Hi. Ditch use of kppp and use wvdial - you can use a suid perl script to launch wvdial on demand, or you can start wvdial from /etc/rc.local (in which case it will dial when you boot) Whenever I use dialup - I just start wvdial at system boot - but if your phone line isn't dedicated, then an suid root script to call wvdial is needed (I suppose you could just suid root the wvdial binary too) On Fri, 2004-03-26 at 12:22 +0530, Parameshwara Bhat wrote: > Hello Friends, > > I recently posted a mail asking if anybody could guide me as to how to > share 'kppp' in fedora core1 with non-root users.It is a home PC shared by > members of the family.I would not share root password for fear of ignorant > actions affecting security/stability of system.Presently any non-root user > has to supply root password to connect(dial up ) to ISP. > > I have followed all actions suggested by Scott Burns and Stone Beat but > that has not solved the isuue.Basically what I did was to SUID on > /usr/sbin/kppp and edit /etc/pam.d/kppp to comment out a line.Nothing has > worked. > > Are there any more ideas on what could be or what should be done ? > > Coming from MSWindows environement,I would think security being so tight > as not allow non-root users of desktop an internet connection very crazy. > I chose Power Desktop Installation and a decent user-oriented installation > should have set this automatically . Is Linux not to be used on desktops > and layman users? > > Parameshwara Bhat > > On Mon, 26 Mar 2004 22:06:01 -0500 (EST), <fedora-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list