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The Lounge War Stories Prize of being an Admin - Part 2 Post 302793849 by ahamed101 on Sunday 14th of April 2013 03:50:20 AM
Old 04-14-2013
Prize of being an Admin - Part 2

I was reading this thread of admin_xor Prize of being an Admin and thought will share this experience of mine which is kind of opposite to what he did - I didn't tell anybody what happened Smilie

We were porting one of the subsystem from Solaris to Linux. As part of that we developed many wrapper scripts. So, there is this rsh wrapper script which is deployed in the system which internally uses ssh if security is enabled or uses native rsh instead (this native rsh is placed in a different path, so that it will not show up in the $PATH and the wrapper rsh script is placed in /usr/bin). For some testing purpose, I modified the ssh command inside the rsh wrapper script to "rsh" command and forgot to change it back. So, you know what happened next. If I do a rsh, it goes into a continuous loop calling the rsh wrapper script over and over again, this clogged the cpu in no time. I did this change in the Testing teams setup. And the worst part was I did it in 2 of their setup.

Next day I came to office and there is a big fuss all over the place. I didn't bother cause it was't assigned to me and I totally forgot that what I did was causing this. After couple of days, the issue was assigned to me and then "oops" I realized it. Now what? Of course I didn't tell them Smilie. Hearing about what happened to admin_xor for what he did, imagine what would've happened to me.

Later I told them that it was a "human" Smilie error and that there is no issue with the system. But then they asked how could it happen to 2 systems. I was like "it happened man, forget it" Smilie - no I didn't say that, I told them we'll monitor it. I assured them that it is human error and we will monitor the system and if it re-occurs we will investigate again and now its not worth spending time on this - obviously I know it - cause I am the culprit.

--ahamed

Last edited by ahamed101; 04-14-2013 at 01:25 PM..
 

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rsh(1M) 						  System Administration Commands						   rsh(1M)

NAME
rsh, restricted_shell - restricted shell command interpreter SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/rsh [-acefhiknprstuvx] [argument]... DESCRIPTION
rsh is a limiting version of the standard command interpreter sh, used to restrict logins to execution environments whose capabilities are more controlled than those of sh (see sh(1) for complete description and usage). When the shell is invoked, it scans the environment for the value of the environmental variable, SHELL. If it is found and rsh is the file name part of its value, the shell becomes a restricted shell. The actions of rsh are identical to those of sh, except that the following are disallowed: o changing directory (see cd(1)), o setting the value of $PATH, o pecifying path or command names containing /, o redirecting output (> and >>). The restrictions above are enforced after .profile is interpreted. A restricted shell can be invoked in one of the following ways: 1. rsh is the file name part of the last entry in the /etc/passwd file (see passwd(4)); 2. the environment variable SHELL exists and rsh is the file name part of its value; the environment variable SHELL needs to be set in the .login file; 3. the shell is invoked and rsh is the file name part of argument 0; 4. the shell is invoke with the -r option. When a command to be executed is found to be a shell procedure, rsh invokes sh to execute it. Thus, it is possible to provide to the end- user shell procedures that have access to the full power of the standard shell, while imposing a limited menu of commands; this scheme assumes that the end-user does not have write and execute permissions in the same directory. The net effect of these rules is that the writer of the .profile (see profile(4)) has complete control over user actions by performing guaranteed setup actions and leaving the user in an appropriate directory (probably not the login directory). The system administrator often sets up a directory of commands (that is, /usr/rbin) that can be safely invoked by a restricted shell. Some systems also provide a restricted editor, red. EXIT STATUS
Errors detected by the shell, such as syntax errors, cause the shell to return a non-zero exit status. If the shell is being used non- interactively execution of the shell file is abandoned. Otherwise, the shell returns the exit status of the last command executed. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
intro(1), cd(1), login(1), rsh(1), sh(1), exec(2), passwd(4), profile(4), attributes(5) NOTES
The restricted shell, /usr/lib/rsh, should not be confused with the remote shell, /usr/bin/rsh, which is documented in rsh(1). SunOS 5.11 1 Nov 1993 rsh(1M)
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