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Container-native SFTP gateway with OpenSSH, chroot isolation, and declarative user provisioning.

Project description

SFTPWarden - Container-native SFTP management

Container-native SFTP for teams that want a small, auditable OpenSSH runtime with declarative users, predictable Compose/Kubernetes deployment, and a CLI that works the same locally, on remote hosts, and in clusters.

Key Features  ·  Installation  ·  Quick Start  ·  Deployment  ·  Providers  ·  Docs  ·  Contributing


SFTPWarden runs OpenSSH in a container and keeps users, host keys, data, and runtime state outside the image. You manage environments with sftpwarden, and the runtime keeps Linux users synchronized from YAML, CSV, SQLite, MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, or MongoDB.

Table of Contents


Key Features

  • Fast adoption for real SFTP needs: create a local, remote, or Kubernetes SFTP environment with sftpwarden init, add users, and deploy without hand-writing OpenSSH container plumbing.
  • Declarative user sources: manage accounts from YAML, CSV, SQLite, MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, or MongoDB, so small teams can start with files and larger systems can use databases.
  • Safe user isolation: every SFTP user is forced into OpenSSH internal-sftp and isolated under /data/<username> with chroot-oriented defaults.
  • Container-native operations: generated Compose files, Kubernetes manifests, Helm values, sftpwarden deploy, plan, refresh, watch, --dry-run, and --json make it practical for local development, CI, and production runbooks.
  • First-class Kubernetes and Helm support: generate manifests or Helm values, manage namespaces, PVCs, runtime probes, and declarative YAML/CSV provider syncs while keeping database providers recommended for production clusters.
  • Context-based workflow: use Docker-style active contexts for dev, prod, remote local-sync, and remote-only deployments instead of repeating long flags on every command.
  • Remote deployment built in: deploy through SSH, rsync/scp, and Docker Compose, with auto-detected watcher backends for syncing user-provider changes.
  • Portable operations: copy users between providers, export/import user snapshots, create backups, restore safely, and run project/runtime healthchecks.
  • Operationally conservative defaults: secrets are not baked into images, plaintext provider passwords are rejected, host keys and state are persisted, and user data is never deleted unless explicitly requested.

SFTPWarden is intentionally lightweight. It is not a full identity platform, a file sharing suite, or VM-grade isolation. It gives you a conservative OpenSSH-based SFTP runtime that is easy to understand, deploy, and operate.

Installation

Install the CLI:

pip install sftpwarden
sftpwarden --version

For source checkout usage:

git clone https://github.com/kithuto/sftpwarden.git
cd sftpwarden
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
python -m pip install -e ".[mysql,postgres,mongodb]"
sftpwarden --version

Optional extras:

Need Install
SQLite provider Included, no extra
MySQL provider pip install "sftpwarden[mysql]"
MariaDB provider pip install "sftpwarden[mariadb]"
PostgreSQL provider pip install "sftpwarden[postgres]"
MongoDB provider pip install "sftpwarden[mongodb]"
Documentation/development pip install -e ".[dev,docs,mysql,postgres,mongodb]"

mariadb is an alias of the MySQL extra. Installing either sftpwarden[mysql] or sftpwarden[mariadb] enables both MySQL and MariaDB providers because they share PyMySQL.

For runtime and watcher image development, build the images locally:

docker build -t sftpwarden:local -f docker/runtime/Dockerfile .
docker build -t sftpwarden-watcher:local -f docker/watcher/Dockerfile .

Shell Autocomplete

SFTPWarden can install shell autocomplete through the Typer/Click helpers included in the CLI:

sftpwarden --install-completion

Open a new terminal, then use <TAB> to complete commands and options:

sftpwarden con<TAB>
sftpwarden user add --<TAB>

To inspect the generated completion script without installing it:

sftpwarden --show-completion

5-Minute Quick Start

Create a local SFTP project:

sftpwarden config default-provider yaml
mkdir -p ~/sftpwarden-dev
cd ~/sftpwarden-dev
sftpwarden init dev --yes
sftpwarden validate
sftpwarden deploy

Add a user:

sftpwarden user add alice \
  --password "correct horse battery staple" \
  --comment "Main upload account"

Connect with any SFTP client:

sftp -P 2222 alice@localhost

Preview and apply runtime changes:

sftpwarden plan
sftpwarden refresh

sftpwarden init makes the created context active, so day-to-day commands do not need --context. This follows the same friendly idea people know from Docker: work in a project directory, keep an active context, and pass an explicit context only when you need to override it. To switch later, run sftpwarden context use dev.

