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authorivan <ivan>2002-08-12 06:17:09 +0000
committerivan <ivan>2002-08-12 06:17:09 +0000
commit3ef62a0570055da710328937e7f65dbb2c027c62 (patch)
treed549158b172fd499b4f81a2981b62aabbde4f99b /rt/docs/Security
parent030438c9cb1c12ccb79130979ef0922097b4311a (diff)
import rt 2.0.14
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+RT2 runs setgid to some group (it defaults to 'rt').
+
+rt's configuration file, 'config.pm', is not world readable because it
+contains rt's database password. If a user gets access to this file, he
+can arbitrarily manipulate the RT database. This is bad. You don't want
+this to happen. config.pm is mode 550. No users should be members of
+the 'rt' group unless you want them to be able to obtain your rt password.
+
+If you're running the web interface, you'll need to make sure your webserver
+has access to config.pm. You could do this by letting your webserver's user
+be a member of the 'rt' group. This has the disadvantage of letting
+any mod_perl code on your web server have access to your RT password.
+
+Alternatively, you can run RT2 on its own apache instance bound to a high
+port on 127.0.0.1
+which runs as a non-priviledged user which is a member of the group 'rt'.
+
+Configure your webserver to proxy requests to RT's
+virtual directory to the apache instance you just set up.
+
+TODO: doc the apache configs needed to do this.
+
+The same technique can be used to run multiple RT2 instances on the same host.
+
+