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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users allow user to use sudo cp on a specific directory and only a specific file Post 302555070 by Corona688 on Tuesday 13th of September 2011 06:53:22 PM
Old 09-13-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by COKEDUDE
The only way that would be possible is if I give write permission on the /etc directory.
Not true, directory permissions don't control that. If you chown :group /etc/resolv.conf ; chmod g+rw /etc/resolv.conf then anyone in group will be able to modify it.
Quote:
The /etc/resolv.conf keeps getting messed up.
Fixing /etc/resolv.conf every time it gets messed up isn't really a solution... It's like stocking extra fire extinguishers instead of fixing a smoking electrical short. If you don't want whatever autoconfig keeps messing up the file to do so, disable it.
 

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HOST.CONF(5)						    Linux System Administration 					      HOST.CONF(5)

NAME
host.conf - resolver configuration file DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/host.conf contains configuration information specific to the resolver library. It should contain one configuration keyword per line, followed by appropriate configuration information. The keywords recognized are order, trim, multi, nospoof, and reorder. These keywords are described below. order This keyword specifies how host lookups are to be performed. It should be followed by one or more lookup methods, separated by com- mas. Valid methods are bind, hosts, and nis. trim This keyword may be listed more than once. Each time it should be followed by a single domain name, with the leading dot. When set, the resolv+ library will automatically trim the given domain name from the end of any hostname resolved via DNS. This is intended for use with local hosts and domains. (Related note: trim will not affect host- names gathered via NIS or the hosts file. Care should be taken to ensure that the first hostname for each entry in the hosts file is fully qualified or non-qualified, as appropriate for the local installation.) multi Valid values are on and off. If set to on, the resolv+ library will return all valid addresses for a host that appears in the /etc/hosts file, instead of only the first. This is off by default, as it may cause a substantial performance loss at sites with large hosts files. nospoof Valid values are on and off. If set to on, the resolv+ library will attempt to prevent hostname spoofing to enhance the security of rlogin and rsh. It works as follows: after performing a host address lookup, resolv+ will perform a hostname lookup for that address. If the two hostnames do not match, the query will fail. spoofalert If this option is set to on and the nospoof option is also set, resolv+ will log a warning of the error via the syslog facility. The default value is off. reorder Valid values are on and off. If set to on, resolv+ will attempt to reorder host addresses so that local addresses (i.e., on the same subnet) are listed first when a gethostbyname(3) is performed. Reordering is done for all lookup methods. The default value is off. FILES
/etc/host.conf Resolver configuration file /etc/resolv.conf Resolver configuration file /etc/hosts Local hosts database SEE ALSO
gethostbyname(3), hostname(7), resolv+(8), named(8) Debian GNU/Linux 1997-01-02 HOST.CONF(5)
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