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Full Discussion: restricting access...
Special Forums Cybersecurity restricting access... Post 2388 by Neo on Wednesday 9th of May 2001 07:13:58 PM
Old 05-09-2001
MySQL

Thanks so much for sharing your success and providing a thread we can reference when this comes up again (and again)! Smilie Smilie

The trouble with rbash and many other restricted shells is that they are easy to 'break out of' by exec'ing another shell. The chroot method has 'a chance to work'.

BTW: If you do what you just described for individual users (and individual logins) vs. a guest login, then (obviously) you could be more restrictive Smilie I think there is a way to do this that is not too labor intensive, BTW.

[Edited by Neo on 05-09-2001 at 07:17 PM]
 

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RBASH(1)						      General Commands Manual							  RBASH(1)

NAME
rbash - restricted bash, see bash(1) RESTRICTED SHELL
If bash is started with the name rbash, or the -r option is supplied at invocation, the shell becomes restricted. A restricted shell is used to set up an environment more controlled than the standard shell. It behaves identically to bash with the exception that the follow- ing are disallowed or not performed: o changing directories with cd o setting or unsetting the values of SHELL, PATH, ENV, or BASH_ENV o specifying command names containing / o specifying a filename containing a / as an argument to the . builtin command o specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the -p option to the hash builtin command o importing function definitions from the shell environment at startup o parsing the value of SHELLOPTS from the shell environment at startup o redirecting output using the >, >|, <>, >&, &>, and >> redirection operators o using the exec builtin command to replace the shell with another command o adding or deleting builtin commands with the -f and -d options to the enable builtin command o using the enable builtin command to enable disabled shell builtins o specifying the -p option to the command builtin command o turning off restricted mode with set +r or set +o restricted. These restrictions are enforced after any startup files are read. When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed, rbash turns off any restrictions in the shell spawned to execute the script. SEE ALSO
bash(1) GNU Bash-4.0 2004 Apr 20 RBASH(1)
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