SUPER v2.0 (Dec 93) Title : SUPER.EXE: switch SUPERVISOR equivalence on/off Keywords: SUPERVISOR EQUIVALENCE RIGHTS SECURITY UTILITY SUPER.EXE allows to switch SV equivalence on/off when needed. Do your daily work as normal user, and be SV only when needed. Includes DOS and Windows version. No security gap, since you have to be SV equivalence to initialize SUPER for you. Uploaded by author: Wolfgang Schreiber Program history / New Features v1.0 Aug 92: - Allow to run SUPER against another user's account. Sep 92: - Allow to run BATCH files and internal DOS commands - Output redirectable with DOS pipes v2.0 Dec 93: - Adapt to NetWare v3.12 (and a little to v4.0x) SUPER.EXE (DOS version) Syntax: SUPER [option] [User=] If no user name is added SUPER will affect the current user Available options: ? Display this help screen Display current security status - Remove supervisor equivalence, enable SUPER + Make user equivalent to supervisor # Remove supervisor equivalence and disable SUPER * Grant supervisor equivalence and disable SUPER Execute any command as supervisor (NW 386 only) Examples: SUPER - Remove SV equivalence and make it switchable. SUPER + Add SV equivalence and leave it switchable. SUPER + User=Admin Make user ADMIN SV equivalence; make switchable. SUPER SYSCON Execute SYSCON as supervisor. SUPER.EXE (Windows version) The Windows versions displays the SUPER status of up to 8 servers at a single glance. Advantage: * Nice icon * Up to 8 servers at one glance * Point and Click Limitations: * Not applicable to other users * No commands executable with temp SV rights. Background: SUPER allows a user who in Supervisor equivalent to do the daily work as normal user, while Supervisor equivalence is available when needed. This reduces the risk of accidental damage to files caused by carelessness, unattended workstations, or viruses. "SUPER -" will modify the security byte of your bindery property SECURITY_EQUALS to 0x22 (read/write object). This allows the user to change his/her own security equivalences. Then the Supervisor equivalence is removed. Since the user may change the equivalences now, he/she can later add Supervisor equivalence with "SUPER +" when needed. "SUPER " will first add Supervisor equivalence, then execute the command, and finally remove Supervisor equivalence. NetWare v3.12 considerations: This NetWare version does not allow to set the bindery property SECURITY_EQUALS to 0x22. On NetWare v3.12 SUPER will make the user manager of self and SUPERVISOR. Again, this is mot a security breach, since s/he was SUPERVISOR equivalence anyway. NetWare v4.x considerations: SUPER affects only objects in the current bindery context. The 'Switchable' flag cannot be set, however. SUPER will try to make you equivalent to SUPERVISOR and (if available in the bindery context) to ADMIN. Hints, Internals, Security and Warnings: SECURITY.EXE brings a warning: 'Has incorrect access security on the SECURITY_EQUALS property'. BINDFIX warns: 'Warning: Object property SECURITY_EQUALS has incorrect security flags.' Basically, for each user there is a standard property in the bindery associated with the user called SECURITY_EQUALS, which contains a list of users and groups to which that user has security equivalence. When a user is created, the rights to this property are Supervisor Write (meaning that only a supervisor equivalent can grant or change equivalences) and User Read (meaning that a user can read their own equivalences). The supervisor also has the ability to change the rights mask to this property. This is what SUPER.EXE does ... it changes the rights mask for a user (can only be done by somebody with supervisor equivalence) so that the user then can add their own security equivalences. "SUPER -" will modify the security byte of your bindery property SECURITY_EQUALS to 0x22 (read/write object). This allows the user to change his/her own security equivalences. SUPER allows a user who is Supervisor equivalent to do the daily work as normal user, while Supervisor equivalence is available when needed. This reduces the risk of accidental damage to files caused by carelessness, unattended workstations, or viruses. SOLUTION The warnings are expected and desired in combination with SUPER since a supervisor should be informed about the existence of other supervisors - even the 'hidden ones' with a non-standard security access flags. If the users that were highlighted in SECURITY or BINDFIX did NOT use SUPER there might be a severe security gap, because these users have received their rights from ther sources. You can use SUPER (DOS) to correct this, however. SUPER has parameters that allow resetting the bindery flag to it's original state - obviously this will prevent these users from receiving SV equivalence with SUPER. This program was written by Wolfgang Schreiber in Borland's Turbo Pascal.