On 26 May, Jesse Goldman wrote: > Hi, > > Curious thing just happend on my machine. All of a sudden, I'm no longer > allowed to su to root. An attempt results in "You are not authorized to > su root". Could this be related to the "secure-su" package? The "suauth" > file is the standard one and doesn't forbid me from switching to root. On > a different machine with the same version of secure-su installed, I *can* > su to root though. Does anyone know why this might happen? >
Check your /etc/login.defs for: # If "yes", the user must be listed as a member of the first gid 0 group # in /etc/group (called "root" on most Linux systems) to be able to "su" # to uid 0 accounts. If the group doesn't exist or is empty, no one # will be able to "su" to uid 0. # SU_WHEEL_ONLY yes Ciao, Martin -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .