|
|
|
|
|
by mmh0000
35 days ago
|
|
Usually, no. NFS defaults to "root_squash," which silently changes UID=0 to the UID of the `nfsnobody` user. However, in the /etc/exports file, you can (but shouldn't) add the share option "no_root_squash" which disables that. So, root access is slightly protected. But all other users are wide open. |
|
For the typical case of world-readable files this was fine. Occasionally someone would feed it a file that was not group-readable but not world-readable and it would error (when it would have worked before).
I suggested printing the error message: "nobody can't read this file" but we solved it in a different way.