On 7/15/05, Alec Berryman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Let me clarify what I said: the directory which holds the content > accessible under http://www.example.com/~user/ is physically locate > under the chroot, and a symlink to that directory is placed in the > user's home directory. Neither the user's home directory nor the
Yes, that is how I understood it. > symlink are not under the chroot; you don't have to worry about your > machine being compromised through that symlink. Hmm. Ok. The alternative is the mount --bind that someone mentioned earlier... > Doing the setup the other way around (with the symlink under the > chroot and the directory outside the chroot) would not work - the > program in the chroot would follow the symlink relative to the chroot > and end up somewhere other than the intended directory (most likely > nowhere). Never thought of it that way... Of course I don't deal a whole lot with symlinks directly if I can help it. -- George