Re: [expert] /etc/login.defs
basically what I want to do is allow only people who belong to the wheel group, to be able to use the command su. as for the getpass_asterisks, it means it will echo 3 asterisks for each keystroke when you're entering your password. just to confuse you and anyone else looking over your shoulder :) I'm not paranoid.. :). On Wed, 13 Dec 2000, Ken Thompson wrote: On Wednesday 13 December 2000 09:12 am, you wrote: I have question about the /etc/login.defs that ships with mdk 7.2 how come when I enter the following lines : SU_WHEEL_ONLY yes GETPASS_ASTERISKS 3 they are ignored ? I've been a slack user for 5 yrs now, they work fine in slack.. I'm guessing it has to do with diff versions of login being used.. so does anyone know what he equivalents are for mdk ? secondly.. does anyone have a policy file for Tripwire ? the default tripwire gives is for mostly rhat systems.. Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"; name="message.footer" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: Sombody explain what wheel is fo me?? Puleez.. Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com: Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.
Re: [expert] /etc/login.defs
On Thursday 14 December 2000 15:02, you wrote: basically what I want to do is allow only people who belong to the wheel group, to be able to use the command su. as for the getpass_asterisks, it means it will echo 3 asterisks for each keystroke when you're entering your password. just to confuse you and anyone else looking over your shoulder :) I'm not paranoid.. :). For those things, you can use linuxconf which is accessible from drakconf. You can get more fine-grained than that if you like with settings for privileges per user as well as privileges per group. And a user can belong to several groups. Civileme On Wed, 13 Dec 2000, Ken Thompson wrote: On Wednesday 13 December 2000 09:12 am, you wrote: I have question about the /etc/login.defs that ships with mdk 7.2 how come when I enter the following lines : SU_WHEEL_ONLY yes GETPASS_ASTERISKS 3 they are ignored ? I've been a slack user for 5 yrs now, they work fine in slack.. I'm guessing it has to do with diff versions of login being used.. so does anyone know what he equivalents are for mdk ? secondly.. does anyone have a policy file for Tripwire ? the default tripwire gives is for mostly rhat systems.. Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"; name="message.footer" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: Sombody explain what wheel is fo me?? Puleez.. Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"; name="message.footer" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com: Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.
[expert] /etc/login.defs
I have question about the /etc/login.defs that ships with mdk 7.2 how come when I enter the following lines : SU_WHEEL_ONLY yes GETPASS_ASTERISKS 3 they are ignored ? I've been a slack user for 5 yrs now, they work fine in slack.. I'm guessing it has to do with diff versions of login being used.. so does anyone know what he equivalents are for mdk ? secondly.. does anyone have a policy file for Tripwire ? the default tripwire gives is for mostly rhat systems.. Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com: Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.
Re: [expert] /etc/login.defs
On Wednesday 13 December 2000 17:12, you wrote: I have question about the /etc/login.defs that ships with mdk 7.2 how come when I enter the following lines : SU_WHEEL_ONLY yes GETPASS_ASTERISKS 3 they are ignored ? I've been a slack user for 5 yrs now, they work fine in slack.. I'm guessing it has to do with diff versions of login being used.. so does anyone know what he equivalents are for mdk ? secondly.. does anyone have a policy file for Tripwire ? the default tripwire gives is for mostly rhat systems.. The security system in Mandrake is based on Pluggable Authentication Modules (pam) and mandrake security tools (msec) file:/usr/share/doc/HOWTO/HTML/en/Secure-Programs-HOWTO-9.html#ss9.6 discusses PAM file:/usr/share/doc/msec-0.15/msec.ps discusses msec. http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/Linux-PAM-html/pam.html is probably what you want to administer your system, by setting /etc/pam.d. Civileme Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com: Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.