Ian Firla wrote: >sudo is definitely the way to go; however, you should be very careful. >List the specific operations that the users will need to perform as root >and give them privilege to those *and only those* with sudo. > >Then go through the list again and double and even triple check if you >really need to be assigning all those rights to all those users. You can >*never* be too careful. > >What are you giving these users root rights for anyway? Sounds to me like >a recipe for disaster. > >Ian > > > Hello Ian,
Thank you for the advice. Had recently started a password and security policy. No more rlogin, ftp and telnet sessions. You should be here to see them tilt their heads and their eyes glaze over when their passwords expire. Roy Roy _______________________________________________ Seawolf-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/seawolf-list
