Keith Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> On Wed, 28 Mar 2001 06:08:15 -0600,
> Jesse Pollard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Sure - very simple. If the execute bit is set on a file, don't allow
> >ANY write to the file. This does modify the permission bits slightly
> >but I don't think it is an unreasonable thing to have.
>
> man strip
> man objcopy
> man ld
Thought of theses already (well, at least ld...)
strip - not used that much (most executables still have their symbol table
but could be handled by removing the execute bit, stripping, then
putting it back. Or just use the ld option -s.
objcopy - copies object files. Object files are not marked executable...
ld - on other UNIX systems (Cray/IRIX), I think the output file
(-o) specified is first deleted. Whenever I can cause a link
error, the output is not marked executable. If the GNU ld doesn't
delete it first, then it most likely should.
I was expecting shell scripts to be the complaint first... :-)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jesse I Pollard, II
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Any opinions expressed are solely my own.
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