Hi ,
I am new to shell scripting . I have been go through many sites and ready the material for shell scripting. But I am not getting complete examples for practice.
Can any one suggest me any site that contains lots of ready examples for shell scripting ??
Regards (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I tried to understand what this awk and sed does but cudnt understand.
Can any body explain what awk and sed means with one simple example each and complex examples each with explanation.
Thanks in advance. (7 Replies)
Fairly new to RedHat. Can someone tell me what the version that I am working on.
cat /etc/rehdat-release shows
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.4 Beta (Tikanga)
I would think that this is RedHat 5 update 4. I don't know how what Beta and (Tikanga) means. Is this truly beta code? (1 Reply)
Hello
I have been asked to provide a security patch analysis of servers in my environment. For HPUX and Solaris there are tools wich can be loaded onto the servers to do this. However I do not know of one for Redhat . At this point I must mentioned that the Redhat servers are behind a firewall... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Please let me know what is meaning of the Tikanga in /etc/redhat-release file?
# cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.5 (Tikanga)
#
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kuddusrhce
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
rpmkeys
RPMKEYS(8) System Manager's Manual RPMKEYS(8)NAME
rpmkeys - RPM Keyring
SYNOPSIS
rpmkeys {--import|--checksig}
DESCRIPTION
The general forms of rpm digital signature commands are
rpmkeys --import PUBKEY ...
rpmkeys {-K|--checksig} PACKAGE_FILE ...
The --checksig option checks all the digests and signatures contained in PACKAGE_FILE to ensure the integrity and origin of the package.
Note that signatures are now verified whenever a package is read, and --checksig is useful to verify all of the digests and signatures
associated with a package.
Digital signatures cannot be verified without a public key. An ASCII armored public key can be added to the rpm database using --import.
An imported public key is carried in a header, and key ring management is performed exactly like package management. For example, all cur-
rently imported public keys can be displayed by:
rpm -qa gpg-pubkey*
Details about a specific public key, when imported, can be displayed by querying. Here's information about the Red Hat GPG/DSA key:
rpm -qi gpg-pubkey-db42a60e
Finally, public keys can be erased after importing just like packages. Here's how to remove the Red Hat GPG/DSA key
rpm -e gpg-pubkey-db42a60e
SEE ALSO popt(3),
rpm(8),
rpmdb(8),
rpmsign(8),
rpm2cpio(8),
rpmbuild(8),
rpmspec(8),
rpmkeys --help - as rpm supports customizing the options via popt aliases it's impossible to guarantee that what's described in the manual
matches what's available.
http://www.rpm.org/ <URL:http://www.rpm.org/>
AUTHORS
Marc Ewing <marc@redhat.com>
Jeff Johnson <jbj@redhat.com>
Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
Panu Matilainen <pmatilai@redhat.com>
Red Hat, Inc 29 October 2010 RPMKEYS(8)