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Date:      Wed, 04 Mar 2015 18:12:32 +0000
From:      Arthur Chance <freebsd@qeng-ho.org>
To:        zep <zgreenfelder@gmail.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Check root password changes done via single user mode
Message-ID:  <54F74B10.7090901@qeng-ho.org>
In-Reply-To: <54F7351A.4010900@gmail.com>
References:  <54F56A83.3000404@gmail.com> <CA%2ByaQw_3JJ2tJm32or-UmSpfMFo_jCn_JD1xFw=1E9i9K2reDg@mail.gmail.com> <54F57CD9.2000707@gmail.com> <54F5AF25.7000303@qeng-ho.org> <54F71117.7050606@gmail.com> <54F71E2F.1000705@qeng-ho.org> <54F73455.5080509@gmail.com> <54F7351A.4010900@gmail.com>

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On 04/03/2015 16:38, zep wrote:
>
>
> On 03/04/2015 11:35 AM, Ricardo Martín wrote:
>> At this point you might want to review the original post again.
>> It's a simple and specific request for comments about whether if its
>> feasible to somehow flag a root's password reset in SUM.
>> No more, no less.
>>

>
> perhaps you should review the responses.    the short answer is 'sort
> of, but not really the way you seem want to; also it's a bit of a fool's
> errand and whoever pointed you down this path doesn't like you very much'.
>

I'd agree with that. :-)

If someone has simply changed the root password and done nothing else 
it's trivial to detect that it's changed - the daily periodic password 
backup will do that and it's enabled by default. You might also be able 
to decide whether it happened during multi- or single- user mode based 
on the modification time of the password file.

If the person who changed it doesn't want you to find out it's changed, 
you are going to have a learning experience.

-- 
Those who do not learn from computing history are doomed to
GOTO 1



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