-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Anders Johansson wrote:
On Monday 08 October 2007 10:54:41 G T Smith wrote:
Anders Johansson wrote:
On Sunday 07 October 2007 14:23:50 G T Smith wrote:
Unfortunately if you can disconnect a resource, you can also reconnect something else at the same point, and that could be a security issue. If the location is taken it makes it more difficult (but not impossible) to hijack. No you can't, because linux will only allow you to mount things as a user when permission is explicitly given in fstab. Which means the worst they could do is remount the same resource
If you think this is wrong, please give a concrete example of how it could be done <snip something about home directories on samba shares>
Obviously your scenario is just wrong.
I think you need to do a little research into both AD and NDS and some Network Operating System concepts.... You are thinking server and machine centric not network centric... e.g. NT user accounts are frequently dynamically created on the local machine on login and the account removed on logout, accounts and their settings exist on the network NOT the machine (I am unaware of anything similar on *NIX). The approach has its problems but works well enough...
First of all, for the kind of shares you're talking about, there are the non-mounted resources (smb:// in various browsers and vfs implementations). You can't have your home directory on samba anyway (or at least you shouldn't). So that eliminates your scenario
If the directory is mounted on login there is no real reason why you should not either. You are obviously completely unfamiliar with concept of the hotdesk. Let me spell it out ... user does not have own machine, user may have own resources and own role in organisation, user must be able sit down and use any machine in a pool of machines and use as own... This is commonly used in teaching institutions, call centres, and other variants of cubicle land... And are you seriously suggesting that in organisation with several hundred users that you set up several hundred home directories (and associated accounts) on each machine in the pool? The browser is an approach with limitations. For it to work with reasonable safety any settings need to travel with the user and not be tied to the machine. Oddly enough this is something fairly easy to do with Windows with AD or NDS...
Secondly, one single mount point for all users is just bad, it won't work.
There are a number of references to this type of configuration around with NFS, there is usually a single mount point but is lower down the hierarchy on the server end and in theory you should only see the material pertinent to the logged in user. There have various ways of presenting a file system across a network for a long time in *NIX world, but they do not really fit more recent desktop use models.
Thirdly, if there really is a need for mounting, there is FUSE (but there isn't a need, so...)
Have you actually tried smbfuse? It crawls....veeeeeeerrrrryyyy ssssslllllooowwwllyy :-) When I last looked at it, it spent an awful lot of time authenticating when I tracked what was happening, also can pick stuff that do not want to be picked up if you are not careful ... Nice idea but not currently usable...
Finally, for the kind of "conditional mounts" you refer to, there is autofs
You are talking hardware conditional not user/location conditional. i.e. If A is member of group 2 they can use resource VI when they log in... What we considering is the concept of single point of login and transparent access to resources .... One of the most serious security issues is password and identity overload... if people have lots of IDs and passwords people starting loosing track what password works with which ID... so people people starting making life easy for themselves and choose insecure password or put the passwords down on a bit of paper.. (how many people have come across the stick it note with the password list on the monitor :-) )
In no case do you ever have to give a normal user root access
Ideally of course,
Anders
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