In message <199907112034.waa17...@gratis.grondar.za>, Mark Murray wrote: } > 1. ident is useful as far as it goes. It shouldn't be trusted as } > authentication, but it can give you a good idea of where to start when } > tracking down problem users. } } First thing you say to yourself after a compromise is "trust nothing". } Things like idents can/will/should/are targets.
As has been said over and over, identd isn't useful to track a compromise of the machine running it, but can be useful if machine A is running it and hasn't been compromised, and machine A is used to break into machine B. Of course even then you have to be careful about trusting logs, but in a well set up environment it's certainly better than nothing. And it's useful for tracking abuse that's not related to breaking into machines. [ ... ] } > 3. Having a built in version of a "real" ident run out of inetd would be } > *very* welcome by the people that need it. pidentd is a bloated, buggy pig. } } Small set of people. Much larger set of dupes who would believe/trust } this. While that's true, I'll say again that it's an argument against _abusing_ identd and not an argument against _using_ it. You may not like/want/need it, but other people do, and not all of them are idiots. Just because someone else's usage model differs from yours doesn't make their experiences or desires invalid. -- Jon Hamilton hamil...@pobox.com To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message