The only reference I can find, in the SuSE manuals, is to su, not to sudo or sux. I also looked in several other Linux and Unix references. In Que's "Special Edition, Using Linux," is the definition: "sudo. You probably want to skip this package. It is basically a system administration utility and a potential security hole in the Linux system." That's as close as I can get. --doug On Monday 31 May 2004 01:34, Doug McGarrett wrote:
On Sunday 30 May 2004 14:59, Patrick Shanahan wrote: /snip/
/bin/ls: kde3: Permission denied
you need root access, ie: su or sudo or sux... -- Patrick Shanahan Registered Linux User #207535
I can't believe that so much stuff is perms denied in these later versions of Linux. I could deal with the eralier versions. Now, someone please tell me what is the difference between su and sudo and sux. And why?
--doug