Why does "root" worn everything?

Ken Smith kensmith at sunybcs.uucp
Wed Mar 16 00:10:53 AEST 1988


In article <9926 at steinmetz.steinmetz.UUCP> davidsen at crdos1.UUCP (bill davidsen) writes:
>
>  I hope you say that somewhat casually. I consider backups to be a
>routine administrative action, and don't have the luxury of being able
>to do the daily in single user mode. If not root, then how would you do it?

All that's needed for being able to dump is permission to read the device
you're trying to dump.  Group privileges for an 'operator' account are a
convenient way of handling it.  Be sure they also have write permission
on /etc/dumpdates.  It's too bad rdump uses a privileged socket, it'd be
nice to be able to remote dump workstations from a non-root account.  At
least there is a way to set it up so you don't have to make root on the
workstation equivalent to root on the system you're dumping to...

For you security minded people check the permissions of your disks in /dev,
we found them world readable at one point on a couple of our systems.  I
have no idea how they got that way, the list of past and present system
administrators here is long...

						Ken Smith

internet: kensmith at cs.buffalo.edu	bitnet:	kensmith at sunybcs.BITNET
uucp:	  ..!{ames,boulder,decvax,rutgers}!sunybcs!kensmith



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