Stroller wrote:
On 14 Nov 2009, at 20:46, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
You are right of course, but in this particular case the guy who pays
wants to have root access.
And you agreed to work like that?
So when he fucks things up good royal and proper, will he gladly
accept his
shafting and pay you more to undo it? Or will he do the usual
customer stunt
and blame you?
My typical experience is that the customer will take it completely on
the chin and pay me to fix the problems. That doesn't make foul-ups
due to such unnecessary meddling any less frustrating, though.
I only work under one of two conditions:
I am root and the customer is not.
The customer is root and I am not.
This is clearly the "right" way to operate, however it can be
extremely difficult to walk away from your largest-paying contract,
just because the owner sees this particular issue differently.
One has to hope, really, that the client only wants the root password
as insurance in case you get run over by a bus, and won't use it to
arbitrarily mess about on the system.
Stroller.
I would do one thing and take it as often as possible, a large CYA
pill. I had this situation with a friend once a few years ago, trust
me, it's a lot easier to blame someone else than yourself. System logs
saved me since they pointed to him instead of me.
That pill should contain logs, notes and anything else that can be used
to protect yourself. When a scapegoat is needed, you're it. That said,
I sort of think you see this already.
Dale
:-) :-)