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Date:      Thu, 2 May 1996 01:19:34 -0400 (EDT)
From:      "Brian T. Schellenberger - Personal Account" <babbleon@mercury.interpath.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org (FreeBSD Questions)
Subject:   Groups ; Setuid
Message-ID:  <199605020519.BAA12169@mercury.interpath.com>

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Ok, I first used BSD way back in 1981, but I've been wandering in the
land of the lost (sys5-ish systems) for many years now, and I don't
quite "get it" about permissions and BSD, so . . .


  1. I want to be able to su to root from my ID, but did not originally
     give myself root perms.  When I tried to edit (via vipw) the password
     file to just change my group, it didn't seem to "take" somehow, so
     I switched it back.  If I understand the theory, though, I should be
     able to be in multiple groups.  How?  It doesn't seem to be in the
     handbook or the FAQ, and my perusal of man pages hasn't show anything.
     I admit I'm not on speaking terms with info yet, but I don't think
     that FreeBSD favors it anyway.

  2. I want to be able to setuid a "script" to root and have it jolly well
     do whatever I can do logged in as root.  In particlar, I want to have
     scripts to slattach and associated "stuff" to various places and I
     want to allow non-root folks to do so.  I can make some stuff work with
     suidperl, but even then it barfs if I try to invoke an extermal command
     that's a shell.

     Sure, it's a security risk, but this is a home system; it just doesn't
     need to be *that* secure.  Or is there a better way to do this sort 
     of thing?

-- 
Brian T. Schellenberger, the Man from Babble-On.

"Someday I'll get around to importing all the cool quotes from my other
account's .sig files."      http://mercury.interpath.com/~babbleon



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