Workstations: good reasons for owner root access
Lawrence V. Cipriani
lvc at cbnews.ATT.COM
Thu Aug 18 08:56:45 AEST 1988
In article <25952 at think.UUCP> barmar at kulla.think.com.UUCP (Barry Margolin) writes:
>Why not just make shutdown setuid root, and executable only by a group
>of which you are the sole member?
/etc/shutdown is a script, but can be worked around. One other thing that
must be done is to stay out of single user mode. If you go to single user
from multi-user the user is made root.
>These are the kinds of tools someone was referring to when he said
>that in a well-designed system you should rarely need to use "su".
>"su" should only be for unusual circumstances. Users shutting down
>their workstations is not unusual, so there should be a standard tool
>for it.
Indeed. Isn't it rediculuous that the most mudane operations (backup,
recover, creating users, etc.) on a eunuchs computer require the most
powerful permissions possible. Sheesh.
--
Larry Cipriani, AT&T Network Systems, Columbus OH, (614) 860-4999
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