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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat su - root , without pressing password Post 302342430 by sandholm on Sunday 9th of August 2009 05:29:51 PM
Old 08-09-2009
I threw together a quickie little example web-page for "Giving Privileges to Users", that demonstrates the use of sudo, as well as the use of expect, for controlling interactive programs in batch. Here's the link:

Giving Privileges to Users ?(Tom's Linux Tip's)?

Hope that helps you!
- Tom
 

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lpasswd(8)						      System Manager's Manual							lpasswd(8)

NAME
lpasswd - Change group or user password SYNOPSIS
lpasswd [OPTION]... [name] DESCRIPTION
Changes password of user or group name. If the name argument is not provided, username of the invoking user is used; the name argument is ignored if lpasswd is run set-uid to a different user. Entering an empty password (by pressing Enter) aborts the password setting operation. OPTIONS
-F, --plainpassword-fd=fd Read password from file descriptor fd, terminated by end of file, ' ' or ' '. -f, --password-fd=fd Read password hash from file descriptor fd, terminated by end of file, ' ' or ' '. -g, --group Change password of group name. By default the password of user name is changed. -i, --interactive Ask all questions when connecting to the user database, even if default answers are set up in libuser configuration. -P, --plainpassword=password Set the password to password. Note that the password can be viewed while running lpasswd using tools such as ps(1). -p, --password=encrypted Set the password to the password represented by the hash encrypted. Note that the hash can be viewed while running lpasswd using tools such as ps(1). EXIT STATUS
The exit status is 0 on success, nonzero on error. libuser Jan 12 2005 lpasswd(8)
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