This is standard unix behaviour. if a user's home directory path isn't
readable by that user, they can't access it. typically the /home dir should
be world readable as should the / dir. home directories can be any
permissions a user wants and should be owned by the user themselves.
Ryan
"Scott D. Yelich" wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>
> On Sat, 25 Dec 1999, Stanislav N. Vardomskiy wrote:
> > On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Warner Losh wrote:
> > > At best you can get a file in /etc/ that is owned by yourself.
> > This just *might* be a problem.
> [DELETED]
> > Lastly, a simplest denial of service, creating /etc/nologin can disrupt
> > the service.
>
> SSH seems very finicky... in many ways. Unless this has been changed
> in recent versions, it's also possible to disrupt/deny ssh service
> if the directory *above* a login id's home directory isn't readable.
>
> Can anyone explain what *that* requirement is for?
>
> Scott
> ps: Also, as a side note, scp seems to ignore alternative-login in ssh.
> I'm not sure if that's a feature or a bug -- I consider it a bug and
> thus have disabled scp on sites where I use alternative-login.
> pps: 1.2.26
>
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Received on Dec 27 1999