On Tue, May 04, 2004 at 05:57:11PM -0400, Tim Grotenhuis wrote: > True. I am not allowing anonymous access or anything, I just have a handle > full of developers in my group...all people I know personally. They can > easily give me their public key and I have to manually put it into the > authorized_keys2 file. I suppose if their private keys were compromised I > could have an issue. How would you suggest controlling access to CVSROOT?
I have an idea that doesn't relate directly to the above, but may be useful. There's a piece of software called fakeroot (http://packages.debian.org/fakeroot) that makes the underlying software believe it's running as root when it is not. That may make cvs have the behavior you want. -Adam _______________________________________________ Info-cvs mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs