mikshaw


Group: Members
Posts: 4856
Joined: July 2004 |
 |
Posted: Dec. 13 2005,15:52 |
 |
If those menu items still allow dsl to open a root shell, then "sudo commandname" is not asking for a password. You can try the "visudo" command as root, and remove "NOPASSWD" from dsl's section of /etc/sudoers. This will most likely cause some applications run from menu or icon to fail without a noticeable error, since (i think) stdout from some of them will go to the login shell. Although i haven't tested it, i think emelfm as superuser will not work unless it is started from a terminal. The root X shells should work, though, as well as installing mydsl apps from within emelfm. Midnight Commander is a visual shell itself, so anything run from that should provide you a password prompt. One of these days i'm going to test it out to see just what the affects are =o)
-------------- http://www.tldp.org/LDP/intro-linux/html/index.html
|