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Full Discussion: disallow change directory
Operating Systems AIX disallow change directory Post 302590933 by kwliew999 on Wednesday 18th of January 2012 04:39:05 AM
Old 01-18-2012
disallow change directory

Dear all expects,
I have a security problem that I would like to resolve.
I need to create a user ID in my AIX 5.3 environment and to point the login to a specific directory for FTP purposes. There is only 2 directories that I can allow the user ID to perform read/write. I would like to prevent the user ID to go other places for read / writing..

User ID : TestFTP
Home Directory : /home/TestFTP
/home/TestFTP/.profile : cd /data06/ABC01

Thus, it ends up sign in to /data06/ABC01.
It should be allowed to read/write on /data06/ABC01 and /data06/ABC01/ABC01_BAK.

Other than that, it cannot cd .. to go back to /data06 or it cannot cd to any other directories.

May I know how to create such as ID?

Thanks.
 

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SU(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						     SU(1)

NAME
su -- substitute user identity SYNOPSIS
su [-flm] [login] [-c shell arguments] DESCRIPTION
su requests the password for login and switches to that user and group ID after obtaining proper authentication. A shell is then executed, and any additional shell arguments after the login name are passed to the shell. If su is executed by root, no password is requested and a shell with the appropriate user ID is executed. The options are as follows: -c Invoke the following command in a subshell as the specified user. -f If the invoked shell is csh(1), this option prevents it from reading the ``.cshrc'' file. -l Simulate a full login. The environment is discarded except for HOME, SHELL, PATH, TERM, and USER. HOME and SHELL are modified as above. USER is set to the target login. PATH is set to ``/bin:/usr/bin''. TERM is imported from your current environment. The invoked shell is the target login's, and su will change directory to the target login's home directory. This option is identical to just passing "-", as in "su -". -m Leave the environment unmodified. The invoked shell is your login shell, and no directory changes are made. As a security precau- tion, if the target user's shell is a non-standard shell (as defined by getusershell(3)) and the caller's real uid is non-zero, su will fail. The -l and -m options are mutually exclusive; the last one specified overrides any previous ones. Only users in group ``wheel'' (normally gid 0) or group ``admin'' (normally gid 20) can su to ``root''. By default (unless the prompt is reset by a startup file) the super-user prompt is set to ``#'' to remind one of its awesome power. SEE ALSO
csh(1), login(1), sh(1), skey(1), kinit(1), kerberos(1), passwd(5), group(5), environ(7) ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables used by su : HOME Default home directory of real user ID unless modified as specified above. PATH Default search path of real user ID unless modified as specified above. TERM Provides terminal type which may be retained for the substituted user ID. USER The user ID is always the effective ID (the target user ID) after an su unless the user ID is 0 (root). HISTORY
A su command appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. BSD
April 18, 1994 BSD
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