03-13-2008
SE Linux. Made by the Govt, for the Govt
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Is it possible to dynamically allocate a new user group to an existing session on Solaris 5.8
I'd like to be able to allow certain users to access a set of scripts for the life of session (preferably there own session not a specific login created for the purpose) by dynamically giving the session... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hammer
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
As the title descibes I wish to create an excel spreadsheet which lists all directories in full allong with the users, groups and rights.
I have not used Perl scripts before so I'm a little lost on this on.
Cheers (0 Replies)
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
How do I add a user to a group? And how do I determine the list of groups to add a user?
Solaris 10 newbie (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: peteythapitbull
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4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi I have a user zak and
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5. Solaris
Hi.........
I'm trying to set a group of users to login to do a required super-user tasks without knowing the super-user passwd.
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6. AIX
1 - what is the maximum no: of groups a user can be a part of ?
2 - what is maximum no: of users a group can contain ? (6 Replies)
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi
I need to permit one group to have r-x permissions on all files in a directory and another group to have just read access, im confused how to do this as if i set the 'Other' permission class as read access then all users will have access to them.
So basically i have a directory which the... (2 Replies)
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Is there a command to nest a group in another group in AIX. (2 Replies)
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9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
OK guys and gals.
I've been working on a debian system for a little bit, in hopes of making it into a system we can use for manifests and other things.
I am very new to unix, particularly debian.
I would like to make 2 or 3 different groups.
1 would be for me, and other people... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: samee71
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10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
All,
I am building a glusterfs environment for file storage and need to set up ACL's as there are multiple users that need different types of access. I have ingested ~20TB of needed data to /toplevel dir and:
chown -R root:root /toplevel ; chmod -R 775 /toplevel
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Discussion started by: hburnswell
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cgcreate
CGCREATE(1) libcgroup Manual CGCREATE(1)
NAME
cgcreate - create new cgroup(s)
SYNOPSIS
cgcreate [-h] [-s] [-t <tuid>:<tgid>] [-a <agid>:<auid>] [-f mode] [-d mode] -g <controllers>:<path> [-g ...]
DESCRIPTION
The command creates new cgroup(s) defined by the options -g.
-a <agid>:<auid>
defines the name of the user and the group which own the rest of the defined control group's files. These users are allowed to set
subsystem parameters and create subgroups. The default value is the same as has the parent cgroup.
-d, --dperm=mode
sets the permissions of a control groups directory. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -d 775.
-f, --fperm=mode
sets the permissions of the control groups parameters. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -f 775. The
value is not used as given because the current owner's permissions are used as an umask (so 777 will set group and others permis-
sions to the owners permissions).
-g <controllers>:<path>
defines control groups to be added. controllers is a list of controllers and path is the relative path to control groups in the
given controllers list. This option can be specified multiple times.
-h, --help
display this help and exit
-s, --tperm=mode
sets the permissions of the control group tasks file. The permissions needs to be specified as octal numbers e.g. -f 775. The
value is not used as given because the current owner's permissions are used as an umask (so 777 will set group and others permis-
sions to the owners permissions).
-t <tuid>:<tgid>
defines the name of the user and the group, which owns tasks file of the defined control group. I.e. this user and members of this
group have write access to the file. The default value is the same as has the parent cgroup.
FILES
SEE ALSO
cgrules.conf (5) cgexec (1) cgclassify (1)
Linux 2009-03-15 CGCREATE(1)