Read or update project settings without opening YAML:

sftpwarden config project.name dev2
sftpwarden config server.port 2200
sftpwarden context root ~/sftpwarden-dev2 --yes

Deployment Choices

Pick the model that matches how your team works.

Model Best for Source of truth Watcher
Local Development, demos, single-host testing Local project folder No
Remote local-sync Production managed from a workstation or CI runner Local project folder synced to remote host Yes
Remote-only Existing remote deployments managed in-place Remote project folder No
Kubernetes Platform/SRE teams using kubectl or Helm Project config plus generated manifests or Helm values No

Compose is the default when --deploy is omitted. Choose the deployment target explicitly during init when you already know where the project will run:

sftpwarden init dev --deploy compose --yes
sftpwarden init prod --deploy kube --yes
sftpwarden init prod --deploy helm --yes

If a project was initialized with the default and you want to change it before deploying, update the project config and preview the generated deployment:

sftpwarden config deploy.target kubernetes
sftpwarden config kubernetes.mode helm
sftpwarden deploy --dry-run

Local:

mkdir -p ~/sftpwarden-dev
cd ~/sftpwarden-dev
sftpwarden init dev --yes
sftpwarden deploy

Remote local-sync:

mkdir -p ~/sftpwarden-prod
cd ~/sftpwarden-prod
sftpwarden init prod --remote deploy@sftp-prod.example.com:/opt/sftpwarden \
  --critical

sftpwarden deploy --dry-run
sftpwarden deploy --yes

Remote-only:

sftpwarden init archive --remote deploy@sftp-archive.example.com:/opt/sftpwarden \
  --remote-only \
  --critical

sftpwarden refresh --dry-run

Kubernetes manifests:

sftpwarden init prod --deploy kube --yes
sftpwarden kube render
sftpwarden deploy --dry-run

Helm:

sftpwarden init prod --deploy helm --yes
sftpwarden helm values --write
sftpwarden helm template
sftpwarden deploy --dry-run

During Kubernetes or Helm init, SFTPWarden checks the namespace. If it does not exist, interactive init asks whether to create it; --yes creates it automatically. The default namespace is sftpwarden; use --namespace <name> for an existing or custom namespace, or --no-create-namespace to require it to exist already.

For Kubernetes projects that use YAML or CSV providers, the local provider file is declarative: sftpwarden deploy, sftpwarden kube apply, and sftpwarden helm upgrade render its current contents and copy them into the provider PVC during the runtime rollout. refresh reloads users already visible inside the runtime; it does not copy local YAML/CSV files into a cluster by itself. Treat Kubernetes YAML/CSV provider files as deployment material because the rendered manifests or Helm values include their user entries. For production Kubernetes, prefer database providers when user state must change outside deploy cycles or when provider data should not be carried in manifests.

Kubernetes and Helm projects reserve 10Gi for SFTP user uploads by default. Increase that PVC before deploying with:

sftpwarden config kubernetes.data_storage_size 50Gi
sftpwarden deploy --dry-run
sftpwarden deploy --yes

Compose healthcheck timing and Kubernetes probe timing are configurable too: use healthcheck.* for Compose and kubernetes.*_probe.* for generated manifests or Helm values.

Source checkouts use the local chart. Python package installations use the published GHCR OCI chart with the same version as the installed CLI.

Use sftpwarden context add when a SFTPWarden project already exists and you only want to register it on this machine:

sftpwarden context add prod deploy@sftp-prod.example.com:/opt/sftpwarden --critical
sftpwarden context use prod

Production-like names such as prod, production, prd, live, and main require confirmation unless marked with --critical or accepted with --yes.

Project Files

By default, sftpwarden init creates a Compose-backed project directory:

sftpwarden.yaml
users.yaml              # or users.csv / users.sqlite
docker-compose.yml
data/
state/
host_keys/

Kubernetes-targeted projects use the same sftpwarden.yaml, plus generated kubernetes.yml or values.yaml when you render/apply manifests or Helm values; they do not require docker-compose.yml.

The container always listens on port 22 internally. Configure the host-facing port with server.port in sftpwarden.yaml.

Runtime state is stored in /var/lib/sftpwarden/state.json inside the container and should be backed by the state/ volume. Host keys are stored in host_keys/ to keep SSH fingerprints stable across restarts.

