Create the /etc/cron.d/cron.allow file.
Enter the root user name into the cron.allow file.
If you do not add root to the file, superuser access to crontab commands will be denied.
Enter the user names, one per line, that will be allowed to use the crontab command.
root username1 username2 username3 . . . |
The following example shows a cron.deny file that prevents user names visitor, jones, and temp from accessing the crontab command.
$ cat /etc/cron.d/cron.denydaemon bin smtp nuucp listen nobody noaccess jones temp visitor |
The following example shows a cron.allow file. The users smith, jones, lp, and root are the only ones who can access the crontab command.
$ cat /etc/cron.d/cron.allow root jones lp smith |