Re: /etc/suid_profile

2006-05-09 Thread Peter Fraser
(not quite true, it has "wheel" as one of its groups) and going "sudo ksh" or "sudo ksh -l" should put you into a privileged shell. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jason McIntyre Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 20

Re: /etc/suid_profile

2006-05-09 Thread Jason McIntyre
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 12:13:33PM -0400, Peter Fraser wrote: > I was a user of "bash", but with 3.9 I thought > I would try to use ksh my normal shell. So > far so good. One problem though, "man ksh" > states: > > A privileged shell does not process $HOME/.profile > nor the ENV parameter. Instea

Re: /etc/suid_profile

2006-05-09 Thread Peter Fraser
al Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Diana Eichert Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2006 12:25 PM To: misc@openbsd.org Subject: Re: /etc/suid_profile what does "man ksh" explain about the "-l" switch ?

Re: /etc/suid_profile

2006-05-09 Thread Diana Eichert
what does "man ksh" explain about the "-l" switch ?