Hello Stan,
Don't know why you must jail the user while you want he is able to
su to root.
It is not necessary to jail every account on you system. If you want
someone to be able to su, why not simply keep him not jailed?
Kevin
On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 6:34 PM, Čaniga Stanislav
<address@hidden> wrote:
Hi Oliver
Thanks for looking into this:
What I want to achieve is: disabled root ssh login (already
works), and having only few users in a "su" group, that are able
to execute the su, to be able to su to the root user and manage
the system. I want all users to be chrooted and only those in the
"su"group can su.
Stan
On Nov 9, 2008, at 11.29 , Olivier Sessink wrote:
Čaniga Stanislav wrote:
Hi all,
I'm having a little problem with setting up the jailkit
properly in
order to use su as a chrooted user.
what exactly do want to achieve? having 'su' inside a chroot
jail is not
very common. su is a setuid binary (not recommended in a jail)
and it
probably needs access to the shadow file (not in the jail) to
check
passwords.
perhaps there are other (more secure) ways to accomplish what
you want
to do.
Olivier
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