On Tuesday, 24 November 2009 at 16:24, James Antill wrote: > On Mon, 2009-11-23 at 22:32 +0000, Colin Walters wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 10:02 PM, James Morris <jmorris@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > Possibly (it could simply be that an updated policy is weaker for some > > > reason) -- but it doesn't matter, there should be no way to change MAC > > > policy without MAC privilege. > > > > It'd be nice here if we had the ability to only grant the ability to > > install applications, not packages. > > "applications" is still way too broad, IMO. Even if you limit it to > what I assume you meant, "Desktop applications", it's not obvious that > is good enough. > > A useful end goal seems more likely to be something like "allow 'local' > users to update/install signed/trusted versions of: fonts, codecs, > themes, games, editors". For bonus points you could make it possible for > them to remove packages they have installed. I can imagine an additional drop-down list of "user roles" on the user account creation screen in firstboot GUI. What you described above would be a "home user". However, parents may not want to let their kids install all the games they can from Fedora software collection, so we'd also need some tool to manage allowed root-level actions associated with these roles. Looks like a kind of enhanced sudo to me. ;) Regards, R. -- Fedora http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/User:Rathann RPMFusion http://rpmfusion.org | MPlayer http://mplayerhq.hu "Faith manages." -- Delenn to Lennier in Babylon 5:"Confessions and Lamentations" -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list