the problem is they both have valid points. in this,as in nearly all aspects of unix administration, there is not a single right answer.
-----Original Message----- From: "Patrick Börjesson"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: 2/17/06 4:15:08 PM To: "gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org"<gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org> Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] How many GB for / partition? First, I can't really understand why either one of you two won't fully explain your reasonings when going against the other. It helps noone. On 2006-02-17 19:04, Hemmann, Volker Armin uttered these thoughts: > On Friday 17 February 2006 07:33, Alexander Skwar wrote: > > Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: > > > On Thursday 16 February 2006 20:40, Alexander Skwar wrote: > > >> Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: > > >> > On Thursday 16 February 2006 17:18, Alexander Skwar wrote: > > >> >> Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: > > >> >> > > > >> >> > Why should he make /tmp noexec, > > >> >> > > >> >> Security precaution. > > >> > > > >> > if you have 10+ users with access to the box. But a workstation, > > >> > without even sshd running, it is not needed. Of course, if you have a system with _no_ services running (including apache, sshd and so on), or a firewall that blocks every and all incoming connection attempt, then for someone to access /tmp without having physical access to the system (in which case you're pretty much screwed anyhow) is, as far as I know, impossible.=20 This doesn't take into account client-side exploits; because with these the exploiting code has access to whatever resources the user running the client has, including writing to whatever areas that the user has.=20 > > >> "needed" - What's "needed", anyway? > > >> > > >> > And hey, why should /tmp noexec save you from anything? > > >> > > >> Because it does. > > > > > > so? how? > > > > Think, you might find out. What does noexec do, hm? > > > > Even *you* might find out... > > > > Well... If I think about it... No, you're too clueless > > to find out. > > > > Hint 1: "noexec" nowadays makes it impossible to execute > > programs stored on that filesystem. >=20 > I know, but it won't save you from anything. > After a user got in, he is a user. And every user has a place with write= =20 > permission (if he is user apache/httpd he has lots of places, where he ca= n=20 > store code). Outside of /tmp. Where? [Message truncated. Tap Edit->Mark for Download to get remaining portion.] -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list