Even when not run as root and the process belongs to another user.

The /usr/ucb/ps command is SetUID root, as you suggest (well, it's a wrapper for a SetUID program). In traditional Unix, ps was always SetUID root, as it read process structures directly from kernel memory. It's only in more modern Unices with /proc that it doesn't need to be, but for some reason on Solaris it still is.

To be fair, /usr/ucb/ps is a SunOS 4 compatibility-mode program, and doesn't have to be installed. I couldn't find a way to look at a process's environment with the /bin/ps, but regardless it's not safe to assume nobody else can look at your environment.


In reply to Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: How best to hide command-line arguments from ps command? by sgifford
in thread How best to hide command-line arguments from ps command? by Plankton

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