W?i?n?d?o? w?s?2?0?0?3, Jian Li? F? T? P. Service:
w?i?n?d?o? w?s?2?0?0?3, Jian Li? F? T? P-Services-service device
FTP connection 530 User < username > cannot log in home directory inaccessible workaround
Thanks for sharing: http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_5fdcf5c901012mma.html
After you create a new FTP user in Server 2003 and turn on IIS FTP, sometimes the 530 user username cannot log in home directory inaccessible error occurs when you connect to this FTP. The general solution on the Internet is whether the FTP directory exists, whether the user rights are set correctly, and so on. But often these are set correctly, but there are still such error prompts.
In fact, the reason is that in the new iis-ftp when you choose to isolate the user, and in the FTP folder you choose is different from the user-related folders, so naturally will appear this hint, and can not find a workaround.
This involves the setting and naming of the FTP folder for Server 2003 with a fairly strict specification.
For example, if you want to open a IIS-FTP service directory for user ABC under Server 2003 set to E:\\ftp. In addition to installing IIS and FTP components and the appropriate configuration, you should also create a subfolder in the FTP folder. Name LocalUser, and then create a subfolder in the LocalUser folder named ABC, which is the user name you want to open the FTP service to.
This will automatically enter the E:\\ftp\\localuser\\abc folder directory when the user ABC runs the FTP service to log on to Server 2003, which explains why the 530 user username cannot log in home is initially reported. Directory inaccessible is wrong. Because this is not the case, the E:\\FTP\\LOCALUSER\\ABC directory does not exist at all.
In addition, if we intend to allow FTP sites to provide anonymous logins, you should also create a separate subdirectory under the LocalUser directory. Similarly, users who log on anonymously will automatically enter into the D:\\ftp\\localuser\\public directory.
This setting is useful for multiple personal use of a server, and in addition, you can set the traffic, number of connections, and so on for each FTP site in IIS to properly allocate server resources.