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I know that but if I don't wanna change but still protect system, like any way to create an alias?@Fiftyseven
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If you're not sharing machines, you could add ip restrictions, or set up/change ssh keys.
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You could create a new user (with a different password), and revoke the sudo access for the current one.
The simplest way would still be to change your password, is that definitely not an option? -
Kimmax109877yIf he has physical access nothing can protect you. Boot init=/bin/bash and you're done
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In your bash profile you are putting something like:
alias rm="echo" ?
You could install a trash package an alias as that instead, but I don't think that's what you want though you can undo deletes then. -
Have your work always in some repository like git, svn etc and then follow 3+2+1 backup rule. This use case is typical disaster management which covers another scenarios say your hard disk fried one day.
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RAZERZ26547yAre you sure that you can't just
alias rm -rf='echo eat my shit'
And then . ~/.bashrc or source ~/.bashrc? -
I tried to change alias for rm, it didn't work, so I didn't test for rm -rf@RAZERZ
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Move the rm binary somewhere else, and put a shell script in it's place. Check if the arguement is /, otherwise point it to the real rm. If it's actually rm -rf /, print out some insults. I don't recommend testing it though.
Good luck.
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All linux users out there is there a way to protect from "rm -rf" scenario if your friend knows your linux password
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