Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 20 Jan 1995 17:22:25 EDT
From:      "M.C Wong" <mcw@hpato.aus.hp.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freefall.cdrom.com (freebsd-questions@freefall.cdrom.com)
Subject:   copy disabled filesystem
Message-ID:  <199501200623.AA242912999@hp.com>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
OK, I am no great Novell fan nor user, but really like the idea of being 
able to read a file but not allowing copy permission.

How difficult can this kind of feature be implemented on Unix ? I meant, you
may need to allower user to be able to read/open some libraries but not giving
them the right to copy/steal a copy of it, and you probably don't want to write 
wrapper around whatever compiler, loader you have to change uid to open some
particular files for read (ie to disable user from read but still need to have
them use it, strange idea ? Not!). 

I guess the tricky part of this feature is that one can easily cat the file to
a different name and hence bypass the copy-disabled feature to achieve the
act. But there got to be a better way of achieving this sort of goals?

--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 M.C Wong 				   Email: mcw@hpato.aus.hp.com 
 Australian Telecom Operation              Voice: +61 3 272 8058        
 Hewlett-Packard Australia Ltd             Fax:   +61 3 898 9257        
 31 Joseph St, Blackburn 3130, Australia   OS: FreeBSD-1.1.5.1
 http://hpautow.aus.hp.com:9999/~mcw/mcw.html (or http://hpautorf/~mcw)



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199501200623.AA242912999>