[techtalk] tracking multiple admin logins?

Jen Hamilton jhamilto at n2h2.com
Thu Apr 5 12:39:35 EST 2001


Just be careful of what sudo access you give. For example, do not give
sudo access to perl or vi because they can become excellent hacking tools.

Jen

On Wed, 4 Apr 2001, Eric R. Turner wrote:

> On Wed, 4 Apr 2001, Dennis Wheeler wrote:
> 
> > 
> > The company I work for, develops software for Linux servers, and so have
> > a need for various/multiple people to logon as root to various servers
> > that are under development and being tested.
> >
> > Is there way to track who is logging in (as root), in order to better
> > track who is making changes to which config files?
> >
> 
> Use sudo as much as possible! It was designed for the issue you are
> facing, and I believe is fairly standard across unix-like operating
> systems. Also, consider keeping all of your config files in CVS. That way
> not only can you track changes to the config files, but you can also
> revert to any prior version if something gets messed up. It also makes a
> nice centralized repository of your config files if you have multiple
> servers that you want to have the same configuration.
> 
> $.02
> 
> Eric R. Turner
> 
> --
> My public OpenPGP key can be found at
> http://www.wwu.edu/~turnere/turnere.asc
> 
> 
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