[lug] Protecting Mount Points
Will
will.sterling at gmail.com
Wed Feb 23 13:36:50 MST 2011
And if you are on an obsolete UNIX that has questionable support for
extended file attributes and virtually no way to manipulate them from
userland?
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 1:17 PM, David L. Willson <DLWillson at thegeek.nu>wrote:
> This is what I do:
>
> # chattr +i /mountdir
>
> David L. Willson
> Trainer, Engineer, Enthusiast
> RHCE MCT MCSE Network+ A+ Linux+ LPIC-1 NovellCLA UbuntuCP
> tel://720.333.LANS
> Freedom is better when you earn it. Learn Linux.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Will" <will.sterling at gmail.com>
> To: lug at lug.boulder.co.us
> Sent: Wednesday, February 23, 2011 1:04:44 PM
> Subject: [lug] Protecting Mount Points
>
>
> I want to protect some mount points from being written to if an NFS mount
> were to fail. I think I can do this by setting the mount point to be owned
> by root and writable by no one. When the NFS export is mounted the mount
> point will take on the permissions of the export allowing the proper
> users/groups to write to it. I am about to set up a quick test to verify
> this but I was wondering if anyone already knows if this works or a better
> way to accomplish the same?
>
>
> Regards,
> Will
> _______________________________________________
> Web Page: http://lug.boulder.co.us
> Mailing List: http://lists.lug.boulder.co.us/mailman/listinfo/lug
> Join us on IRC: irc.hackingsociety.org port=6667 channel=#hackingsociety
> _______________________________________________
> Web Page: http://lug.boulder.co.us
> Mailing List: http://lists.lug.boulder.co.us/mailman/listinfo/lug
> Join us on IRC: irc.hackingsociety.org port=6667 channel=#hackingsociety
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.lug.boulder.co.us/pipermail/lug/attachments/20110223/77343c49/attachment.html>
More information about the LUG
mailing list