[PlanetCCRMA] Running as ROOT
Bill Polhemus
bill at polhemus.cc
Sat Jan 6 10:38:01 PST 2007
This will no doubt seem silly to most, but I have always been inclined
to run as "root" when using Linux. It just seems like I always end up
wasting so much time with "workarounds" when I run as a non-root user
that I can't seem to justify doing it any other way.
I have been roundly impugned many times over when having this discussion
on Linux forums, but no one can ever really give me a good reason to run
as non-"root" other than "you're going to hit the wrong button and screw
up your system!" (Sort of analogous to "you'll shoot your eye out, kid.")
In the ten years since I began playing around with Linux - gradually
becoming a fairly knowledgeable Linux Sysadmin as I have been running a
Linux server now for more than six years - I have NEVER had any problems
logging on and using the system as the "root" user, either CLI (as I'm
prone to do, being an old-fashioned nerd) or with GNOME/KDE (I swing
both ways).
Of course, the PlanetCCRMA system is something of a different animal, a
true workstation rather than a server that's humming along quietly in
the background, so there may be more occasion to really screw things up.
I know that the PlanetCCRMA kernel has been built specifically to allow
low-latency and improved pre-emptiveness when running as a non-root
user, and this is consistent with the Conventional Wisdom as constitutes
good Linux user practice, but I'm wondering (again, STILL) what the
downside is to running as "root."
Comments very welcome, but PLEASE no flames. I respond far better to
real information than to imperiousness.
Thanks.
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