On Sun, 8 Jul 2007, René Standfest wrote:

Matt Shields schrieb am 08.07.2007 14:32:

On 7/8/07, Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sat, 2007-07-07 at 22:51 -0700, Robert - eLists wrote:
Greetings

On centos 5, if I ssh in as a regular non-superuser account and go to the
sbin dir to issue a reboot command, it wont do it as says you must be
superuser

If you are on the console logged in as a non-superuser account and do the
same thing, it will reboot.

Is this a feature, or a bug?
If you're at the console you can usually just push the reset or power
button *anyways*, so it's a non-bug. I believe you can edit the
appropriate entries in /etc/pam.d if you really want to change this.

Not necessarily true.  Lots of people use remote KVM's :)  So just
because someone has access to the console does not mean they have
physical access to the server.

That's true, but you can push CRTL-ALT-DEL and the computer reboots, even if
you're not logged in.

Can't C-A-D be filesystem trapped to prevent the system from rebooting with that key combo? If so, that could negate that option if the fs is configued as such.

Scott


Greets
René
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