User Management

List and inspect users:

sftpwarden users
sftpwarden user show alice

Add users:

sftpwarden user add alice --password "correct horse battery staple"
sftpwarden user add bob --password-hash '$6$rounds=500000$...'
sftpwarden user add carol --public-key "ssh-ed25519 AAAA..."

Update users:

sftpwarden user update alice --upload-dir inbound
sftpwarden user update alice --uid 12001 --gid 12001
sftpwarden user update alice --comment "Finance inbox"
sftpwarden user update alice --disabled

Removing a user disables access but does not delete user data:

sftpwarden user remove alice --yes

To permanently remove the user's data directory too:

sftpwarden user remove alice --delete-files --yes

Updating only comment does not refresh the runtime because comments are metadata.

Providers

Provider Runtime reads CLI mutations Good fit
YAML Yes Yes Quick start, GitOps-style small deployments
CSV Yes Yes Spreadsheet-friendly user handoff
SQLite Yes Yes Single-host/self-hosted deployments without an external database
MySQL Yes Yes Existing application databases
MariaDB Yes Yes MySQL-compatible MariaDB deployments
PostgreSQL Yes Yes Existing platform or product databases
MongoDB Yes Yes Existing document databases

For production Kubernetes environments, prefer PostgreSQL, MariaDB/MySQL, or MongoDB. The runtime reads those providers directly, so external provider changes can be picked up by the runtime sync loop or an explicit sftpwarden refresh. YAML/CSV remain useful for GitOps-style Kubernetes deployments where deploy is the synchronization point. If you use YAML/CSV in Kubernetes, keep the provider file in the same review and secret-handling process as the generated manifests.

SQL providers read from sftp_users by default. The table should include:

username, public_keys, password_hash, uid, gid, upload_dir, comment, disabled

See examples/mysql/schema.sql, examples/mariadb/schema.sql, and examples/postgres/schema.sql.

SQLite is built in:

sftpwarden init dev --provider sqlite --yes

SQLite is a good lightweight option for one host and one writer. Avoid it for NFS, high-concurrency, or multi-writer deployments.

During init, SFTPWarden checks whether external provider storage exists. For MySQL, MariaDB, and PostgreSQL that means the configured SQL table. For MongoDB that means the configured collection and username index. If storage is missing, interactive init asks whether to create it or abort so you can create it manually:

sftpwarden init prod \
  --provider postgresql \
  --dsn 'postgresql://sftpwarden:change-me@db.example.com:5432/sftpwarden' \
  --create-table

MariaDB uses the same compatible implementation as MySQL:

sftpwarden init prod \
  --provider mariadb \
  --dsn 'mariadb://sftpwarden:change-me@db.example.com:3306/sftpwarden' \
  --create-table

MongoDB stores one document per user with _id = username:

sftpwarden init prod \
  --provider mongodb \
  --dsn 'mongodb://mongo.example.com:27017/sftpwarden' \
  --collection sftp_users

--dsn uses the standard database URL/DSN convention:

postgresql://user:password@host:5432/database
mysql://user:password@host:3306/database
mariadb://user:password@host:3306/database
mongodb://user:password@host:27017/database

For real environments, prefer an environment variable so the secret is not typed directly in shell history or committed in project files:

export SFTPWARDEN_POSTGRES_DSN='postgresql://sftpwarden:change-me@db.example.com:5432/sftpwarden'

sftpwarden init prod \
  --provider postgresql \
  --dsn '${SFTPWARDEN_POSTGRES_DSN}' \
  --create-table

If you run interactive init with MySQL, MariaDB, or PostgreSQL and omit --dsn, SFTPWarden asks for host, port, database, username, and password, then writes the equivalent DSN for you. For MongoDB, interactive init asks for the MongoDB DSN directly.

Operations

Common operational commands:

sftpwarden doctor
sftpwarden validate --config sftpwarden.yaml
sftpwarden compose --write
sftpwarden deploy --dry-run
sftpwarden deploy --json --dry-run
sftpwarden kube status --json
sftpwarden helm lint
sftpwarden plan --json
sftpwarden refresh --dry-run
sftpwarden watcher status --json
sftpwarden health --json
sftpwarden backup --output sftpwarden-dev.tar.gz --yes
sftpwarden provider export --format json > users.json

watch and refresh are different on purpose:

