aches, or from configuration
errors.
> [list of questions]
> - what will happen, if the program has not the sgid/suid bit ?
ACK.
> yes. but also every sgid/suid bit that is not necessary
> should be removed.
Certainly.
> i know, that some people do not like suidmanager, and so th
e changed;
you can then easily import the sample files or keep your
local changes.
All this is (for additional comfort) combined with RCS
version control.
Translated to Debian, this would mean that packages would
maintain the "sample" files, while users use the "site"
dir
without the
suid root bit. As a solution, we need a wrapper which
does pty allocation and starts kind of "client" xterm with
user privileges. (Or we need glibc-2.1 and linux 2.1
where non-privileged programs can do proper pty
allocation. ;-)
tlr
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Thomas Roessler · 74a353cc0b19
acket's
documentation.
tlr
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Thomas Roessler · 74a353cc0b19 · dg1ktr · http://home.pages.de/~roessler/
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which apply to their systeem.
Clearly, maintaining the suid-clearance package will be a
rather time-intensive job. This means that it should most
probably be done by several people, each of whom will pick
the packages they work on.
Comments?
tlr
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Thomas Roessler · 74a353cc0b19 · dg1ktr · ht
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