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Date:      Tue, 26 Mar 1996 13:37:54 +1100 (EDT)
From:      Darren Reed <avalon@coombs.anu.edu.au>
To:        taob@io.org (Brian Tao)
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Restricting ping -s and -l
Message-ID:  <9603260237.AA03198@coombs.anu.edu.au>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.3.91.960325194516.13507Q-100000@cabal.io.org> from "Brian Tao" at Mar 25, 96 07:47:33 pm

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In some mail from Brian Tao, sie said:
> 
>     Are there any good reasons why a non-root user should need the -s
> and -l options in ping?  I've had problems in the past with users
> starting up a dozen "ping -s 8000"'s to a foreign site, saturating our
> own T1 to the net.  Who needs ping -f when you can control the packet
> size.  :(
> 
>     I can't really think of any legitimate reason for allowing -s and
> -l to unprivileged user, but before I modify the source, I figured I'd
> ask around first.  :)

Do you stop them sending arbitary 8000 byte UDP packets ?

Or is it the reurns which hurt ?




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