this post was submitted on 12 Apr 2025
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that's why root owns my .bash* stuff
I don't think that actually works; the attacker could just remove .bashrc and create a new file with the same name.
If the .bashrc is immutable, the attacker can't remove it.
That's how it works.
The home directory would need to be immutable, not bashrc.
?
It's .bashrc, not bashrc, and .bashrc is in the home directory.
If .bashrc is immutable, it can't be removed from home.
It's the directory that needs to be writable to delete files, not the file itself.
Although the immutable bit (if that's what you're talking about - I thought you meant unsetting the write bit) might change that, I'm not sure.
you're right. that's something i wanted to look into. guess setfacl would do the trick?
"chattr +i" is what I use to make things immutable
thanks