* "Neil D. Roberts" | What I mean basically is so that when the root password gets changed | accidentally, this process sets it back to what it was.
We had this happen in our school, and after that we added a second user with uid = 0. Also, we could have used sudo, so that a semi-priviledged-user could sudo to root and then change root's password. You will of course have to guard that password very well, as it might give instant root.. :) I find this a better solution than autochanging passwords. -- Tollef Fog Heen Unix _IS_ user friendly... It's just selective about who its friends are.