erwise.
> Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. wrote:
> > From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Subject: Re: Run as owner
> > On Friday 29 November 2002 23:30, Kirk Bailey wrote:
> >
> >>OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 400
11:11:08 -0500:
> Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. wrote:
> >From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Subject: Re: Run as owner
> >
> >On Friday 29 November 2002 23:30, Kirk Bailey wrote:
> >>OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on t
hoever ran it, it ran as; it assumes the id of the person running it. Hmmm...
Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. wrote:
From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Run as owner
On Friday 29 November 2002 23:30, Kirk Bailey wrote:
OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner,
On Nov 30 Kirk Bailey wrote:
> This script is not perl, it is in python. So far the python community has
> failed in the search for clue, possibly this one can assist?
>
Python or not python is irrevelant here.
As last resort, if you don't want to use su, sudo or ksu, you can use
a setuid/setgid
In the last episode (Nov 30), Kirk Bailey said:
> This script is not perl, it is in python. So far the python community has
> failed in the search for clue, possibly this one can assist?
Sudo.
You don't seem to be listening to anyone's responses. Perl, Python,
/bin/shl, they're all the same. Y
This script is not perl, it is in python. So far the python community has
failed in the search for clue, possibly this one can assist?
Andrew Prewett wrote:
On Nov 29 Kirk Bailey wrote:
OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000 bit.
If you execute a script, and the
From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Run as owner
On Friday 29 November 2002 23:30, Kirk Bailey wrote:
> OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000
bit.
>
> OK, I did. No such luck, it continues to run as the apache identity
>
On Friday 29 November 2002 23:30, Kirk Bailey wrote:
> OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000 bit.
>
> OK, I did. No such luck, it continues to run as the apache identity
> 'nobody'.
I'm just wondering, why is this a problem?
>
> Any advice?
To Unsubscribe: send mail
On Nov 29 Kirk Bailey wrote:
> OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000 bit.
If you execute a script, and the first line begins
with `#!/usr/bin/perl -w' (in case of a perl script) and the sript is
marked executable then the kernel executes it like:
exec("/usr/bin/perl
In the last episode (Nov 29), Kirk Bailey said:
> OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000 bit.
What man? Script execution honors the setuid bit on the executable
interpreter, _not_ the script itself.
--
Dan Nelson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsubscribe: sen
OK, man says to get a script to run as the owner, turn on the 4000 bit.
OK, I did. No such luck, it continues to run as the apache identity 'nobody'.
Any advice?
--
end
Respectfully,
Kirk D Bailey
+-"Thou Art Free." -Eris---+
| http://www.
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