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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Changing Users Passwords Via Script? Post 19327 by PJolliffe on Tuesday 9th of April 2002 03:37:24 PM
Old 04-09-2002
Question Changing Users Passwords Via Script?

I am the administrator for a large network of HP/UX servers, about 100, this will be growing to over 200 in the next 18 months, part of my duties are to change the root passwords on these machines once month... which is a pain. I have written a script that will generate random passwords for me and print them out so that I do not have to think of and write down the passwords for safe keeping.

Yep, you guessed the next question... how can I pass the passwords to a script which will change them automatically on each machine?

I have done quite a bit of looking into this and found one answer is to use the GNU expect binary, but I am having difficulties getting the binary working on our servers, should I not get it working does any one have any ideas?

Please note that company policy does not allow me to use remote shells, psuedo root users and none expiring accounts.

Thanks in advance

- Paul
 

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lppasswd(1)							    Apple Inc.							       lppasswd(1)

NAME
lppasswd - add, change, or delete digest passwords. SYNOPSIS
lppasswd [ username ] lppasswd -a [ -g groupname ] username lppasswd -x username DESCRIPTION
lppasswd adds, changes, or deletes passwords in the CUPS digest password file, passwd.md5. When run by a normal user, lppasswd will prompt for the old and new passwords. When run by the super-user, lppasswd can add new accounts (-a username), change existing accounts (user- name), or delete accounts (-x username) in the digest password file. Digest usernames do not have to match local UNIX usernames. OPTIONS
lppasswd supports the following options: -g groupname Specifies a group other than the default system group. SECURITY ISSUES
By default, the lppasswd program is not installed to allow ordinary users to change their passwords. To enable this, the lppasswd command must be made setuid to root with the command: chmod u+s lppasswd While every attempt has been made to make lppasswd secure against exploits that could grant super-user privileges to unprivileged users, paranoid system administrators may wish to use Basic authentication with accounts managed by PAM instead. SEE ALSO
lp(1), lpr(1), http://localhost:631/help COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2007-2013 by Apple Inc. 22 February 2008 CUPS lppasswd(1)
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