Francesc Dantí wrote:
My idea is that when somebody logs in (with ssh) he/she can't get access to my files.
You don't need any chroot's to let others get access or not to your files! Please explain what you really want to do! In a default Linux (or Unix) environment, everybody has always read access to other users files if you don't explicitly change permissions (see chmod, umask). So, if you want others to not have access to your files you should type something like: chmod -R go= ~ and perhaps set your umask to 077 (read and execute for user, nothing for group and others for new generated files or directories) umask 077 Hope this helps! (or perhaps some Unix/Linux manual ...) -- Richard Ems ... e-mail: r.ems@gmx.net ... Computer Science, University of Hamburg Unix IS user friendly. It's just selective about who its friends are.