On Thu, Oct 24, 2002 at 11:30:19AM +0300, Jarno Elonen wrote:
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing a
remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for device
access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries after
On Thu, Oct 24, 2002 at 11:15:05PM +0300, Jarno Elonen wrote:
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing
a remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for
device access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing
a remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for
device access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries after backup, and
recreating them just before backup with mknod.
Ingenious. :b
Does it work reliably with devfs? (So that devices don't magically
reappear after deletion, for example)?
I can hear sarcasm in your words,
Not at all - except towards my own stupidity for not even thinking of such a
simple solution. :)
The follow-up question was just
We're using rsync to mirror a hot drive in our main server to a cold drive
(one that is only mounted when backing up, and is briefly mounted read only
for per file restoration).
...which reminds me of a related problem of mine. On my own system, I'm using
a fixed spare IDE hard drive for
On Thu, Oct 24, 2002 at 11:30:19AM +0300, Jarno Elonen wrote:
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing a
remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for device
access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries after
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing
a remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for
device access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries after backup, and
recreating them just before backup with mknod.
On Thu, Oct 24, 2002 at 11:15:05PM +0300, Jarno Elonen wrote:
Does anyone know any way to make this more difficult without introducing
a remote host? Are there, for example, any Linux kernel options for
device access passwords or such?
Maybe removing the appropriate /dev/hd* entries
Ingenious. :b
Does it work reliably with devfs? (So that devices don't magically
reappear after deletion, for example)?
I can hear sarcasm in your words,
Not at all - except towards my own stupidity for not even thinking of such a
simple solution. :)
The follow-up question was just
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