From eaefa28b5211f5ffb2a08dcac404f3248c0e7108 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: wiz Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 20:02:56 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Remove some more kerberosIV remnants. --- etc/kerberosIV/README | 36 ------------------------------------ etc/kerberosIV/krb.conf | 2 -- etc/kerberosIV/krb.realms | 1 - etc/mtree/special | 3 +-- 4 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 41 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 etc/kerberosIV/README delete mode 100644 etc/kerberosIV/krb.conf delete mode 100644 etc/kerberosIV/krb.realms diff --git a/etc/kerberosIV/README b/etc/kerberosIV/README deleted file mode 100644 index 0ee215cf1391..000000000000 --- a/etc/kerberosIV/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,36 +0,0 @@ -# $NetBSD: README,v 1.4 1999/05/08 01:09:09 hubertf Exp $ -# @(#)README 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/9/93 - -Notes about the contents of the /etc/kerberosIV directory: - -The file master_key contains a copy of the master key under which the -entire Kerberos database is encrypted. Disclosing this key would be bad -news. The reason it is stored in the filesystem is because the following -programs need to inspect or modify the kerberos database, and so the key -must be available for them, (or else it would have to be typed in by -hand): - - kerberos (the server itself) - - registerd (for new user registration) - - kpasswdd (for changing passwords) - -The srvtab file contains the encryption keys for each service on the local -host. Any host offering network services would have a key here, although -many such files can be used. - -The principal.* files comprise the Kerberos database itself, and contain -keys for all principles, and should not be world-readable. - -The kerberos.conf file contains the configuration for this machine: - - which realm I'm in - - which servers I should talk to for this realm - -The kerberos.realms file contains the name of Kerberos servers for -various (sub)domains. - -Kerberos log information it placed in /var/log/kerberos.log -(see rc.local to change it) - -The register_keys directory contains a set of files (all of which begin -with "."), each of which contains a des key used for registering new users -with the system. It is used only by the "registerd" program, and only on -a Kerberos server host. diff --git a/etc/kerberosIV/krb.conf b/etc/kerberosIV/krb.conf deleted file mode 100644 index 09db2baac790..000000000000 --- a/etc/kerberosIV/krb.conf +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2 +0,0 @@ -me.MY.DOMAIN -me.MY.DOMAIN my.TRUSTED.FRIEND diff --git a/etc/kerberosIV/krb.realms b/etc/kerberosIV/krb.realms deleted file mode 100644 index 5195ca3f10bc..000000000000 --- a/etc/kerberosIV/krb.realms +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -.MY.DOMAIN me.MY.DOMAIN diff --git a/etc/mtree/special b/etc/mtree/special index 55043e0de6e0..aa38f197e878 100644 --- a/etc/mtree/special +++ b/etc/mtree/special @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# $NetBSD: special,v 1.91 2006/02/11 09:33:16 agc Exp $ +# $NetBSD: special,v 1.92 2006/03/23 20:02:57 wiz Exp $ # @(#)special 8.2 (Berkeley) 1/23/94 # # Hand-crafted mtree specification for the dangerous files. @@ -77,7 +77,6 @@ ./etc/iscsi type=dir mode=0755 ./etc/iscsi/auths type=file mode=0600 ./etc/iscsi/targets type=file mode=0644 -./etc/kerberosIV type=dir mode=0755 ignore optional ./etc/ld.so.conf type=file mode=0644 optional ./etc/lkm.conf type=file mode=0644 optional ./etc/localtime type=link mode=0755