On Thu, 7 Apr 2005, Jan Harkes wrote:
On Thu, Apr 07, 2005 at 11:16:14AM -0400, Richard B. Johnson wrote:...In the not-too distant past, one could disable Ctl-Alt-DEL. Can't do it anymore.Observe that reboot() returns 0 and `strace` understands what parameters were passed. The result is that, if I hit Ctl-Alt-Del, `init` will still execute the shutdown-order (INIT 0).
Actually, if CAD is enabled in the kernel, it will just reboot. If CAD is disabled in the kernel a SIGINT is sent to pid 1 (/sbin/init).
No, that's not how it ever worked. There are parameters that are available in the reboot-system call that define the operation that will occur when the 3-finger salute occurs.
Execute man 2 reboot.
So what you probably had in the not-too-distant past was a disabled CAD in the kernel _and_ you had modified the following line in /etc/inittab,
The systems to which I refer do not, and never even had a file-system, much-less any inittab. That's SYS-V init stuff for interactive access.
# What to do when CTRL-ALT-DEL is pressed. ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -r now
AFAIK this hasn't ever really changed.
Jan
The kernel's response (or the 'C' runtime-library interface) has changed so that it is now possible for somebody at the keyboard of a machine to destroy the machine's operation by executing Ctl-Alt-Del. I don't know how long this potential catastrophe has existed, but when the machine(s) were initially certified there was no possible way for a user to kill the machine from the keyboard.
It is possible that a 'C' runtime library was changed in the tarket so it's not a kernel problem. I'm checking it out now.
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