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Top Forums Programming When I am writing my own interpreter... Post 302141146 by Legend986 on Thursday 18th of October 2007 12:21:21 AM
Old 10-18-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by blowtorch
I'm not saying that you shouldn't get any help at all, in fact, you are actually making an effort to do this yourself, while most people just ask for code.

Just that it is against forum rules to post homework questions.
Well I understand... But thats my point, I'm not in search of a solution or the code... I'm not a Computer Science student and I've made this point clear almost a few weeks back in the same forum and need some help in learning all this because I'm lost at a few places... Well, even then what you say is right... Even though this is not my homework, I now understood your reason - these "homeworks" are given in many universities... lol

Quote:
Originally Posted by porter
I'm looking forward to using "lsh" when Legend986 is done, it looks good so far.
I don't quite remember using the term lsh anywhere... Can you please tell me what it is? Or by any chance did you give a name to my shell? Smilie
 

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LSH-KRB-CHECKPW(8)						    lsh manuals 						LSH-KRB-CHECKPW(8)

NAME
lsh-krb-checkpw - program to check a Kerberos username/password combination SYNOPSIS
lsh-krb-checkpw username-to-check DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the lsh-krb-checkpw command. This manual page was written for the Debian distribution because the orig- inal program does not have a manual page. Instead, it has documentation in the GNU Info format; see below. lsh-krb-checkpw is a program that checks if a username and password combination is valid for login by doing a kerberos lookup. It is designed to be used as a password helper program for lshd (8), (eg. --password-helper=/usr/sbin/lsh-krb-checkpw. lsh-krb-checkpw takes one required argument, which is the username, and reads the password from stdin, then returns 0 if the password is valid, or 1 otherwise. Note that the password must be supplied exactly, ie. there must be no newline after the password, so if invoking from a shell, just type "<your-password><CTRL-D>". SEE ALSO
lsh(1), lshd(8). The programs are documented fully by Lsh, available via the Info system. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Timshel Knoll <timshel@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). lsh-krb-checkpw Nov 15 2005 LSH-KRB-CHECKPW(8)
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