--- Begin Message ---
- To: submit@bugs.debian.org
- Subject: O: lcap -- Removes 'capabilities' in the kernel, making the system more secure
- From: Mario Iseli <mario@debian.org>
- Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2007 14:19:36 +0100
- Message-id: <20071206131936.GA18497@helena.mario.local>
Package: wnpp
Severity: normal
The current maintainer of lcap, Christian Hudon <chrish@debian.org>,
is apparently not active anymore. Therefore, I orphan this package now.
Maintaining a package requires time and skills. Please only adopt this
package if you are *sure* you will have enough time and attention to
work on it.
If you want to be the new maintainer, please see
http://www.debian.org/devel/wnpp/index.html#howto-o for detailed
instructions how to adopt a package properly.
Some information about this package:
Package: lcap
Binary: lcap
Version: 0.0.6-3.1
Priority: optional
Section: admin
Maintainer: Christian Hudon <chrish@debian.org>
Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 4)
Architecture: any
Standards-Version: 3.6.2.1
Format: 1.0
Directory: pool/main/l/lcap
Files:
5a4a94dfb2610c96b30f556f14bb3e0f 552 lcap_0.0.6-3.1.dsc
bd1c4511c3297e464e1392320c1bdaa5 12766 lcap_0.0.6.orig.tar.gz
4fa17daebcc9e6aedd49fa7594668f66 3081 lcap_0.0.6-3.1.diff.gz
Package: lcap
Priority: optional
Section: admin
Installed-Size: 64
Maintainer: Christian Hudon <chrish@debian.org>
Architecture: i386
Version: 0.0.6-3.1
Depends: libc6 (>= 2.3.5-1)
Filename: pool/main/l/lcap/lcap_0.0.6-3.1_i386.deb
Size: 10356
MD5sum: 179649456a4b352b08fa7c2808c99b19
SHA1: cf492bdfcef166cbd8ab543629d72c25acd2b1f1
SHA256: d2475aefc18d0c1e67896cdca034de83df62f990c87505b574506a68fa639cf9
Description: Removes 'capabilities' in the kernel, making the system more secure
Capabilities are a form of kernel-based access control. This program
provides a user-friendlier way than setting proc/sys/kernel/cap-bound by hand
to remove capabilities from your Linux kernel.
.
For example, you can remove the capability to load kernel modules by executing
'lcap CAP_SYS_MODULE' as root. Then no one, not even root, can load modules
into your kernel. This can be useful for tightening the security of your
Linux machines.
Tag: admin::kernel, interface::commandline, role::program, scope::utility
--
.''`. Mario Iseli <mario@debian.org>
: :' : Debian GNU/Linux developer
`. `'`
`- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
--- End Message ---