09-17-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Judo_Bear
I am trying to combine these all on one line.
It's going to be difficult to automate
su. It insists on interactive authentication, and doesn't run commands listed after it since those are ones your current shell expects to do. It can be told to run things given on the commandline, but then it doesn't prompt you for more commands when it's done!
You could configure
sudo instead, to allow you and only you(or perhaps some group of users, etc, etc.) to run a shell under the 'account' user without a password and then, modify account's
~/.profile or
~/.kshrc to run
. /home/i5/i5.4/release/account/profile.ksh automatically on login, as well as set the prompt and change directory to where you want. So you go from sudo to doing what you want in one step, or
su - account and one password to being setup as you want.
Last edited by Corona688; 09-17-2010 at 06:08 PM..
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CHSH(1) User Commands CHSH(1)
NAME
chsh - change login shell
SYNOPSIS
chsh [options] [LOGIN]
DESCRIPTION
The chsh command changes the user login shell. This determines the name of the user's initial login command. A normal user may only change
the login shell for her own account; the superuser may change the login shell for any account.
OPTIONS
The options which apply to the chsh command are:
-h, --help
Display help message and exit.
-R, --root CHROOT_DIR
Apply changes in the CHROOT_DIR directory and use the configuration files from the CHROOT_DIR directory.
-s, --shell SHELL
The name of the user's new login shell. Setting this field to blank causes the system to select the default login shell.
If the -s option is not selected, chsh operates in an interactive fashion, prompting the user with the current login shell. Enter the new
value to change the shell, or leave the line blank to use the current one. The current shell is displayed between a pair of [ ] marks.
NOTE
The only restriction placed on the login shell is that the command name must be listed in /etc/shells, unless the invoker is the superuser,
and then any value may be added. An account with a restricted login shell may not change her login shell. For this reason, placing /bin/rsh
in /etc/shells is discouraged since accidentally changing to a restricted shell would prevent the user from ever changing her login shell
back to its original value.
FILES
/etc/passwd
User account information.
/etc/shells
List of valid login shells.
/etc/login.defs
Shadow password suite configuration.
SEE ALSO
chfn(1), login.defs(5), passwd(5).
shadow-utils 4.5 01/25/2018 CHSH(1)