12-13-2007
That FS Corruption problem isnt solved yet, I am sitting remotely and have advised your tips to some one close to site. But yet to hear about further updates - i shall certainly keep that thread updated to share the knowledge on it.
1) I have not chown'ed the FS to user. Its owned by root only. But one user is present in this FS and same user is not able to run fsck for that FS where he is present.
2) What you mean by 'turn on loggin on the FS' - How to do that?
3) As the direct root login is disabled and I login from some login and then sudo to root. But this way isnt allowing to run FSCK for the FS where my login was present. Can I have this login present over in root partition?
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LEARN ABOUT X11R4
securetty
SECURETTY(5) Linux Programmer's Manual SECURETTY(5)
NAME
securetty - file which lists terminals from which root can log in
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/securetty contains the names of terminals (one per line, without leading /dev/) which are considered secure for the transmis-
sion of certain authentication tokens.
It is used by (some versions of) login(1) to restrict the terminals on which root is allowed to login. See login.defs(5) if you use the
shadow suite.
On PAM enabled systems, it is used for the same purpose by pam_securetty(8) to restrict the terminals on which empty passwords are
accepted.
FILES
/etc/securetty
SEE ALSO
login(1), login.defs(5), pam_securetty(8)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux 2015-03-29 SECURETTY(5)