Hard Links between UNIX Utility Programs
Michael I. Bushnell
mike at turing.unm.edu
Wed Aug 3 18:32:22 AEST 1988
In article <3642 at pitt.UUCP> hoffman at vax.cs.pittsburgh.edu (Bob Hoffman) writes:
>In article <185 at chip.UUCP> mparker at chip.UUCP (M. D. Parker) writes:
>>... I want to prevent users from
>>examining the mailq using the /usr/ucb/mailq program
>I believe it can be done by setting protections and group-IDs
>carefully. First of all, I think it's safe to assume that you
>don't want any of your users executing /usr/lib/sendmail directly
>for any reason. Sendmail is normally invoked by the users' mail
>agent, e.g. /bin/mail, /usr/ucb/Mail, etc. I propose a way of
>restricting execution of /usr/lib/sendmail without losing any
>functionality for the users sending or receiving mail or for the
>administration of the mail facility.
Oh, please, please don't inflict pain on your users like this.
What if I want to write my own mail agent? Say I like emacs? Then
I get emacs's mail agent, which calls sendmail. Sendmail is intended
to usable by arbitrary bozos, who will usually want to use a nice
interface instead.
Also, you can get some access to sendmail with "telnet localhost smtp",
anyway.
--
N u m q u a m G l o r i a D e o
Michael I. Bushnell
HASA - "A" division
mike at turing.unm.edu
{ucbvax,gatech}!unmvax!turing.unm.edu!mike
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