Your English is fine.  Unfortunately, I haven't used ssh, so I hope you
can find your way with that.  To keep users out of each other's home
directories, I think it is easiest to make each user own his
/home/usr<n>, make the mode 700, and umask 77 in /etc/profile.  You
might want to give root umask 22 in ~/.bash_profile, to make what he
does visible, but not changeable.  Or perhaps you might not.  I don't
think it's any harm to make perl generally available.  I could bbe
wronng, of course.  I hope you are able to make some sense of this. :-)

Lawson
          >< Microsoft free environment

This mail client runs on Wine.  Your mileage may vary.
  

On Thu, 22 Apr 1999, Petr Klimovic wrote:

> I want give users of my system possibility of login by SSH.
> Users have home directories like: /home/usr1, /home/usr2, etc...
> usr1 must not see files from user2 and vice versa.
> How make this? And users want use Perl.
> Sorry for my english.
> 
> 
> 




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