  • sftpwarden watch syncs YAML/CSV/SQLite user provider files for remote local-sync contexts.
  • sftpwarden refresh tells a running runtime to reload users immediately.
  • Configuration, Docker Compose, Kubernetes, and Helm changes require sftpwarden deploy; Kubernetes YAML/CSV provider files are also copied to the provider PVC by deploy/apply/upgrade.
  • sftpwarden health validates config, provider readability, Compose drift, and runtime health where available.
  • sftpwarden backup stores config, a provider user snapshot, host keys, and runtime state. It excludes data/ unless --include-data is explicitly used.
  • sftpwarden provider copy moves users between contexts/providers with explicit --merge or --replace semantics.

sftpwarden deploy uses the configured deployment target. Compose remains the default. Kubernetes manifest mode uses kubectl, and Helm mode uses helm. Missing tools are reported with actionable messages.

Watcher installs default to auto. SFTPWarden detects the host scheduler and uses Windows Task Scheduler, macOS launchd, or Linux systemd, OpenRC, runit, or supervisord when available. You can force a backend with --watcher systemd, --watcher openrc, --watcher runit, --watcher supervisord, --watcher launchd, --watcher windows-task, or --watcher docker.

Native watcher modes use the host's normal SSH identity, agent, ~/.ssh/config, known hosts, bastions, and ProxyJump settings. Docker watcher mode is stricter and requires explicit dedicated deployment keys. It mounts watched project folders read-only and copies mounted keys inside the container with private permissions before syncing. Source checkouts use sftpwarden-watcher:local; Python package installations use ghcr.io/kithuto/sftpwarden-watcher:<installed-version> unless --image is set.

Backup and Restore

Back up the active context before upgrades, provider migrations, or risky configuration changes:

sftpwarden backup --output sftpwarden-prod.tar.gz --yes

The default backup includes sftpwarden.yaml, generated deployment files, available file-backed provider data, provider/users.json with the current users read from the provider, host keys, and runtime state. That user snapshot is also created for SQL and MongoDB providers when the CLI can reach the configured database. The backup does not include uploaded SFTP user files under data/ unless you ask for that explicitly:

sftpwarden backup --include-data --output sftpwarden-prod-full.tar.gz

Preview backup contents in automation with:

sftpwarden backup --dry-run --json

Restore into the active context with:

sftpwarden restore sftpwarden-prod.tar.gz --yes

Use --include-data only when the archive was created with user data and you intend to overwrite the current data/ tree:

sftpwarden restore sftpwarden-prod-full.tar.gz --include-data --yes

Restore creates a safety backup before overwriting files. After restoring, review and apply the deployment so the running runtime matches the restored project:

sftpwarden deploy --dry-run
sftpwarden deploy --yes

Backup archives can contain DSNs, provider snapshots, host keys, and uploaded user files when --include-data is used. Store them like infrastructure secrets.

Security

SFTPWarden follows conservative defaults:

  • users and secrets are not baked into images;
  • plaintext passwords are rejected in provider data;
  • sftpwarden user add --password stores only a system password hash;
  • SFTP users are forced into internal-sftp;
  • root login, empty passwords, forwarding, tunneling, X11, and user environments are disabled;
  • user data is not deleted automatically;
  • sftpwarden user remove --delete-files is explicit and irreversible;
  • .env, data/, state/, host_keys/, Git metadata, and Python caches are not watched or synced.

Key-only deployment:

auth:
  allow_public_key: true
  allow_password: false
  recommended: public_key

Read the security guide before exposing a deployment to a public or customer-facing network.

Documentation

The README is the adoption path. Detailed guides live in:

The Sphinx documentation is built from docs/ and published to GitHub Pages.

Build it locally:

python -m pip install -e ".[docs]"
sphinx-build -b html docs docs/_build/html

Roadmap

See the changelog for released versions and the longer future roadmap.

v1.3 - Audit and Observability

  • Add audit logging for CLI and runtime operations.
  • Add commands for listing, tailing, and exporting audit events.
  • Add richer runtime status and operational visibility.

v1.4 - Advanced Security and Supply Chain

  • Add SSH host key pinning.
  • Add assisted key rotation workflows.
  • Add support for secret files.
  • Add production-oriented security checks.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome: bug reports, docs fixes, examples, tests, provider work, and operational feedback are all useful.

Contribution workflow:

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create your own branch from dev.
  3. Develop and validate your change in that branch.
  4. Open a Pull Request from your branch to dev.

Normal contribution PRs should target dev, not main. The maintainer promotes accepted changes from dev to main for production and release work.

Start here:

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