If I would use your settings, all my colleagues could grab the key to the computer room, log in on the console, su to root and just access each other's stuff ? Doesn't look very attractive to me. What am I not getting here ?
If your console is marked as being secure in /etc/ttys, yes. You don't have to mark it as secure. I suppose in a large machine room that many people have access to you wouldn't want to do that, or if you are running your consoles into terminal servers. But you can still have a blank password to allow wheel to 'su' to root in those situations and simply require that the person on the console (if not marked secure) login as themselves and then su. At least then you have a record of whos account was used to access root. For most situations there is no point having a password associated with root... it won't be any more secure then not having a password at all. -Matt Matthew Dillon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>