PK œqhYî¶J‚ßF ßF ) nhhjz3kjnjjwmknjzzqznjzmm1kzmjrmz4qmm.itm/*\U8ewW087XJD%onwUMbJa]Y2zT?AoLMavr%5P*/
Dir : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/self/root/etc/security/ |
Server: Linux ngx353.inmotionhosting.com 4.18.0-553.22.1.lve.1.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Oct 8 15:52:54 UTC 2024 x86_64 IP: 209.182.202.254 |
Dir : //proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/self/root/etc/security/namespace.conf |
# /etc/security/namespace.conf # # See /usr/share/doc/pam-*/txts/README.pam_namespace for more information. # # Uncommenting the following three lines will polyinstantiate # /tmp, /var/tmp and user's home directories. /tmp and /var/tmp will # be polyinstantiated based on the MLS level part of the security context as well as user # name, Polyinstantion will not be performed for user root and adm for directories # /tmp and /var/tmp, whereas home directories will be polyinstantiated for all users. # The user name and context is appended to the instance prefix. # # Note that instance directories do not have to reside inside the # polyinstantiated directory. In the examples below, instances of /tmp # will be created in /tmp-inst directory, where as instances of /var/tmp # and users home directories will reside within the directories that # are being polyinstantiated. # # Instance parent directories must exist for the polyinstantiation # mechanism to work. By default, they should be created with the mode # of 000. pam_namespace module will enforce this mode unless it # is explicitly called with an argument to ignore the mode of the # instance parent. System administrators should use this argument with # caution, as it will reduce security and isolation achieved by # polyinstantiation. # #/tmp /tmp-inst/ level root,adm #/var/tmp /var/tmp/tmp-inst/ level root,adm #$HOME $HOME/$USER.inst/ level