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Full Discussion: Bsh shell on SCO
Operating Systems SCO Bsh shell on SCO Post 302179190 by martocapo on Thursday 27th of March 2008 07:43:14 AM
Old 03-27-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by jgt
See if the bsh shell is listed in /etc/perms, if so just copy the files from the old system to the new system using the same ownership and permissions.
If it is not in /etc/perms, then copy the file that is first executed to invoke the shell, and then try to run it, and continue copying files until you get no more error messages.

SCO is binary compatible all the way back to Xenix 2.1
Thks for your reply.
I have do it so and does't work, i think is the version of the O.S. it's telling me "memory fault (coredump)" when i run a copy of the binary "bsh" copied from the old unix system, the version of the old unix is a 5.0.4 SCO and i have to install a 5.0.7 SCO on my HP blade WMWare ESX because of the limitation of the 5.0.4. sco can't support new CPUs.
 

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pam_console_appy(8)					   System Administrator's Manual				       pam_console_appy(8)

NAME
pam_console_apply - set or revoke permissions for users at the system console SYNOPSIS
pam_console_apply [-r] DESCRIPTION
pam_console_apply sets or resets permissions on devices in the same manner as pam_console. If /var/run/console.lock exists, pam_console_apply will grant permissions to the user listed therein. If the lock file does not exist, permissions are reset to those listed in /etc/security/console.perms, which should be configured to set permissions on devices so that root owns them. ARGUMENTS
-r Signals pam_console_apply to reset permissions. The default is to set permissions so that the user listed in /var/run/console.lock has access to the devices, and to reset permissions if no such file exists. FILES
/var/run/console.lock /etc/security/console.perms SEE ALSO
pam_console(8) console.perms(5) BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please report them via the "Bug Track" link at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/ AUTHOR
Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com>, using code shamelessly stolen from parts of pam_console. Red Hat 2001/3/6 pam_console_appy(8)
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