On Mon, 1 Oct 2001, default wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am allowing a couple of ppl to have a shell account on one of my machines,
> and I am making a few changes to disallow them from using certain things...
> like chmoding the 'ps' command to 550 etc...
>
> I wanted to ask, is there any reason why one
/etc/passwd (probably really /etc/pwd.db) are used for several user-land
programs including 'ls'. It's highly recommended that /etc/passwd stay
readable to the world.
Btw, the output of 'ps' can be easily reconstructed via access to the
/proc filesystem. You can unmount this partition, but ps will
From: "Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
How Can ThisBe wrote:
My question is, when I make a new file or directory in ~/public_html (with
chown tigger:www), the file is made with the following permission:
-rw-r--r-- 1 tigger www 0 Nov 15 13:42 public_html/test1.php
How ca
How Can ThisBe wrote:
Hi, I've just noticed a small issue, which I'm sure others are aware of.
For apache to server users webpages, apache need to be able to read files
and directories. So we have something like the following (by default) on
FreeBSD;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~% ls -Al ./ public_html/ind
Hi, I've just noticed a small issue, which I'm sure others are aware of.
For apache to server users webpages, apache need to be able to read files
and directories. So we have something like the following (by default) on
FreeBSD;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~% ls -Al ./ public_html/index.php | grep pub
-rw-r