Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:

There are some added protections to make doing that even harder now. When you type "rm" from the command line, you are actualy running "rm -i" thanks to a handy alias. So you would be asked to confirm every deletion. When you get asked about the first one, hit Ctrl-c, and it will abort the command.

Yes, isn't Linux (especially Mandrake) just wonderful?

Not that you want to be logged in as root, unless you realy need to for what you are doing. But it is harder to break things then it used to be. There are still a lot of things you can do as root that will break the system.

Mikkel

It's a bit bit like walking on thin ice, isn't it?

As a general rule, one should "su" to root only when it is absolutely necessary. I am a reformed root user. What I mean by that is that I always used to log in as root at home, because I never had to worry about permissions on devices, directories, etc. It was a form of laziness. I did this for years, but lately I have got into the habit of trying to make things work as a normal user.

(I still run xmms and k3b as root, though. Probably laziness.)

cheers
Duncan



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