The option -ae didn't return any different output with the truss command for these errors lines, they gave the same error without any arguments being passed.
In /etc/user_attr only these three configurations are available. Nothing was defined for ksh and su.
Hi!!,
I am on HP UX -11. I have created a new group and want to assign some the users to this group without changing their existing group ( The new group is the secondary group for them)
Any ideas how to do it??
SAM doesnt seem to be working.. Any way of doing it from command line??
... (1 Reply)
Is there a command or better combination of cmds that will give me the list of Unix users in a particular Unix group whether their primary group is that group in question (information stored in /etc/passwd) or they are in a secondary group (information stored in /etc/group).
So far all I got... (5 Replies)
Hi There,
How many user can be added to a unix single group. I need this for unix and solaris.
BRs
-----Post Update-----
I'm asking about secondary group and not primary group. All the users are having 8 character as their username.
value is set for getconf LINE_MAX is... (1 Reply)
Experts,
I know when I use id it shows only the primary group information for the given user, and that info comes from passwd file. When I use groups it shows all groups user are member of, however from where come information given by groups command?
grep fmtt3990 /etc/passwd... (6 Replies)
We have created ACL's to allow two differnet groups to access some directories. You can see output from getfacl below.
group::rwx
group:rbauser:r--
The original group has full access, the secondary group has read only. However users in the secondary group can't see the directories. Think this... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I would like to know how to find our secondary group of user only.
I have used the command id -Gn user1
it is showing both groups of user.
Primary and secondary group. (2 Replies)
Hello,
i try to add user john to secondary group, named groupB
this will add as primary group,
how can i add to secondary group??
dn: cn=groupB,ou=Groups,dc=ldap-server,dc=com
changetype: modify
add: memberuid
memberuid: john (1 Reply)
Oracle Linux 6.6
grid user's secondary groups are asmadmin,asmdba,asmoper and dba
# id -a grid
uid=638(grid) gid=2000(oinstall) groups=2000(oinstall),2100(asmadmin),2200(dba),2300(asmdba),2301(asmoper)
I want to remove dba as the secondary group for grid and keep the remaining ones.
ie. I... (5 Replies)
Hi ,
Is there a way to find out when an account was added to a group in Windows 2003?Could you please tell me how to find that?
Regards,
Maddy (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Maddy123
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
profiles
profiles(1)profiles(1)NAME
profiles - print execution profiles for a user
SYNOPSIS
profiles [-l] [ user ...]
The profiles command prints on standard output the names of the execution profiles that have been assigned to you or to the optionally-
specified user or role name. Profiles are a bundling mechanism used to enumerate the commands and authorizations needed to perform a spe-
cific function. Along with each listed executable are the process attributes, such as the effective user and group IDs, with which the
process runs when started by a privileged command interpreter. The profile shells are pfcsh, pfksh, and pfexec. See the pfexec(1) man page.
Profiles can contain other profiles defined in prof_attr(4).
Multiple profiles can be combined to construct the appropriate access control. When profiles are assigned, the authorizations are added to
the existing set. If the same command appears in multiple profiles, the first occurrence, as determined by the ordering of the profiles, is
used for process-attribute settings. For convenience, a wild card can be specified to match all commands.
When profiles are interpreted, the profile list is loaded from user_attr(4). If any default profile is defined in /etc/security/policy.conf
(see policy.conf(4)), the list of default profiles are added to the list loaded from user_attr(4). Matching entries in prof_attr(4) provide
the authorizations list, and matching entries in exec_attr(4) provide the commands list.
The following options are supported:
-l Lists the commands in each profile followed by the special process attributes such as user and group IDs.
Example 1: Sample Output
The output of the profiles command has the following form:
example% profiles tester01 tester02
tester01 : Audit Management, All Commands
tester02 : Device Management, All Commands
example%
Example 2: Using the list Option
example% profiles -l tester01 tester02
tester01 :
Audit Management:
/usr/sbin/audit euid=root
/usr/sbin/auditconfig euid=root egid=sys
All Commands:
*
tester02 :
Device Management:
/usr/bin/allocate: euid=root
/usr/bin/deallocate: euid=root
All Commands
*
example%
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
1 An error occurred.
/etc/security/exec_attr
/etc/security/prof_attr
/etc/user_attr
/etc/security/policy.conf
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
auths(1), pfexec(1), roles(1), getprofattr(3SECDB), exec_attr(4), policy.conf(4), prof_attr(4), user_attr(4), attributes(5)
11 Feb 2000 profiles(1)