04-15-2008
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
AIX - 4.3
background:
2 E30s connected to a disk tower, shared volume group stored on the disk tower. only one machine has the volume group locked at any one time . . .
situation:
i need to set auto activation to 'no' for the volume group on both machines, but I can not just transfer... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Xiix
1 Replies
2. AIX
Hi, I was told that 300GB of LUN has been allocated to my server by the SAN group. apart from rootvg i have 2 volume groups(oracle) for which i need to add space as follows:
oradbvg 250GB to be added
oralvg 50GB
what are the steps that i should follow after iam being told that LUN has been... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthikosu
4 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
How to set the name of the group and the owner while creation of the file?
-rwxrwxr-x 1 root sys 1202 Dec 5 2002 abc.awk
like here i need to set the name of root and sys to xxx xxx
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nehak
2 Replies
4. UNIX and Linux Applications
I am trying to write a kornshell script that will automatically create veritas disk groups. However, the only utility that I can find that will create the diskgroup is vxdiskadd, which prompts with interactive questions. I've tried to pass the answers through to vxdiskadd, but I receive the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jm6601
0 Replies
5. Solaris
hi,
how to assign group policy to user in solaris (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: meet2muneer
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I've this file and need to sort the data in each group
File would look like this ...
cat file1.txt
Reason : ABC
12345-0023
32123-5400
32442-5333
Reason : DEF
42523-3453
23345-3311
Reason : HIJ
454553-0001
I would like to sort each group on the last 4 fileds and print them... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: prash184u
11 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
/etc/group
tiadm::345:mk789,po312,jo343,ju454,ko453,yx879,iy345,hn453
bin::2:root,daemon
sys::3:root,bin,adm
adm::4:root,daemon
uucp::5:root
/etc/passwd
mk789:x:234:1::/export/home/dummy:/bin/sh
po312:x:234:1::/export/home/dummy:/bin/sh
ju454:x:234:1::/export/home/dummy:/bin/sh... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: chidori
6 Replies
8. AIX
hello, i am running an AIX6.1 machine and i am trying to restore a volume group that i backed up using mkvgdata command from another server. although i checked file .data and i make sure that PP size for this volume group is 128, when i run restvg command to restore it, it fails because it... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: omonoiatis9
2 Replies
9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
I have a pdb file with the following format:
ATOM 11 N PRO A 1 23.223 20.197 14.441 1.00 12.21 N
ATOM 12 CA PRO A 1 21.881 20.749 14.227 1.00 11.37 C
ATOM 13 C PRO A 1 21.929 21.556 12.903 1.00 10.73 C
ATOM 14... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Egy
4 Replies
GROUP(5) BSD File Formats Manual GROUP(5)
NAME
group -- format of the group permissions file
DESCRIPTION
The file </etc/group> consists of newline separated ASCII records, one per group, containing four colon ':' separated fields. These fields
are as follows:
group Name of the group.
passwd Group's encrypted password.
gid The group's decimal ID.
member Group members.
The group field is the group name used for granting file access to users who are members of the group. The gid field is the number associ-
ated with the group name. They should both be unique across the system (and often across a group of systems) since they control file access.
The passwd field is an optional encrypted password. This field is rarely used and an asterisk is normally placed in it rather than leaving
it blank. The member field contains the names of users granted the privileges of group. The member names are separated by commas without
spaces or newlines. A user is automatically in a group if that group was specified in their /etc/passwd entry and does not need to be added
to that group in the /etc/group file.
INTERACTION WITH DIRECTORY SERVICES
Processes generally find group records using one of the getgrent(3) family of functions. On Mac OS X, these functions interact with the
DirectoryService(8) daemon, which reads the /etc/group file as well as searching other directory information services to determine groups and
group membership.
FILES
/etc/group
SEE ALSO
passwd(1), setgroups(2), crypt(3), getgrent(3), initgroups(3), passwd(5), DirectoryService(8)
BUGS
The passwd(1) command does not change the group passwords.
HISTORY
A group file format appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
Mac OS X July 18, 1995 Mac OS X