On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 10:51 PM, Joseph S D Yao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I did figure someone would point out that I'd said more words than those
> in the last entry.  I really don't want to add any more to this topic.
> If anyone else can stand up and say that THEY have admin'ed Unix, Linux,
> BSD, etc. for over 35 years, and NEVER seen a mistake made worse because
> the person making the mistake was su'ed or sudo'ed to root, then I will
> applaud that person's good luck - SILENTLY.

In the end always make backups. I've in my career (only 15 years) once
deleted files as root by accident. But it has only happened once, and
it was in the first year of my career. BTW, I'm impressed that you
were already admin'ing Unix when there were only a few hundred
installations worldwide...

A lot of things can go wrong. A lot of things are run as root even
when it's not obvious. I've seen a system thoroughly wrecked by a
typing error in a postinstall script included in a sun package.
Luckily this was a test system, and it was exactly to catch such
things that the package was installed on a test system first. That's
how you do it in a real production environment. I don't edit
httpd.conf on any production server. I do it on an integration
machine, ship a package to a test machine, and if it passes the tests
(executed by someone else) it goes on production.

Krist

-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bremgarten b. Bern, Switzerland
--
A: It reverses the normal flow of conversation.
Q: What's wrong with top-posting?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What's the biggest scourge on plain text email discussions?

---------------------------------------------------------------------
The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project.
See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info.
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   "   from the digest: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to