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Full Discussion: Admintool
Operating Systems Solaris Admintool Post 302222649 by Stin on Thursday 7th of August 2008 09:13:45 AM
Old 08-07-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by dsbeerf
If you haven't specifically changed your DISPLAY variable (manually, or in a '.profile'), it is most likely set to: ':0'

Also, if you have done a 'su' to root in your "terminal", most likely you will NOT have permission to access the X server.

So, first do: "DISPLAY=:0;export DISPLAY" [or "setenv DISPLAY ':0'" for csh/tcsh.]
Then try the admintool again. If it does not work, then:

If you DID 'su' to root, open another command window (xterm, dtterm, etc.) as YOU (not root), and do: "xhost +"
This will allow you, as root, to 'connect' to the X server with your command 'admintool'.

B.T.W.: admintool will be eliminated in Solaris 10.
==
My set up is this:

I have a Sunfire V100 server running Solaris 8. ip address 192.168.1.250.
I cave a windows XP laptop and xwin32 installed. ip address 192.168.1.64

I can used xwin32 to bring up a CDE. Then a terminal window. From there I can su to root. (su -) But admin tool would not work. Error: Cannot open Display.

I used the above steps to resolve this issue, but first I needed to know the display.
- Log into CDE with regular user
- Bring up terminal window (whilst logged in as regular user)
- At the prompt type: echo $DISPLAY
-> It returned a line: 192.168.1.64:1.0
- Switch user to root: su -
-> enter root password
- At the # prompt type: DISPLAY=192.168.1.64:1.0 ; export DISPLAY

admintool &
and voila!
 

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ACCESS.CONF(5)							 Linux-PAM Manual						    ACCESS.CONF(5)

NAME
access.conf - the login access control table file DESCRIPTION
The /etc/security/access.conf file specifies (user/group, host), (user/group, network/netmask) or (user/group, tty) combinations for which a login will be either accepted or refused. When someone logs in, the file access.conf is scanned for the first entry that matches the (user/group, host) or (user/group, network/netmask) combination, or, in case of non-networked logins, the first entry that matches the (user/group, tty) combination. The permissions field of that table entry determines whether the login will be accepted or refused. Each line of the login access control table has three fields separated by a ":" character (colon): permission:users/groups:origins The first field, the permission field, can be either a "+" character (plus) for access granted or a "-" character (minus) for access denied. The second field, the users/group field, should be a list of one or more login names, group names, or ALL (which always matches). To differentiate user entries from group entries, group entries should be written with brackets, e.g. (group). The third field, the origins field, should be a list of one or more tty names (for non-networked logins), host names, domain names (begin with "."), host addresses, internet network numbers (end with "."), internet network addresses with network mask (where network mask can be a decimal number or an internet address also), ALL (which always matches) or LOCAL. LOCAL keyword matches if and only if the PAM_RHOST is not set and <origin> field is thus set from PAM_TTY or PAM_SERVICE". If supported by the system you can use @netgroupname in host or user patterns. The @@netgroupname syntax is supported in the user pattern only and it makes the local system hostname to be passed to the netgroup match call in addition to the user name. This might not work correctly on some libc implementations causing the match to always fail. The EXCEPT operator makes it possible to write very compact rules. If the nodefgroup is not set, the group file is searched when a name does not match that of the logged-in user. Only groups are matched in which users are explicitly listed. However the PAM module does not look at the primary group id of a user. The "#" character at start of line (no space at front) can be used to mark this line as a comment line. EXAMPLES
These are some example lines which might be specified in /etc/security/access.conf. User root should be allowed to get access via cron, X11 terminal :0, tty1, ..., tty5, tty6. + : root : crond :0 tty1 tty2 tty3 tty4 tty5 tty6 User root should be allowed to get access from hosts which own the IPv4 addresses. This does not mean that the connection have to be a IPv4 one, a IPv6 connection from a host with one of this IPv4 addresses does work, too. + : root : 192.168.200.1 192.168.200.4 192.168.200.9 + : root : 127.0.0.1 User root should get access from network 192.168.201. where the term will be evaluated by string matching. But it might be better to use network/netmask instead. The same meaning of 192.168.201. is 192.168.201.0/24 or 192.168.201.0/255.255.255.0. + : root : 192.168.201. User root should be able to have access from hosts foo1.bar.org and foo2.bar.org (uses string matching also). + : root : foo1.bar.org foo2.bar.org User root should be able to have access from domain foo.bar.org (uses string matching also). + : root : .foo.bar.org User root should be denied to get access from all other sources. - : root : ALL User foo and members of netgroup admins should be allowed to get access from all sources. This will only work if netgroup service is available. + : @admins foo : ALL User john and foo should get access from IPv6 host address. + : john foo : 2001:db8:0:101::1 User john should get access from IPv6 net/mask. + : john : 2001:db8:0:101::/64 Disallow console logins to all but the shutdown, sync and all other accounts, which are a member of the wheel group. -:ALL EXCEPT (wheel) shutdown sync:LOCAL All other users should be denied to get access from all sources. - : ALL : ALL SEE ALSO
pam_access(8), pam.d(5), pam(7) AUTHORS
Original login.access(5) manual was provided by Guido van Rooij which was renamed to access.conf(5) to reflect relation to default config file. Network address / netmask description and example text was introduced by Mike Becher <mike.becher@lrz-muenchen.de>. Linux-PAM Manual 06/04/2011 ACCESS.CONF(5)
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