I am trying to containerise an ftp server NodeJS application. It works fine when I run it with npm but it does not respond when I run it inside of a container.
This is th
Listen on 0.0.0.0:5000
in the container, with passive ports defined
const FtpSvr = require ( 'ftp-srv' );
const hostname = '0.0.0.0';
const port = 5000;
const ftpServer = new FtpSvr ({
url: `ftp://${hostname}:${port}`,
anonymous: true,
pasv_url: `ftp://${hostname}:${port}`,
pasv_min: 65500,
pasv_max: 65515,
});
Build the container as is and then run with the following ports mapped, which can all be used in an ftp connection:
docker run -p 5000:5000 -p 65500-65515:65500-65515 --rm rrakshak/ftp-demo
Gives the response:
$ curl ftp://localhost:5000
-rw-r--r-- 1 1 1 141 Oct 21 01:22 Dockerfile
drwxr-xr-x 1 1 1 4096 Oct 21 01:21 node_modules
-rw-r--r-- 1 1 1 21137 Oct 21 01:21 package-lock.json
-rw-r--r-- 1 1 1 52 Oct 21 01:21 package.json
-rw-r--r-- 1 1 1 660 Oct 21 01:23 server.js
-rw-r--r-- 1 1 1 20287 Oct 21 01:21 yarn.lock
The ftp client must be set to use passive mode.
When an FTP client is in active mode, the FTP server receives a PORT
command from the client and creates a new TCP connection from the container back out to the client for data on that PORT
.
Due to the Docker port mapping into the container, the source address of this data connection often won't match what the FTP client is using as the initial destination for the FTP server. Similar issues occur when setting up FTP servers behind NAT on classic servers.