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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers resrtrict user to his home directory Post 7492 by xiamin on Wednesday 26th of September 2001 11:38:40 PM
Old 09-27-2001
resrtrict user to his home directory

Hello

How do i restrict a user only to his own directory so that he wont be able to cd to other directories.

say for excample there is user called xiamin then xiamin should be restricted to /usr/xiamin only.


i am on redhat linux

regards
Hrishy
 

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STICKY(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 STICKY(8)

NAME
sticky -- sticky text and append-only directories DESCRIPTION
A special file mode, called the sticky bit (mode S_ISVTX), is used to indicate special treatment for shareable executable files and directo- ries. See chmod(2) or the file /usr/include/sys/stat.h for an explanation of file modes. STICKY TEXT EXECUTABLE FILES
The sticky bit has no effect on executable files. All optimization on whether text images remain resident in memory is handled by the ker- nel's virtual memory system. STICKY DIRECTORIES
A directory whose `sticky bit' is set becomes an append-only directory, or, more accurately, a directory in which the deletion of files is restricted. A file in a sticky directory may only be removed or renamed by a user if the user has write permission for the directory and the user is the owner of the file, the owner of the directory, or the super-user. This feature is usefully applied to directories such as /tmp which must be publicly writable but should deny users the license to arbitrarily delete or rename each others' files. Any user may create a sticky directory. See chmod(1) for details about modifying file modes. BUGS
Neither open(2) nor mkdir(2) will create a file with the sticky bit set. HISTORY
A sticky command appeared in Version 32V AT&T UNIX. 4th Berkeley Distribution June 5, 1993 4th Berkeley Distribution
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