Please excuse for double posting, but since this seems like a " yep, me dummy question", I feel I should post here.:o
Just joined after using the site as a guest.. (Very Good Stuff in here.. thanks folks.)
I am in the process of hardening a Solaris 10 server using JASS. I also must use DISA... (1 Reply)
Just joined after using the site as a guest.. (Very Good Stuff in here.. thanks folks.)
I am in the process of hardening a Solaris 10 server using JASS. I also must use DISA Security Checklists (SRR) scripts to test for things that did not get hardened to DISA standards.
One of the things... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to change the access permissions of the files whose extension is same.For example *.c but these are inside a directory and inside that other directory is there and it contains the .c files..for example--
So my aim is to search the files under src and change the access permissions... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a dir structure that has many many subdirs, I would like to dump all the files from al the sub-dirs into a single directory? Can someone tell me the mv command that would do this please?
before example:
datadir/
datadir/datajan/jan.dat
datadir/datafeb/feb.dat
after example:... (1 Reply)
I want to allow windows update when ordinary users are logged on, I'm pretty sure that adjusting the permissions registry entry HEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/SOFTWARE/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/WindowsUpdate to allow acces to all domins users does the trick.
I already have a logon.bat that runs at... (0 Replies)
Hi, I am creating a ksh script to search for a string of text inside files within a directory tree. Some of these file are going to be read/execute only. I know to use chmod to change the permissions of the file, but I want to preserve the original permissions after writing to the file. How can I... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have written the following script that later I want to put in cron,:
#!/bin/bash
_find="/usr/bin/find"
_paths="/moneta_polled01/mediation_gsm /moneta_polled01/mediation_mmsc"
for d in $_paths
do
$_find $d -type f -exec chmod 777 {} \;
done
but it does not seem to be... (8 Replies)
Hi All
I have the following script that is supposed to change permissions of incoming files to a directory, but it does not seem to do what I want, please can you help:
mkdir -p /tmp/tmpdir
find /moneta_polled01/sgsn/ -exec ls -l {} \; |grep -v rwxrwxrwx |awk '{print $9}' >... (4 Replies)
Hey, It's me again.
Have a problem, that's not really a problem. I have the below script, that goes to the directory I want it to go to. lists out the directories available, lets you choose the directory you want, then it changes the permissions on said directory. using chmod -R and chown -R.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
this is the structure of the directory
/local/home/app/cases
under cases directory, below are the sub directories and each directory has files.
/local/home/app/cases/1
/local/home/app/cases/2
/local/home/app/cases/3
/local/home/app/cases/4
File types are .txt .sh and so... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lookinginfo
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
mkfs
MKFS(1M)MKFS(1M)NAME
mkfs - construct a file system
SYNOPSIS
/etc/mkfs special proto
DESCRIPTION
Mkfs constructs a file system by writing on the special file special according to the directions found in the prototype file proto. The
prototype file contains tokens separated by spaces or new lines. The first token is the name of a file to be copied onto block zero as the
bootstrap program, see bproc(8). The second token is a number specifying the size of the created file system. Typically it will be the
number of blocks on the device, perhaps diminished by space for swapping. The next token is the number of i-nodes in the i-list. The next
set of tokens comprise the specification for the root file. File specifications consist of tokens giving the mode, the user-id, the group
id, and the initial contents of the file. The syntax of the contents field depends on the mode.
The mode token for a file is a 6 character string. The first character specifies the type of the file. (The characters -bcd specify regu-
lar, block special, character special and directory files respectively.) The second character of the type is either u or - to specify set-
user-id mode or not. The third is g or - for the set-group-id mode. The rest of the mode is a three digit octal number giving the owner,
group, and other read, write, execute permissions, see chmod(1).
Two decimal number tokens come after the mode; they specify the user and group ID's of the owner of the file.
If the file is a regular file, the next token is a pathname whence the contents and size are copied.
If the file is a block or character special file, two decimal number tokens follow which give the major and minor device numbers.
If the file is a directory, mkfs makes the entries . and .. and then reads a list of names and (recursively) file specifications for the
entries in the directory. The scan is terminated with the token $.
If the prototype file cannot be opened and its name consists of a string of digits, mkfs builds a file system with a single empty directory
on it. The size of the file system is the value of proto interpreted as a decimal number. The number of i-nodes is calculated as a func-
tion of the filsystem size. The boot program is left uninitialized.
A sample prototype specification follows:
/usr/mdec/uboot
4872 55
d--777 3 1
usr d--777 3 1
sh ---755 3 1 /bin/sh
ken d--755 6 1
$
b0 b--644 3 1 0 0
c0 c--644 3 1 0 0
$
$
SEE ALSO filsys(5), dir(5), bproc(8)BUGS
There should be some way to specify links.
MKFS(1M)