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Full Discussion: Help in find and replace.
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Help in find and replace. Post 302208590 by zaxxon on Tuesday 24th of June 2008 10:08:31 AM
Old 06-24-2008
Quote:
perl -i.bak -pe's/(password=").*?"/$1abcd"/' tomcat-users.xml
Strange that $1 is substituted while enclose by single quotation marks, which prevent that for shell variables.

If you tend to use sed instead of perl (I am not that familiar with perl) you can just write something like (just an example):
Code:
sed 's/(password=").*?"/'${1}${enpasswds}'"/' tomcat-users.xml  > newfile

 

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CRYPT(3)						     Library Functions Manual							  CRYPT(3)

NAME
crypt - one-way password encryption function SYNOPSIS
#define _MINIX_SOURCE 1 #include <unistd.h> char *crypt(const char *key, const char *salt) DESCRIPTION
The first use of crypt() is to encrypt a password. Its second use is to authenticate a shadow password. In both cases crypt() calls pwdauth(8) to do the real work. Crypt() encrypts a password if called with a user typed key, and a salt whose first two characters are in the set [./0-9A-Za-z]. The result is a character string in the [./0-9A-Za-z] alphabet of which the first two characters are equal to the salt, and the rest is the result of encrypting the key and the salt. If crypt() is called with a salt that has the form ##user then the key is encrypted and compared to the encrypted password of user in the shadow password file. If they are equal then crypt() returns the ##user argument, if not then some other string is returned. This trick assures that the normal way to authenticate a password still works: if (strcmp(pw->pw_passwd, crypt(key, pw->pw_passwd))) ... If key is a null string, and the shadow password is a null string or the salt is a null string then the result equals salt. (This is because the caller can't tell if a password field is empty in the shadow password file.) The key and salt are limited to 1024 bytes total including the null bytes. FILES
/usr/lib/pwdauth The password authentication program SEE ALSO
getpass(3), getpwent(3), passwd(5), pwdauth(8). NOTES
The result of an encryption is returned in a static array that is overwritten by each call. The return value should not be modified. AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) CRYPT(3)
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