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> "Stefan" == Stefan Srdic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Stefan> So far, I've successfully configure pam_smbpass.so to sync UNIX
Stefan> and SAMBA passwords for my networked users. However, I was as
Stefan> successfull in configuring pam_tmpdir.so t
Hey guys, I'm running Woody at Home and I've recently being messing
around with a few PAM modules avaible from the Woody archives.
So far, I've successfully configure pam_smbpass.so to sync UNIX and
SAMBA passwords for my networked users. However, I was as successfull in
configuring pam_tmpdir.so
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Hash: SHA1
> "Stefan" == Stefan Srdic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Stefan> So far, I've successfully configure pam_smbpass.so to sync UNIX
Stefan> and SAMBA passwords for my networked users. However, I was as
Stefan> successfull in configuring pam_tmpdir.so
Hey guys, I'm running Woody at Home and I've recently being messing
around with a few PAM modules avaible from the Woody archives.
So far, I've successfully configure pam_smbpass.so to sync UNIX and
SAMBA passwords for my networked users. However, I was as successfull in
configuring pam_tmpdir.so
This is completely off-topic at this point, but there are a few uses
of sudo. The original poster trusts his admins, and wants to give
them all root privs without the hassle of having them all use one
account. Sudo is not enforcing anything in this case, it is merely
a) allowing convenience by al
- Original Message -
From: "Robert L. Yelvington" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 12:29 PM
Subject: Re: shared root account
> what's to stop a person, once they've sudo'd, from editing
/etc/sudoers and
> giving themselves more privs?
This is a good reason to run LIDS
This is completely off-topic at this point, but there are a few uses
of sudo. The original poster trusts his admins, and wants to give
them all root privs without the hassle of having them all use one
account. Sudo is not enforcing anything in this case, it is merely
a) allowing convenience by a
- Original Message -
From: "Robert L. Yelvington" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 12:29 PM
Subject: Re: shared root account
> what's to stop a person, once they've sudo'd, from editing
/etc/sudoers and
> giving themselves more privs?
This is a goo
Eric E Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ok, the amount of aiming away from your foot that you can do with
> giving someone priveleges by giving them the root password is a proper
> subset of the aiming away from your foot that you can do when
> granting priveleges through sudo.
Think of a daemo
> "Ethan" == Ethan Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Ethan> On Sat, Jul 07, 2001 at 02:10:09AM +0100, Eric E Moore wrote:
>> I would be very shocked if you could compromise a system with a
>> sudoers entry of: me hostname = (root) /bin/cat
Ethan> i would not, being able to read every file on
Eric E Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ok, the amount of aiming away from your foot that you can do with
> giving someone priveleges by giving them the root password is a proper
> subset of the aiming away from your foot that you can do when
> granting priveleges through sudo.
Think of a daem
> "Ethan" == Ethan Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Ethan> On Sat, Jul 07, 2001 at 02:10:09AM +0100, Eric E Moore wrote:
>> I would be very shocked if you could compromise a system with a
>> sudoers entry of: me hostname = (root) /bin/cat
Ethan> i would not, being able to read every file o
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