. I can't find anything anywhere that tells me what the ftp://address is to my computer's FTP directory (Don't even know where that is yet, either). So, now that my site is "running" what do I do? How do I find out what the ftp address is? How can I change it?
The FTP address of the FTP server is the same as the address for your computer.
type "ipconfig" in a command prompt to see what the IP address for your computer is (There may be more than one adapter, be sure to lok for the adapter names and pick the one that is your wired lan connection).
Of course you can only get to that FTP site from your internal lan, not from the internet at this point. At least not without more setup on your router between the internet and your local network...
I think the harder part might be managing the user accounts on the FTP server in order to even be allowed to connect to it though... By default it's pretty locked down from what I rememebr. Assuming you haven't already turned on anonymous guest accounts or added your other computer's user account on the FTP server.
I haven't fully grasped all the settings yet since I haven't really had a chance to connect to the server and see what does what, but here are some settings I have within the IIS Manager which I think might be relavent:
Note: Anything within () represents the selected setting.
IPv4 address and domain restriction settings:
-Access for unspecified clients (allowed)
-Enable domain name restrictions (disabled)
That way you get a name like myftpserver.is-a-geek.net and when you type ftp://myftpserver.is-a-geek.net it will always resolve your external ip address.
System Manufacturer/Model Number: Toshiba L505 OS: Windows 7 64x CPU: AMD Turion II Dual-Core Mobile M520 2.30 GHz Memory: 4GB Graphics Card: ATI Radeon HD 4200
Setting up an FTP server for external internet access opens a whole can of worms
Yes, a DynIP service is needed, plus port forwarding at the internet/lan gateway and of course anynomous read/write access should be off (Read only in one place and write only in another at worst). Lots of security issues with running an FTP server acessable from the internet. If not set up right it'll become a warez drop box in about 2 hours...
Hopefully the OP is just using it for internal stuff?
System Manufacturer/Model Number: Toshiba L505 OS: Windows 7 64x CPU: AMD Turion II Dual-Core Mobile M520 2.30 GHz Memory: 4GB Graphics Card: ATI Radeon HD 4200
My intention with the ftp server is to share movies with my girlfriend's computer. I have a prtition dedicated to movies and I figured it would be a bit easier than having to create torrents. What are te security risks of having an FTP server with read permissions only and a secure log in? Is it at all possible for someone to access other parts of my computer through this server? Now that I have just the basics down, I suppose I'll start using a static ip address, if it's necessary. Is it necessary? I mean given that the server is read only and only contains movies, should I still be worried about security? By the way, thank you guys for your input on this. I really appreciate it!
I know you said that you did not want to use any other apps but instalingl and using FilePhile is much more simple than configuring ftp to work on both systems.
What could be easier than clicking on the user's email address, browsing for the file and then sending? You can set it up so that the it dumps directly into the folder the user specifies. You can also configure it so that the other user doesn't even have to confirm the transfer so you two could send files to each other at anytime as long as the Filephile software is running.
System Manufacturer/Model Number: Toshiba L505 OS: Windows 7 64x CPU: AMD Turion II Dual-Core Mobile M520 2.30 GHz Memory: 4GB Graphics Card: ATI Radeon HD 4200