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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers restrict one user to see only his home directory in his profile Post 302285603 by quirkasaurus on Monday 9th of February 2009 10:04:02 AM
Old 02-09-2009
Ok. Unless you change the "world" permissions on the whole system,
I don't believe that you can do this through permissions.

So.... that's why I think you need a slightly more sophisticated solution.

Try putting this in the user's ~/.profile

Then, you can put all of the valid directories in the
/.approved_dirs file
Make that file read / writable by root only, and
the directory where it resides cannot by writable
by the user. But we're assuming a rather unsophisticated user anyways.
Putting the .approved_dirs file in their HOME directory and making it
owned by root and not writeable by anyone else might be sufficient.

Code:
typeset -xf _cd



function _cd
{


\cd $*

if grep "^${PWD}$" /.approved_dirs > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
  return
fi

\cd $OLDPWD

return
}


alias -x cd=_cd

 

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forward(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							forward(4)

NAME
forward - forward mail SYNOPSIS
/var/adm/forward/username $HOME/.forward DESCRIPTION
The .forward file allows a user to forward messages to another host, or to invoke programs (such as vacation(1)) to process their mail. It is formatted as a series of comma-separated addresses in the form: addr_1, addr_2, ... Alternatively, each address can be on a separate line. The newer sendmail.v8 program also allows the use of comments (lines that begin with a ``#'') and blank lines. As with the aliases(4) file, mail messages can be forwarded to another host or given to programs for further processing. The following is an example of the vacation program. Assuming that the user's name is myra, create a .forward file and add the following line: myra, "|/usr/bin/vacation myra" The previous example forwards mail to myra (the backslash prevents an accidental aliasing loop), and also sends a copy of the message to the vacation program. For security reasons, the file must be owned by the user or by root and it should be writable only by the file owner. In addition, the file must be readable by the owner (myra) or root. On traditional systems, only the $HOME/.forward file is checked. The sendmail.v8 program allows the use of the system-wide forwarding directory /var/adm/forward. By default, this directory is checked for a forward file prior to examining the users $HOME directory. FILES
System-wide forwarding file. The per-user forwarding file. RESTRICTIONS
The sendmail command can hang trying to read the user's $HOME/.forward file. If the user's home directory is NFS-mounted and temporarily unavailable, sendmail will stall until the directory becomes available again. The use of non-NFS mounted directories for the forwarding of files is recommended. The use of /var/adm/forward is supported only by sendmail.v8. The actual path for /var/adm/forward is configurable in the sendmail.cf file. Incorrect file permissions/ownership are quietly ignored. It is easy to create an accidental loop, for example, on host_a myra@host_b and on host_b myra@host_a RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: aliases(4), sendmail.cf(4), sendmail(8) delim off forward(4)
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