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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Privacy In a UNIX Server Environment Post 302907063 by adtuck on Wednesday 25th of June 2014 02:44:49 PM
Old 06-25-2014
Privacy In a UNIX Server Environment

I am dealing with a privacy issue that I am unable to solve. Essentially, there is a .sas file saved on a UNIX Server. I am interested in changing permissions etc so that:

1. The .sas file can only be altered by the owner.
2. The contents of the .sas file can not be viewed (there is sensitive login information in the .sas file)
3. The .sas file can be run by a set of people chosen by the owner.

Things I have tried thus far:
1. Messing with chmod on the .sas file.
2. Saving the login information in an encrypted pwd.txt file.

My method "if all else fails":
Create a faceless login to replace the sensitive login information in the .sas file. This is admittedly less secure and therefore secondary, but certainly a possibility.

Any advice would be greatly appreciated!!
 

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logindevperm(4) 						   File Formats 						   logindevperm(4)

NAME
logindevperm, fbtab - login-based device permissions SYNOPSIS
/etc/logindevperm DESCRIPTION
The /etc/logindevperm file contains information that is used by login(1) and ttymon(1M) to change the owner, group, and permissions of devices upon logging into or out of a console device. By default, this file contains lines for the keyboard, mouse, audio, and frame buffer devices. The owner of the devices listed in /etc/logindevperm is set to the owner of the console by login(1). The group of the devices is set to the owner's group specified in /etc/passwd. The permissions are set as specified in /etc/logindevperm. Fields are separated by TAB and/or SPACE characters. Blank lines and comments can appear anywhere in the file; comments start with a hash- mark, ` # ', and continue to the end of the line. The first field specifies the name of a console device (for example, /dev/console). The second field specifies the permissions to which the devices in the device_list field (third field) will be set. These permissions must be expressed in octal format. For example, O774. A device_list is a colon-separated list of device names. Note that a device name must be a /dev link. A device entry that is a directory name and ends with "/*" specifies all entries in the directory (except "." and ".."). For example, "/dev/fbs/*" specifies all frame buffer devices. Once the devices are owned by the user, their permissions and ownership can be changed using chmod(1) and chown(1), as with any other user- owned file. Upon logout the owner and group of these devices will be reset by ttymon(1M) to owner root and root's group as specified in /etc/passwd (typically other). The permissions are set as specified in the /etc/logindevperm file. FILES
/etc/passwd File that contains user group information. SEE ALSO
chmod(1), chown(1), login(1), ttymon(1M), passwd(4) NOTES
/etc/logindevperm provides a superset of the functionality provided by /etc/fbtab in SunOS 4.x releases. SunOS 5.10 22 Oct 2003 logindevperm(4)
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