I have a bit of a situation: I have a handful of linux machines (almost all with different distributions and kernels and software - one hell to keep secure) and all the machines have different roots. These guys want to keep their root passwords (or at least the root privileges) so they can update their X/KDE/whatever when/if they feel like it but on the other hand, they would like to see someone (me) keep their machines secure - something they themselves do not have time (we all know keeping up security is a fulltime job). Obviously to install patches etc I, also, need root privileges. This poses a problem if I am not to remember all those different root passwords and without making all the passwords the same! How can that _safely_ be accomplished? There are versions of su, sudo etc) that do not ask passwords, there are suid binaries but which is _THE_ way of accomplishing this? Presently there are only shared root passwords between the server admins but now we are trying to get the workstation security boosted up as well - being behind one firewall does not seem to be enough in an environment where a whole class B network is behind that one fw...
-- ----------------------------------------------- | Juha Jäykkä, [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | home: http://www.utu.fi/~juolja/ | -----------------------------------------------