On Sat, Mar 08, 2003 at 07:12:13PM +0200, Birzan George Cristian wrote: > I've talked with several other friends, and most of them (5 to 1), > agreed that /root/ shouldn't be 755, but something more restrictive.
I'm in agreement as well. I use /root as a common communication area among admin staff. Admin staff have their own home directories but prefer them keep them private. /root is a good place to put things which are intended to be "public" to the admin group. sudo is fine for doing many things, but not everything. I use cfengine2 to force it at least to 750. I also use cfengine2 to enforce all sorts of harsher preferences so that I automatically override some of the weaker debian settings within minutes of doing an apt-get or dselect upgrade. When you have multiple people, working over long periods of time (years), with varying stress conditions, there will at some point be mistakes made. That's why defense in depth is so important. The more layers of protection you can place the more likely a single mistake won't leave you wide open. -- ------------------------------------------------------ IN MY NAME: Dale Amon, CEO/MD No Mushroom clouds over Islandone Society London and New York. www.islandone.org ------------------------------------------------------