Hi

Thanks for your answer.

I'm running Linux from the time when kernel had 0.99 version number. Our
LTSP installation is running non-stop for about 6 months with quite luck
but for our employee (different logins of course). Right now I want to
prepare it for students. WebMin is not good enough for us, we need
something more automated. Our students will not use email. We will
supply only such services for them as:
- web browser
- OpenOffice 
- library retrival software
Of course I was testing such situation when two or more terminals was
logged in with the same account and had only problems with Mozilla.
Maybe my tests wasn't god enough. I want to prepare minimal graphical
environment with easy of use and security in mind (no acces to compiler
and any possibly dangerous commands or shell - if possible). I will
consider separate logins if You suggest it so strongly :). This is only
application server without any critical applications running. I think
that one login account for many users would be interesting anyway. 

Regards
Daniel �a�

W li�cie z pi�, 25-10-2002, godz. 14:37, Brian Fahrlander pisze: 
> On 25 Oct 2002 14:14:13 +0200, Daniel �a� <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > Hi
> > 
> > I am network administrator of Main Library of Opole University. We are
> > going to use LTSP in our library. Definitely. We even bought 2 servers
> > for this and 12 dedicated terminals. Yes we want to use one account for
> > many users as we were doing for years with NOVELL for example. This
> > account is student with no password and very low rights. We have many
> > students and i think that creating accounts for them is not good idea.
> > Anybody know or can help how to avoid problems with such configuration
> > with KDE as the desktop?
> 
>     First, congratulations!  I hope you have all luck possible.
> 
>     But try to force yourself out of the single-login idea.  This isn't Novell; this 
>is a different breed of cat.  For one thing, this is a new install- not 
something you've run for the last 12 years and gotten all the security holes out of- 
you might leave open something that a more veteran admin would close on 

the first login.  It's just something that's gonna happen sooner or later.
> 
>     Running a single login also gives you almost no clue whatsoever as to 
>who-did-what, but it can tell you which terminal, and that's not much help.
> 
>     How would a student send/receive email, for example?  Are you going to ask for 
>yet another login for that?  Think it's gonna be as hardened as the primary login?  

Probably not.
> 
>     Students are students.  Sure, they may only have accounts for 12 weeks, but 
>those can be some really long weeks.  Use individual logins.  Use tools to help

 make this easier: /etc/skel and webmin.
> 
>     The /etc/skel setup lets you create a sample directory (and for that matter 
>running scripts) to create a template account.  Each time a new user is created, the

 files in that directory are used as defaults. I believe "man skel" is where you'll 
find these details.  Redhat also has a nice part on it, in the manual.
> 
>     You *might* even want to invoke quotas at some point (other than email boxes!) 
>so that one user doesn't download the world and expect the system to

 handle it.  Again, another good use of individual logins.  Setting a single quota for 
the one user means that one instance of the generic login can suck-up all the drive 
space and lock out ALL other users.
> 
>     Webmin allows you to admin the thing remotely- you don't even have to be on the 
>same continent, yet you get full control over the system from the comfort of your 
>desktop...any desktop...wherever you are.  And it's a nice, simple, graphical (web) 
>application that's convenient to use, not to mention educational.  See 
>http://www.WebMin.com.
> 
>     Unix (and therefore, Linux) was created this way for a reason; remember it was 
>concieved in a reseach-bunker at AT&T, but it was strengthened and grown in academic 
>environments like Berkeley, Stanford, and MIT.
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Brian Fahrl�nder          GNU/Linux Zealot, Conservative, and Technomad
> Evansville, IN                    My Voyage: http://www.CounterMoon.com
> ICQ  5119262
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Komm', M�dchen, alles ist jetzt vorbei. Schall' Dich an, auf eine lange,
> s��e Reise.
> 
> 
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