Re: how to put a password for linux single

2000-06-07 Thread John Aldrich
On Wed, 07 Jun 2000, kdeepak wrote: > Hi all, >How put a password for linux single in lilo . > "man lilo.conf" for the answer. John -- To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe" as the Subject.

RE: how to put a password for Linux single

2000-06-07 Thread Whitley, Sarah \(ISS Reading\)
me if you have any problems. Regards Sarah Whitley Senior Consultant ISS > -Original Message- > From: kdeepak [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2000 5:34 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: how to put a password for Linux single > > > >

how to put a password for linux single

2000-06-07 Thread kdeepak
Hi all, How put a password for linux single in lilo . regards k.deepak --- K.DEEPAK System Administrator AdventNet Development Centre (India) Pvt Ltd "Kaashyap Enclave" 13-A Velachery Main Road

Re: linux single

1998-03-22 Thread Stelios Bounanos
> On Sun, 22 Mar 1998, Stelios Bounanos wrote: > > > But even then, people can use programs that run under dos-windoze to reset > > the BIOS -- I've tried this with several different BIOSs with a _lot_ of > > success! > All you need to do is open the cover and reset the bios. There ia always > a

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread Tom Diehl
On Sun, 22 Mar 1998, Stelios Bounanos wrote: > But even then, people can use programs that run under dos-windoze to reset > the BIOS -- I've tried this with several different BIOSs with a _lot_ of > success! All you need to do is open the cover and reset the bios. There ia always a way to do thi

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread drink
On Sat, 21 Mar 1998, Tom Diehl wrote: > And a boot disk will bypass this and any other options you put in lilo. > The only way to secure a machine it NOT to allow physical access. > If they know about linux single they know how to use a boot disk. > You are just kidding yourself if yo

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread Stelios Bounanos
> And a boot disk will bypass this and any other options you put in lilo. > The only way to secure a machine it NOT to allow physical access. > If they know about linux single they know how to use a boot disk. > You are just kidding yourself if you think your machine is secure. A bo

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread Henrik Edlund
sked for one. > > And a boot disk will bypass this and any other options you put in lilo. > The only way to secure a machine it NOT to allow physical access. > If they know about linux single they know how to use a boot disk. > You are just kidding yourself if you think your machine is s

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread Tom Diehl
ons you put in lilo. The only way to secure a machine it NOT to allow physical access. If they know about linux single they know how to use a boot disk. You are just kidding yourself if you think your machine is secure. ..Tom "Do not meddle in the affairs of w

Re: linux single

1998-03-21 Thread Stelios Bounanos
The Right Thing(tm) to do is to append the following 2 lines: parrword=whatever restricted at the end of the linux section of /etc/lilo.conf Mine, for example looks like this: boot=/dev/hda map=/boot/map install=/boot/boot.b prompt timeout=30 vga=7 image=/boot/vmlinuz label=linux

Re: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread Tom Diehl
On Fri, 20 Mar 1998, Magnus Solvang wrote: > Quoting Tom Diehl ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > > | Having said that do what was suggested before (comment out the prompt > | directive in /etc/lilo.conf and rerun lilo) and you will have no more > | boot prompt. You could also passwd protect lilo but then

Re: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread E Kelly Bond
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 > I have seen a message thread on how to setup your > rc files to do a "exec login" during the boot process > allowing you to setup a Actually, it was a article in the Linux Gazette in Issue 19, July 1997 It explains in detail how to setup your m

Re: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread E Kelly Bond
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I have seen a message thread on how to setup your rc files to do a "exec login" during the boot process allowing you to setup a "Hit Enter to continue boot process or type the ROOT password to enter single user mode." message at boot. As I remembe

Re: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread Magnus Solvang
Quoting Tom Diehl ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): | Having said that do what was suggested before (comment out the prompt | directive in /etc/lilo.conf and rerun lilo) and you will have no more | boot prompt. You could also passwd protect lilo but then only you would | be able to boot. ...and the machine

Re: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread Tom Diehl
On Thu, 19 Mar 1998 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I can't have it boot straight into Linux because it also runs > windows95. The problem is that the console is in an open lab and anyone > could reboot and use linux single to gain root privs and I'm trying to > remove this gia

RE: Securing Linux Single Mode

1998-03-20 Thread Canary, Robert W.
Col ! I didn't know lilo would do that. -- From: Raj Singh[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, March 20, 1998 5:02 AM To: RedHat List Cc: The recipient's address is unknown. Subject:Re: Securing Linux Single Mode Hi, I use the following to ask for

Re: Securing Linux Single Mode

1998-03-20 Thread Raj Singh
Hi, I use the following to ask for a password when linux is given at the LILO: prompt. YES, it is documented in RedHat distributions. Check 'man lilo.conf' or the /usr/doc/lilo-/doc directory. You would need to make /etc/lilo.conf readable only by root, otherwise anyone can read the lilo.con

RE: linux single

1998-03-20 Thread KThorpe
>Date: Thu, 19 Mar 1998 12:03:08 -0500 >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: linux single >I can't have it boot straight into Linux because it also runs >windows95. The problem is that the console is in an open lab and anyone >could reboot and use linux single to gain ro

Re: linux single

1998-03-19 Thread drink
I can't have it boot straight into Linux because it also runs windows95. The problem is that the console is in an open lab and anyone could reboot and use linux single to gain root privs and I'm trying to remove this giant security hole. Can anyone help? I'd rather not have t

linux single

1998-03-19 Thread drink
Hi all, I've got an intel based redhat 4.1 box and I want to remove the linux single ability of LILO. Can anyone either tell me how or point me towards a piece of documentation that will explain it? I know I once saw this a few years ago on this list, but i can't figure out how to