Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2012 16:34:18 -0700 From: "Edward M." <eam1edward@gmail.com> To: Polytropon <freebsd@edvax.de> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Editor With NO Shell Access? Message-ID: <4F5E87FA.7090001@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <4F5E7D1F.9030703@gmail.com> References: <4F5E4C2A.1020005@tundraware.com> <4F5E6D3A.50302@gmail.com> <20120312231000.4bb530e1.freebsd@edvax.de> <4F5E7687.5070808@gmail.com> <20120312232300.4da8ebf3.freebsd@edvax.de> <4F5E7D1F.9030703@gmail.com>
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On 03/12/2012 03:47 PM, Edward M. wrote: > On 03/12/2012 03:23 PM, Polytropon wrote: >> On Mon, 12 Mar 2012 15:19:51 -0700, Edward M. wrote: >>> On 03/12/2012 03:10 PM, Polytropon wrote: >>>> /etc/shells to work, but a passwd entry like >>>> >>>> bob:*:1234:1234:Two-loop-Bob:/home/bob:/usr/local/bin/joe >>> >>> I think this would not let the user to login,etc >> I'm not sure... I assume logging in is handled by /usr/bin/login, >> and control is then (i. e. after successful login) transferred >> to the login shell, which is the program specified in the >> "shell" field (see "man 5 passwd") of /etc/passwd. How is >> login supposed to know if the program specified in this >> field is actually a dialog shell? >> >> From "man 1 login" I read that many shells have a built-in >> login command, but /usr/bin/login is the system's default >> binary for this purpose if the "shell" (quotes deserved if >> it is an editor as shown in my assumption) has no capability >> of performing a login. >> >> >> > Now i gotta try this out. Off to > hosed my system. Does not work. Could not login, it shows "Couldn't open *-joerc."
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