Hi! I'm very new to unix, so please keep that in mind with the level of language used if you choose to help :D Thanks!
When attempting to use sudo on and AIX machine with oslevel 5.1.0.0, I get the following error:
exec(): 0509-036 Cannot load program sudo because of the following errors:... (1 Reply)
we are looking at changing the way we get root on our network.
in our current system if an admin needs root access he just gets the root password and uses an su.
some of our staff have decided that a sudo to "/bin/sh" will be easer.
some of our staff think a sudo to "su -" will be better.
I... (0 Replies)
Sudo In AIX, how to find out what commands have been run after a user sudo to another user? for example, user sam run 'sudo -u robert ksh' then run some commands, how can I (as root) find what commands have been run?
sudo.log only contains sudo event, no activity logging. (3 Replies)
I'm using virtual file-system in /proc/ to print out 1) current working directory (CWD): ls /proc/$PID/cwd
2) command line*: cat /proc/$PID/cmdline
and 3) # of open files: ls /proc/$PID/fdinfo | wc -l
All above snippets are part of printfs.
Now, some processes complain about SUDO... (1 Reply)
I am writing a BASH script to update a webserver and then restart Apache. It looks basically like this:
#!/bin/bash
rsync /path/on/local/machine/ foo.com:path/on/remote/machine/
ssh foo.com sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reloadrsync and ssh don't prompt for a password, because I have DSA encryption... (9 Replies)
Hi All,
I running a unix command using sudo option inside shell script. Its working well. But in crontab the same command is not working and its throwing
"sudo: sorry, you must have a tty to run sudo". I do not have root permission to add or change settings for my userid. I can not even ask... (9 Replies)
Hi, Have a need to run the below command as a "karuser" from a java class which will is running as "root" user. When we are trying to run the below command from java code getting the below error.
Command:
sudo -u karuser -s /bin/bash /bank/karunix/bin/build_cycles.sh
Error:
sudo: sorry,... (8 Replies)
I want to give root access to a user called denielr on server - tsprd01, but do not want to share root password. I have sudoers configured already.
He should have all access equal to root. I made this entry in /etc/sudoers, but it is not working
denielr tsprd01 =(root) NOPASSWD: ALL
I tried to... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a wrapper script that I am trying to build/execute, which has two different sub scripts, which run as two separate users.
Purpose is to mask the contents of the script and allow the user to execute utlrp.sql, which requires sys level privs to execute.
User FORD logs in, and... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: willyb
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
lib::abs
lib::abs(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation lib::abs(3pm)NAME
lib::abs - "lib" that makes relative path absolute to caller.
SYNOPSIS
Simple use like "use lib ...":
use lib::abs qw(./mylibs1 ../mylibs2);
use lib::abs 'mylibs';
Extended syntax (glob)
use lib::abs 'modules/*/lib';
There are also may be used helper function from lib::abs (see example/ex4):
use lib::abs;
# ...
my $path = lib::abs::path('../path/relative/to/me'); # returns absolute path
DESCRIPTION
The main reason of this library is transformate relative paths to absolute at the "BEGIN" stage, and push transformed to @INC. Relative
path basis is not the current working directory, but the location of file, where the statement is (caller file). When using common "lib",
relative paths stays relative to curernt working directory,
# For ex:
# script: /opt/scripts/my.pl
use lib::abs '../lib';
# We run `/opt/scripts/my.pl` having cwd /home/mons
# The @INC will contain '/opt/lib';
# We run `./my.pl` having cwd /opt
# The @INC will contain '/opt/lib';
# We run `../my.pl` having cwd /opt/lib
# The @INC will contain '/opt/lib';
Also this module is useful when writing tests, when you want to load strictly the module from ../lib, respecting the test file.
# t/00-test.t
use lib::abs '../lib';
Also this is useful, when you running under "mod_perl", use something like "Apache::StatINC", and your application may change working
directory. So in case of chdir "StatINC" fails to reload module if the @INC contain relative paths.
RATIONALE
Q: We already have "FindBin" and "lib", why we need this module?
A: There are several reasons:
1) "FindBin" could find path incorrectly under "mod_perl"
2) "FindBin" works relatively to executed binary instead of relatively to caller
3) Perl is linguistic language, and `use lib::abs "..."' semantically more clear and looks more beautiful than `use FindBin; use lib
"$FindBin::Bin/../lib";'
4) "FindBin" b<will> work incorrectly, if will be called not from executed binary (see <http://github.com/Mons/lib-abs-vs-findbin>
comparison for details)
BUGS
None known
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2007-2010 Mons Anderson.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
Mons Anderson, "<mons@cpan.org>"
CONTRIBUTORS
Oleg Kostyuk, "<cub@cpan.org>"
perl v5.10.1 2010-11-16 lib::abs(3pm)