I am trying to implement passwordless authentication via ssh2. I have used the well documented technique of generating a key pair with a blank passphrase on my client machine, and installing the public key on the destination server (AIX 5.3) in the user's .ssh2 directory. I have used this technique... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I would like to issue a couple of commands as root on a remote machine without having to enter the root password. I used "ssh-keygen -t rsa" to generate the encryption keys, copied the public key to the remote machine, etc.
I also tried playing around with the sshd_config file and... (3 Replies)
Hello,
Do you guys know set of commands that can incorporate to sftp/scp/ssh to add password in a script to automate file transfer.
Our client is not using ssh keys authentication so we are force to create a script to pass the password into the script to transfer files via sftp/scp/ssh.
We... (4 Replies)
I have experience in setting up passwordless authentication by sharing ssh public keys manually.Currently I am in the process to the write a script to perform the same functionality from one source(host) to multiple destinations.
I have one source host (Host A) whose public keys has to be shared... (9 Replies)
Hello,
Need a suggestion to setup private key passwordless authentication. I am not sure this can done or not :wall:
here is the sincerio
I have two servers, sever1 with a user "user1" and servera with usera
here dataflow: usera from servera, will pull/push files to server1 on user1... (2 Replies)
Unable to set ssh passwordless authentication
I am unable to ssh with passwordless authentication from Windows client onto UBuntu server. The ssh version on UBuntu is OpenSSH_5.8p1 Debian-7ubuntu1, OpenSSL 1.0.0e , while SSH on Windows Client is OpenSSH_5.1p1, OpenSSL 0.9.8k. I turned on ssh... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am in the process FTPing some of my report files from my production server to another FTP server through batch/Shell Script.
This is working fine with the password less authentication.
Once i place all my report files in the ftp server the end users need to download ... (3 Replies)
Hey team
I have to enable password less authentication betweeen A to B server and A to C server and A to D server.
For this I generated a ssh key on server A using ssh-keygen command and copied the key using ssh-copy-id command to B, C and D server. Everything is working fine as of now but... (5 Replies)
Hi
I am trying to do SFTP in shell script in such a way that it should not ask for password.
for this is use below script but it prompt for password. here I am not abled to understand where I am making mistake.
#!/bin/bash
# SFTP TO remote server
USER="ITO"
PASSWORD="abcd@1234"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: scriptor
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
stat::lsmode
lsMode(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation lsMode(3pm)NAME
Stat::lsMode - format file modes like the "ls -l" command does
SYNOPSIS
use Stat::lsMode;
$mode = (stat $file)[2];
$permissions = format_mode($mode);
# $permissions is now something like `drwxr-xr-x'
$permissions = file_mode($file); # Same as above
$permissions = format_perms(0644); # Produces just 'rw-r--r--'
$permissions = format_perms(644); # This generates a warning message:
# mode 644 is very surprising. Perhaps you meant 0644...
Stat::lsMode->novice(0); # Disable warning messages
DESCRIPTION
"Stat::lsMode" generates mode and permission strings that look like the ones generated by the Unix "ls -l" command. For example, a regular
file that is readable by everyone and writable only by its owner has the mode string "-rw-r--r--". "Stat::lsMode" will either examine the
file and produce the right mode string for you, or you can pass it the mode that you get back from Perl's "stat" call.
"format_mode"
Given a mode number (such as the third element of the list returned by "stat"), return the appopriate ten-character mode string as it would
have been generated by "ls -l". For example, consider a directory that is readable and searchable by everyone, and also writable by its
owner. Such a directory will have mode 040755. When passed this value, "format_mode" will return the string "drwxr-xr-x".
If "format_mode" is passed a permission number like 0755, it will return a nine-character string insted, with no leading character to say
what the file type is. For example, "format_mode(0755)" will return just "rwxr-xr-x", without the leading "d".
"file_mode"
Given a filename, do "lstat" on the file to determine the mode, and return the mode, formatted as above.
Novice Operation Mode
A common mistake when dealing with permission modes is to use 644 where you meant to use 0644. Every permission has a numeric
representation, but the representation only makes sense when you write the number in octal. The decimal number 644 corresponds to a
permission setting, but not the one you think. If you write it in octal you get 01204, which corresponds to the unlikely permissions
"-w----r-T", not to "rw-r--r--".
The appearance of the bizarre permission "-w----r-T" in a program is almost a sure sign that someone used 644 when they meant to use 0644.
By default, this module will detect the use of such unlikely permissions and issue a warning if you try to format them. To disable these
warnings, use
Stat::lsMode->novice(0); # disable novice mode
Stat::lsMode->novice(1); # enable novice mode again
The surprising permissions that are diagnosed by this mode are:
111 => --xr-xrwx
400 => rw--w----
440 => rw-rwx---
444 => rw-rwxr--
551 => ---r--rwt
600 => --x-wx--T
640 => -w------T
644 => -w----r-T
660 => -w--w-r-T
664 => -w--wx--T
666 => -w--wx-wT
700 => -w-rwxr-T
711 => -wx---rwt
750 => -wxr-xrwT
751 => -wxr-xrwt
751 => -wxr-xrwt
755 => -wxrw--wt
770 => r------wT
771 => r------wt
775 => r-----rwt
777 => r----x--t
Of these, only 400 is remotely plausible.
BUGS
As far as I know, the precise definition of the mode bits is portable between varieties of Unix. The module should, however, examine
"stat.h" or use some other method to find out if there are any local variations, because Unix being Unix, someone somewhere probably does
it differently.
Maybe it "file_mode" should have an option that says that if the file is a symlink, to format the mode of the pointed to file instead of
the mode of the link itself, the way "ls -Ll" does.
SEE ALSO
o "http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/lsMode/".
o ls
o chmod
o stat
AUTHOR
Mark-Jason Dominus ("mjd-perl-lsmode@plover.com").
perl v5.10.1 1998-04-20 lsMode(3pm)