A better solution is to create an alias in /etc/profile - assume the group of users you want to trap is 1144, you can do something like this
Write a wrapper script /usr/local/bin/special_rm.sh
which warns them about each file they are deleting, then reports the action to a logfile.
Or prevents them from deleting file names 'special*' or whatever.
If they are deleting history files or local profiles, move the contents of all profiles off to another protected directory. Use the HISTIFLE variable to write history to a protected directory. Or have the rm/alias script not allow deleting those files.
how r u all,
i have AIX server which is kerberised, and i create a user on it called "sam"
when i want to assign a password for it i typed smit user then i choosed change password and i choosed the user " sam" when i press enter this message ' user 'sam' doesnt exist" appears.
then when i want... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
Whenever I log in to my terminal and execute some cmds and then I type "history", I get the list of all the commands that I have executed.
I want to know where is the history been stored (any path location ?)
Secondly,if I want to delete the history or some part of the history, can... (9 Replies)
hello,
Aside from userdel -r "username', are there any things needed to check before deleting a user? I wanted to cleanup user accounts and Im just worried if there are scripts or tasks created or owned by them that might be affected once I deleted the account. I normally login to their account... (2 Replies)
I went to location where I need to delete all the files owned by me
I used the below code but it didn't work. It didn't throw any error but it hasn't deleted the files
find . -user username -exec rm -rf {} \;
Any suggestions please? (5 Replies)
Hi
My directory structure is as below.
dir1, dir2, dir3
I have the list of files to be deleted in the below path as below.
/staging/retain_for_2years/Cleanup/log $ ls -lrt
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 2 nobody nobody 256 Mar 01 16:15 01-MAR-2015_SPDBS2
drwxr-xr-x 2 root ... (2 Replies)
I have following script to ping multiple ips but i want to delete ip.csv file content after running script .....but before deleting content i have ask user yes/No prompt depend on user input Yes/no ip.csv content will delete..
#!/bin/bash
for enodeb in `cat /tmp/ip.csv`
do
ping -c 2... (3 Replies)
Good Afternoon,
I'm trying userdel -r username on Solaris 9 and getting
UX: userdel: ERROR: unable to find status about home directory: No such file or directory
I see the user's home directory and getent passwd shows the user
Anybody know what's causing it? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Stellaman1977
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
mktrashcan
mktrashcan(1) General Commands Manual mktrashcan(1)NAME
mktrashcan, rmtrashcan, shtrashcan - Attaches, detaches, or shows a trashcan directory
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/mktrashcan trashcan directory...
/usr/sbin/rmtrashcan directory...
/usr/sbin/shtrashcan directory...
OPERANDS
Specifies the directory that contains files that were deleted from attached directories. Whenever you delete a file in the specified
directory, the file system automatically moves the file to the trashcan directory. Specifies the directory that you attach to a trashcan
directory.
DESCRIPTION
The trashcan utilities (mktrashcan and rmtrashcan) enable you to attach or detach an existing directory, which you specify as a trashcan
directory, to any number of directories within the same fileset.
A trashcan directory stores the files that are deleted with the unlink system call. For instance, you can use the mktrashcan utility to
attach a trashcan directory called /usr/trashcan to one or more directories; thereafter, when you delete a file from one of the attached
directories, the file system moves the file to the /usr/trashcan directory. Note that when more than one directory shares attachment to a
trashcan directory, files with the same file name can overwrite each other in the trashcan directory.
If you mistakenly delete a file, use the mv command to return the file from the /usr/trashcan directory to its original directory.
When you enter shtrashcan at the system prompt, the system shows the trashcan directory, if one exists, for the directory you specified.
It is important that trashcan directories have correct access permissions. If the permissions are too restrictive, then it may be impossi-
ble to remove files from the directories that are attached to the trashcan directory. In general, all users and groups that expect to use
the trashcan directory need write permission to the directory. If unexpected "permission denied" errors occur when deleting files that are
in a directory attached to a trashcan directory, use the chmod command to change the permissions on the trashcan directory.
RESTRICTIONS
The directory and trashcan directories must be in the same fileset; however, you can attach the trashcan directory to any directory within
the fileset.
EXAMPLES
The following example creates and attaches a trashcan directory, /usr/trashcan, to two directories, /usr/ray and /usr/projects/sql/test,
which are in the same fileset. The chmod command adds write permission for all users and groups on the new trashcan directory. % mkdir
/usr/trashcan % chmod a+w /usr/trashcan % mktrashcan /usr/trashcan /usr/ray /usr/projects/sql/test To attach the trashcan directory,
/usr/trashcan, to all subdirectories in the /usr directory, enter: % mktrashcan /usr/trashcan /usr/*
New subdirectories that you add beneath the /usr directory are not attached to the trashcan directory until you attach them. Also,
the mktrashcan utility distinguishes between directories and files, attaching only directories to the trashcan directory.
Note that an attached directory produces an EDUPLICATE_DIRS (-1165) error when /usr/trashcan is itself in the directory path you
attach to (as in the previous example). You can ignore this error message.
SEE ALSO advfs(4), mkfset(8), showfsets(8)mktrashcan(1)