On 22 November 2012 19:13, lee <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ian Malone <[email protected]> writes:
>

>> Also the equivalent is not su, it's actually suid, which does rely on
>> the individual application to assume and drop privileges responsibly.
>
> In which way is relying on an application that uses polkit to do only
> what it is supposed to do better or different?  I can see it being

'allowed to do'

> better forcing apps that are setuid root to request a password, yet they
> don't need to do that when they already have the permissions they're
> asking for.
>

Not how setuid works. If it did that it would be polkit.

> If I understand the desgin correctly, using polkit is voluntary for an
> application and it's up to the application to do whatever when it
> receives extended permissions.  When the application already has
> extended permissions, it doesn't need to ask and can do whatever anyway.
>

Apparently you don't and are trying very hard not to.

-- 
imalone
http://ibmalone.blogspot.co.uk
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