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Restrict access to config file?
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General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Environment versions
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 9 SP1
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01573076
Message ID:
01573078
Views:
58
>>Hi,
>>
>>I think almost every application has a configuration file that stores settings like application folder name, database folder name, and some other configuration settings. Currently I have them in a DBF table. Even though only user with certain permission privilege can access and change the setting - from within the application - anybody who knows how to use VFP can open this table and make a change. I want to change this table from DBF to an XML. Still the application access to the settings in this XML will be controlled by Admin password. But naturally anybody who knows how to use a Notepad will be able to open and make the change in this file. Mainly I want to give users ability to make the change without my assistance (if the person with admin password left or forgot his/her password). Do you think that having "unprotected" configuration file - XML - is a bad or good approach?
>>TIA for any suggestions.
>
>You are probably more secure using a DBF file rather than XML. At least with DBF the casual user is somewhat limited in tools that will allow him to open and edit the settings.
>
>Make sure the your config file is readonly for anyone other than administrators (using windows permissions).

You are right. But I am a one-man shop and I am concerned that if I am on vacation or traveling or win a lottery (I wish) the customers will get stuck at some point in time. And I am trying to make it easier for them for possible case if/when they may need to make the changes.
"The creative process is nothing but a series of crises." Isaac Bashevis Singer
"My experience is that as soon as people are old enough to know better, they don't know anything at all." Oscar Wilde
"If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is that if it is comfort or money that it values more, it will lose that too." W.Somerset Maugham
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