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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Most deadly commands on Unix/Linux !! Post 302313295 by Dave Miller on Tuesday 5th of May 2009 09:24:34 AM
Old 05-05-2009
While some of the examples are rather interesting, and reading the wikipedia text on Fork Bomb was also entertianing, I'll supply a command that I thought was rather innocent.

This happened about 12 years ago.

My first day back from a two day unix taining class, I was experiencing a problem (I don't remember exactly what), but I attributed it to bad permissions.

Then, while logged in as root, and at the root directory, I executed the following:

chmod -R 777 *


This changed the permissions of every file on the hard drive. This WAS what I intended. I though it was a good idea to do this, until....

Less than a minute later, my phone started ringing.

It seems unix doesn't like to have it's permissions played with, and reacted rather defensively. With the exception of the console terminal, users that logged off could not log back on. Similarly, networked printers stopped working, although the one printer attached directly did work.

Fortunately, this happened at about 4:40pm on a Friday. We were a 9-5 M-F office, so I only killed the last twenty minutes of the workweek. Not a very productive time period anyway.

Unfortunately, I killed my entire weekend fixing it. I didn't have a good mksysb tape to use and had to 'figure out' a variety of things to fix it.
 

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pam_console(8)						   System Administrator's Manual					    pam_console(8)

NAME
pam_console - determine user owning the system console SYNOPSIS
session optional pam_console.so auth required pam_console.so DESCRIPTION
pam_console.so is designed to give users at the physical console (virtual terminals and local xdm-managed X sessions by default, but that is configurable) capabilities that they would not otherwise have, and to take those capabilities away when the are no longer logged in at the console. It provides two main kinds of capabilities: file permissions and authentication. When a user logs in at the console and no other user is currently logged in at the console, pam_console.so will run handler programs speci- fied in the file /etc/security/console.handlers such as pam_console_apply which changes permissions and ownership of files as described in the file /etc/security/console.perms. That user may then log in on other terminals that are considered part of the console, and as long as the user is still logged in at any one of those terminals, that user will own those devices. When the user logs out of the last terminal, the console may be taken by the next user to log in. Other users who have logged in at the console during the time that the first user was logged in will not be given ownership of the devices unless they log in on one of the terminals; having done so on any one terminal, the next user will own those devices until he or she has logged out of every terminal that is part of the physical console. Then the race can start for the next user. In practice, this is not a problem; the physical console is not generally in use by many people at the same time, and pam_console.so just tries to do the right thing in weird cases. When an application attempts to authenticate the user and this user is already logged in at the console, pam_console.so checks whether there is a file in /etc/security/console.apps/ directory with the same name as the application servicename, and if such a file exists, authentication succeeds. This way pam_console may be utilized to run some system applications (reboots, config tools) without root pass- word, or to enter user password on the first system login only. ARGUMENTS
debug turns on debugging allow_nonroot_tty gain console locks and change permissions even if the TTY's owner is not root. handlersfile=filename tells pam_console.so to get the list of the handlers from a different file than /etc/security/console.handlers EXAMPLE
/etc/pam.d/some-system-tool: auth sufficient pam_rootok.so auth required pam_console.so /etc/pam.d/some-login-service: auth sufficient pam_console.so auth required pam_unix.so session required pam_unix.so session optional pam_console.so FILES
/var/run/console/ /var/run/console/console.lock /etc/security/console.apps /etc/security/console.handlers SECURITY NOTES
When pam_console "auth" is used for login services which provide possibility of remote login, it is necessary to make sure the application correctly sets PAM_RHOST variable, or to deny remote logins completely. Currently, /bin/login (invoked from telnetd) and gdm is OK, others may be not. SEE ALSO
console.perms(5) console.apps(5) console.handlers(5) pam_console_apply(8) /usr/share/doc/pam*/html/index.html BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please report them via the "Bug Track" link at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/ AUTHORS
Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> Support of console.handlers and other improvements by Tomas Mraz <tmraz@redhat.com> Red Hat 2005/10/4 pam_console(8)
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