Robert T Wyatt wrote:
Christopher Bort wrote:
Once sudoers perms are fixed, though, it's probably a good idea to run
Repair Permissions in order to fix permissions on as many other
/private/etc/* files as possible that may have been fuxored by your
recursive chmod. I know you said you did this; I'm curious as to how well
it did getting you back to a good state?
If someone would be willing to take a look, I'll be happy to pass my
list of permissions from /private/etc/ for comparison to another 10.3
machine.
I'm finding that, while many things were repaired, there are many that
were not. The recursive listing of /private/etc/* is too long (3008
files) to post here and I wouldn't be comfortable posting it to the list
anyway since it would expose potential vulnerabilities to the whole wide
world.
One example of something that neither fsck nor DiskUtility are able to
correct that I have already fixed manually is my generated RSA key
files. Clearly one can see the need to fix these things, unfortunately I
have not found the "right way" (short of a system reinstall) so I'm
asking for a volunteer if anyone is willing to take me up on it. All I
would need is something like a diff file of the two listings. I would
supply my output of ls -alFR /private/etc.
Thanks!
Robert
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