Nerius Landys writes:
>>> I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root",
>>> after a reboot it goes back to permission 755.
>>> 1. What's the reason for this? There must be a good reason and I
>>> would like to know it. Everything in FreeBSD just makes sense and is
>>> well d
In the last episode (Feb 01), Nerius Landys said:
> >> I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root", after
> >> a reboot it goes back to permission 755. 1. What's the reason for
> >> this? There must be a good reason and I would like to know it.
> >> Everything in FreeBSD ju
Nerius Landys wrote:
I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root",
after a reboot it goes back to permission 755.
1. What's the reason for this? There must be a good reason and I
would like to know it. Everything in FreeBSD just makes sense and is
well designed (honestly, no
>> I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root",
>> after a reboot it goes back to permission 755.
>> 1. What's the reason for this? There must be a good reason and I
>> would like to know it. Everything in FreeBSD just makes sense and is
>> well designed (honestly, no sarcasm
Nerius Landys writes:
> I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root",
> after a reboot it goes back to permission 755.
> 1. What's the reason for this? There must be a good reason and I
> would like to know it. Everything in FreeBSD just makes sense and is
> well designed (h
I'm running FreeBSD 7.1 i386, and even after I "chmod 700 /root",
after a reboot it goes back to permission 755.
1. What's the reason for this? There must be a good reason and I
would like to know it. Everything in FreeBSD just makes sense and is
well designed (honestly, no sarcasm here).
2. Woul