Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 15:03:58 -0400 From: "C. A. Daelhousen" <cd9@buffalo.edu> To: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Cc: Gerard Samuel <gsam@trini0.org> Subject: Re: Restricting user Message-ID: <20020830150358.A25578@selvirjin.buffalo.edu> In-Reply-To: <20020830183418.A69753@gicco.cablecom.ch>; from hanspeter_roth@hotmail.com on Fri, Aug 30, 2002 at 06:34:18PM %2B0200 References: <3D6F9A15.5020308@trini0.org> <20020830183418.A69753@gicco.cablecom.ch>
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On Fri, Aug 30, 2002 at 06:34:18PM +0200, Hanspeter Roth wrote: > On Aug 30 at 12:15, Gerard Samuel spoke: > > > I would like to restrict a user to their home directory. > > jail seems to be just for processes. > > What else is there that I can look at. > > Maybe a restricted shell such as bash -r. > > -Hanspeter > If you do this, be careful about the dotfiles that the shell reads when it starts up. A college I used to attend didn't remove 'PATH=${PATH}:${HOME}/bin' from one of those dotfiles--allowing any user to write a shell script to give them an unrestricted shell. ~/bin/foo: #!/bin/sh exec /bin/csh (Another lesson to be learned: don't make your policies so draconian that people can't report what they find.) -- ..: Chad Daelhousen == cd9@buffalo.edu :.........: sig v3.1 :... : Programming for 10 +/- 2 years (50 +/- 10% of a lifetime) : :.............Perl will be the first to implement mind reading.: To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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