Thanks Frank for the reply..Im afraid i cant use finger command yet...Im even not aware of its use...but in future i think it would ease my solutions..
Quote:
Originally Posted by ThobiasVakayil
ypcat passwd | grep <userid>
or
getent passwd <userid>
Ya Thobias this would work if it is given in one line command at $ prompt but then i must write a script...so there are whole lot of more steps that i have to incorporate.. but this is easy when i need instant answer..thanks a lot for help...much appreciated
Hi Group,
Can anyone assist me with this?
I am on AIX 5.2 ML06. I create the user and assign a passwd. But I do not want the user to change the passwd at all. I like him/her to use the passwd that I have set for him/her. Any ideas would be highly appreciated!!!
Thanks. (3 Replies)
Hi.
When i execute
which passwdit is showing /usr/bin/passwd, eventhough i set my path as
PATH=/etc:$PATH
i just checked the permission for the passwd under /usr/bin
-r-sr-sr-x
what exactly happening? and what is that s signifies
Thanks. (5 Replies)
Hello,
My issue is that I want to look for specific users that have their first and last initial followed by four numbers. For example:
ab1234
I've already got the user ID's out of the passwd file
more passwd | awk -F ":" '{print $1}' > userids
I just need to know how to just pick... (8 Replies)
Hi,
/etc/passwd file has write permission only for the root user.
Now when a normal user changes the its own password using passwd command, how this information has been written to the /etc/passwd file when the user is not having write permission to this file.
~santosh (2 Replies)
Hello All,
How to force user to change his login passwd on his first login in solaris 10 ?
while adding user do we need to set the password in theis case?? (7 Replies)
Besides doing some shell-script which loops through /etc/passwd, I was wondering if there was some command that would tell me, like an enhanced version of getent.
The Operating system is Solaris 10 (recent-ish revision) using Sun DS for LDAP. (5 Replies)
This is the source code:
#include <pwd.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <string.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
struct passwd *user;
char login="alex", password="qwertyuiop";
if ((user= getpwnam(login)) == NULL)
cout << "No such user\n";
else if... (24 Replies)
Hi,
I've a user alias file in the below format.. I need to change all the ID's that come after the = sign (with some multiple ID's which are separated by comma's) to their respective users that are contained in the passwords file.. Whats the best way to go about this.. Some sort of sed command in... (2 Replies)
I have logged into a box with some userid,but in this box der is no entry for this userid in /etc/passwd file.this box is used by multiple users but none of them have their enteries in passwd file but for each user there is a directory in /home
like for user1 /home/user1
for user2... (5 Replies)
Hi,
i have one shell script which transfers files from one server to other server through FTP, but i can see login id and password is not mentioned.
kindly help to understand the script.then how below script is working if login and password is not mentioned in script
#!/bin/sh... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ni3b007
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
finger.conf
FINGER.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual FINGER.CONF(5)NAME
finger.conf --finger(1) alias configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The optional finger.conf file is used to provide aliases that can be fingered by local and network users. This may be useful where a user's
login name is not the same as their preferred mail address, or for providing virtual login names than can be fingered.
Lines beginning with ``#'' are comments. Other lines must consist of an alias name and a target name separated by a colon. A target name
should be either a user, a forward reference to another alias or the path of a world readable file.
Where an alias points to a file, the contents of that file will be displayed when the alias is fingered.
FILES
/etc/finger.conf finger(1) alias definition data base
EXAMPLES
# /etc/finger.conf alias definition file
#
# Format alias:(user|alias)
#
# Individual aliases
#
markk:mkn
john.smith:dev329
john:dev329
sue:/etc/finger/sue.txt
#
# Network status message
#
status:/usr/local/etc/status.txt
#
# Administrative redirects
#
root:admin
postmaster:admin
abuse:admin
#
# For the time being, 'sod' is sysadmin.
#
admin:sod
SEE ALSO finger(1)HISTORY
Support for the finger.conf file was submitted by Mark Knight <markk@knigma.org> and first appeared in FreeBSD 4.2.
BSD August 16, 2000 BSD