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Full Discussion: stat command with ls -l
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting stat command with ls -l Post 302444541 by Franklin52 on Thursday 12th of August 2010 05:42:58 AM
Old 08-12-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrutinizer
That would work for basic access rights but not for the s,S,t an T characters that denote sticky bits and set[ug]ids...
Hi Scrutinizer,

You're right, but I'll leave this as an exercise for the OP Smilie

Regards
 

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RPLAY.HOSTS(5)							File Formats Manual						    RPLAY.HOSTS(5)

NAME
rplay.hosts - rplay host authentication database SYNOPSIS
/usr/local/etc/rplay.hosts DESCRIPTION
The rplay.hosts file contains a list of hosts and access permissions which rplayd uses to validate incoming connections. Each line is of the form: hostname[:permission] where hostname is the name of a remote host or a host's IP address. Wildcards can be used within IP addresses to match multiple hosts. The wildcard character is "*". permission is an optional field containing any combination of the following characters: r the host can read sounds. w the host can write sounds. x the host can play, stop, pause, and continue sounds. This is normally called execute permission. m the host can monitor the audio stream written by rplayd to the audio device. "rx" permissions are used when no permissions are specified. EXAMPLE
# # All hosts have read access: # *:r # # Trusted hosts: # nice-guy.sdsu.edu:rwx friend.sdsu.edu:rwx amigo.sdsu.edu:rwx 130.191.224.224:rwx # # Hosts which can read and execute: # foo.bar.com:rx 130.190.*:rx 146.244.234.*:rx using.default.perms.edu # # Hosts which can monitor the audio stream # nsa.sdsu.edu:m FILES
/usr/local/etc/rplay.hosts SEE ALSO
rplayd(1) BUGS
The permissions for an "*" entry apply to all matching hosts. The order of this file does not matter. Specific hosts can have access dis- abled with entries like: bad.guy.edu: however, any matching "*" entries will still apply. 12/21/97 RPLAY.HOSTS(5)
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