HP-UX Restricted SAM


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users HP-UX Restricted SAM
Prev   Next
# 1  
Old 01-10-2007
HP-UX Restricted SAM

I am having trouble getting restricted SAM to work by allocating Privileges to a "group". I can make it work by allocaing to the userid's, but would preferre to use the "group" option.

Running B.11.11

Tried the following....

1) Created a user group in /etc/group first
2) Used the restricted SAM menu to create a user group.

Noticed that after option 2 there was no entry in the /etc/group file. But /etc/sam/custom/samgrp.gp was created?

maybe I add the user ids there....

Thoughs, questions, ideas or even the answer would be good.

Thanks
 
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. HP-UX

HPUX 11.23 - Sam and Smh.

I've just been on an HP Training Course for HPUXv11.31 and found out about the gui / web for SMH. I never did a course on HP11v23. On our two servers here in the UK that run 11.23 I'm pretty sure that when I typed in "sam" on the command line it went to a sort of smh. (There was a message saying... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: markp1965
2 Replies

2. HP-UX

how to view restricted sam access

Hello everybody, i need to check which users have resticted sam access..can anybody please let me know how to check this..? Thanks in advance.. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: laxmikant
4 Replies

3. HP-UX

cannot mount cdrom with SAM

Hi there, I am building an HP UX 11 server (first time) and I'm trying to mount the CDROM with SAM. What am I supposed to enter in the "mount directory" box? Also, I can't ftp to the server due to a logon failure. I used root id and password. I deleted the file in the /etc/ftpd directory but... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rbglo
8 Replies

4. HP-UX

SAM running slow

Any ideas on why SAM would take so long to load and initialize? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: csaunders
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

replicating restricted sam users

I'm in the process of setting up two new HP-UX 11.23 i64 servers. On my existing server (HP-UX B.11.0) we have several users defined to have restricted sam access. I'm having trouble finding those definitions and copying them over to the new servers. Is this possible - to just copy over the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: LisaS
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

warning message in SAM

On running ‘Disk Devices’ tools under ‘Disks and File Systems’ option of System Administration Manager (SAM) in our UNIX Server (HP 9000 running HPUX B.11.11 U) a warning message appeared. The message that appeared reads as follows “The Logical Volume Manager shows this device file,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mhbd
3 Replies

7. HP-UX

help on sam

hi, any idea how to get more info on the usage, unix equivalent of sam in hp-ux? thanks (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: yls177
7 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

SAM file

I am having a problem on an HP box, where I am being told that there are too many open files. I am also being told I need to change a SAM file. Could some help me understand what a SAM files is and what it is used for. Thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristian
2 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
Net::Server::Daemonize(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Net::Server::Daemonize(3)

NAME
Net::Server::Daemonize - Safe fork and daemonization utilities SYNOPSIS
use Net::Server::Daemonize qw(daemonize); daemonize( 'nobody', # User 'nobody', # Group '/var/state/mydaemon.pid' # Path to PID file - optional ); DESCRIPTION
This module is intended to let you simply and safely daemonize your server on systems supporting the POSIX module. This means that your Perl script runs in the background, and it's process ID is stored in a file so you can easily stop it later. EXPORTED FUNCTIONS
daemonize Main routine. Arguments are user (or userid), group (or group id or space delimited list of groups), and pid_file (path to file). This routine will check on the pid file, safely fork, create the pid file (storing the pid in the file), become another user and group, close STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR, separate from the process group (become session leader), and install $SIG{INT} to remove the pid file. In otherwords - daemonize. All errors result in a die. As of version 0.89 the pid_file is optional. safe_fork Block SIGINT during fork. No arguments. Returns pid of forked child. All errors result in a die. set_user Become another user and group. Arguments are user (or userid) and group (or group id or space delimited list of groups). set_uid Become another user. Argument is user (or userid). All errors die. set_gid Become another group. Arguments are groups (or group ids or space delimited list of groups or group ids). All errors die. get_uid Find the uid. Argument is user (userid returns userid). Returns userid. All errors die. get_gid Find the gids. Arguments are groups or space delimited list of groups. All errors die. is_root_user Determine if the process is running as root. Returns 1 or undef. check_pid_file Arguments are pid_file (full path to pid_file). Checks for existance of pid_file. If file exists, open it and determine if the process that created it is still running. This is done first by checking for a /proc file system and second using a "ps" command (BSD syntax). (If neither of these options exist it assumed that the process has ended) If the process is still running, it aborts. Otherwise, returns true. All errors die. create_pid_file. Arguments are pid_file (full path to pid_file). Calls check_pid_file. If it is successful (no pid_file exists), creates a pid file and stores $$ in the file. unlink_pid_file Does just that. SEE ALSO
Net::Server. Net::Daemon, The Perl Cookbook Recipe 17.15. AUTHORS
Jeremy Howard <j+daemonize@howard.fm> Program flow, concepts and initial work. Paul Seamons <paul@seamons.com> Code rework and componentization. Ongoing maintainer. LICENSE
This package may be distributed under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Perl Artistic License All rights reserved. perl v5.12.1 2007-02-03 Net::Server::Daemonize(3)