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Full Discussion: User account logging
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers User account logging Post 302598896 by Corona688 on Wednesday 15th of February 2012 04:23:33 PM
Old 02-15-2012
Don't bump posts. We are not "on call". If you don't get an answer immediately, wait!

Quote:
Originally Posted by oraclermanpt
we have multiple users having access to orapps. anyone can change permissions
You can grant them read and write access even if they're not the owner. Not being the owner would prevent them from chmod-ing it.

Of course, if they have write access, they never needed chmod, because they can write to it. If they have access to a file and have shell access, they have access to a file and have shell access. This is why giving 9 people the same shell account is a bad idea...

Quote:
I think script in bash_profile might work.
Nothing would stop them from killing script and falsifying its results. If they have access to their files and processes, they have access to their files and processes. This is why giving 9 people the same shell account is a bad idea...

Do they truly need shell access to this account? Might they just need the ability to do a few very specific things as this user? You could limit them with sudo. Only allow a few specific users to run your very own wrapper script under this user, a wrapper script which records and formats their input in whatever way you like. This would let you control which users get to run it, too, without having to give them all the same password. You'd be able to track which users were running it when, too. You may even be able to do it seamlessly with an alias.

Last edited by Corona688; 02-15-2012 at 05:40 PM..
 

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CHMOD(1)						      General Commands Manual							  CHMOD(1)

NAME
chmod - change access mode for files SYNOPSIS
chmod [-R] mode file ... OPTIONS
-R Change hierarchies recursively EXAMPLES
chmod 755 file # Owner: rwx Group: r-x Others: r-x chmod +x file1 file2 # Make file1 and file2 executable chmod a-w file # Make file read only chmod u+s file # Turn on SETUID for file chmod -R o+w dir # Allow writing for all files in dir DESCRIPTION
The given mode is applied to each file in the file list. If the -R flag is present, the files in a directory will be changed as well. The mode can be either absolute or symbolic. Absolute modes are given as an octal number that represents the new file mode. The mode bits are defined as follows: 4000 Set effective user id on execution to file's owner id 2000 Set effective group id on execution to file's group id 0400 file is readable by the owner of the file 0200 writeable by owner 0100 executable by owner 0070 same as above, for other users in the same group 0007 same as above, for all other users Symbolic modes modify the current file mode in a specified way. The form is: [who] op permissions { op permissions ...} {, [who] op ... } The possibilities for who are u, g, o, and a, standing for user, group, other and all, respectively. If who is omitted, a is assumed, but the current umask is used. The op can be +, -, or =; + turns on the given permissions, - turns them off; = sets the permissions exclu- sively for the given who. For example g=x sets the group permissions to --x. The possible permissions are r, w, x; which stand for read, write, and execute; s turns on the set effective user/group id bits. s only makes sense with u and g; o+s is harmless. SEE ALSO
ls(1), chmod(2). CHMOD(1)
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