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Date:      Mon, 15 May 2000 09:05:24 -0700 (PDT)
From:      R Joseph Wright <rjoseph@mammalia.org>
To:        Bob Johnson <bob@eng.ufl.edu>
Cc:        reader@newsguy.com, questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Unix Virus.. Old but Nasty
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.21.0005150900200.10619-100000@manatee.mammalia.org>
In-Reply-To: <39200B67.807D0326@eng.ufl.edu>

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On Mon, 15 May 2000, Bob Johnson wrote:

> > Date: 14 May 2000 17:59:49 -0700
> > From: Harry Putnam <reader@newsguy.com>
> > Subject: Unix Virus.. Old but Nasty
> > 
> [...]> Joking aside, I've had about enough of the csh or sh shells. Enough
> > that it made me try to get rid of it.   Easily done for users but not
> > so, Root.
> >
> 
> That's sort of why sh is the default shell for root.  Changing it affects 
> a lot of other things.  Why mess with something that works? (read my next 
> comment before answering that)
>  
> [...]
> > 
> > Well I hope a few of you get a laugh out of this anecdote.  But I'd
> > really really like to have someone explain to me how to setup root
> > with a bash shell.  That nasty old csh really does suck.
> 
> 
> To use root with a bash shell, just log in as toor (or su to "toor", of 
> course).  That's exactly why the "toor" user exists.  
> 

The easy answer is to never log in as root.  I haven't for months.  Use
'su -m' from a normal user account to keep your user environment.  I'd
prefer to keep the root account terse and unconfigured, it's a good reason
not to go there.



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