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Date:      Sat, 28 Apr 2012 16:39:06 +0700
From:      Eugene Grosbein <egrosbein@rdtc.ru>
To:        Zenny <garbytrash@gmail.com>
Cc:        "freebsd-stable@freebsd.org" <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Restricting users from certain privileges
Message-ID:  <4F9BBABA.6040708@rdtc.ru>
In-Reply-To: <CACuV5sCHmnUnXTTY%2BkGqszi-Ynu8Vr3bf%2BLALf=yQbhHPXSdXA@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <CACuV5sCyCgn8aBawTEP=BT%2B%2B4Ut4kPt8fXSq%2BgcS2YrkZaU%2BJw@mail.gmail.com>	<E1SO2ER-000K66-8k@kabab.cs.huji.ac.il> <CACuV5sCHmnUnXTTY%2BkGqszi-Ynu8Vr3bf%2BLALf=yQbhHPXSdXA@mail.gmail.com>

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28.04.2012 14:50, Zenny пишет:

>> try sudo from ports, security/sudo
>>
>> cheers,
>>        danny
>>
>>
> Thanks Daniel, but sudo gives all (not selective) root privileges to the
> user (admin in my case). So this is not what I am trying to achieve in my
> original post.

Please do study sudo real power :-)
It can give selective privileges per-command,
an d it can also allow one to run some command with some arguments only
and not with others. Or, without any arguments only - as you tune
its sudoers configuration file.

Eugene Grosbein



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