Good morning,
I would like to find all files of a certain type and display their name as well as their modification date.
In order to do this, I would do the following:
find ./ -name *.csv | ????????
My question: what to put after the pipe instead of the question marks? Is there a basic... (5 Replies)
Hi all -
I've searched the forums and seen a few questions related, but nothing which explicitly answers what I'm looking for.
I need to know if there's ANY way to get the modification history of any users crontab.
Yes, I know that crontabs are in /var/spool/cron. I know that the... (2 Replies)
Can anyone please suggest an alternate command for "stat" . I am trying this on Solaris 5.9 , but the command doesn't exist.
Basically i need to see one particalar file modification history. Any help is appreciated. (4 Replies)
Hi all,
My need is :
1. To know who , when , which command used.
2. Local user should not delete this information.
I mean , with an example , i can say
i have a user user1
i need to give all the following permissions to user1, :
a. A specific directory other than his home... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
My need is :
1. To know who , when , which command used.
2. Local user should not delete this information.
I mean , with an example , i can say
i have a user user1
i need to give all the following permissions to user1, :
a. A specific directory other than his home... (1 Reply)
Hello :)
I'm a newb when it comes to shell scripting and was wondering about a command(s) for a script that could be used to checkout a certain number of version/revision histories of a file. I know for the latest revison you "co filename" or for a certain revision number "co -r*.* filename"... (2 Replies)
Hello,
The system has been rebooted and I need to see the commands executed in the system prior to restart by the oracle user.The history command is not showing me the commands executed prior to reboot.
Please advise.
Best regards,
Vishal (1 Reply)
I have to list the files of particular directory using file filter like find -name abc* something and if multiple file exist I also want time of each file up to seconds.
Currently we are getting time up to minutes in AIX is there any way I can get file last modification time up to seconds. (4 Replies)
I'm basically looking for the ksh equivalent of bash's PROMPT_COMMAND="history -r", where simply redrawing the command prompt in a terminal will cause ksh to reload the history file.
At the risk of sounding incredibly lazy (in which case I would be guilty as charged), I've noticed that if I have... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: DevuanFan
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
productsign
productsign(1) BSD General Commands Manual productsign(1)NAME
productsign -- Sign an OS X Installer product archive
SYNOPSIS
productsign [options] --sign identity input-product-path output-product-path
DESCRIPTION
productsign adds a digital signature to a product archive previously created with productbuild(1). Although you can add a digital signature
at the time you run productbuild(1), you may wish to add a signature later, once the product archive has been tested and is ready to deploy.
If you run productsign on a product archive that was previously signed, the existing signature will be replaced.
To sign a product archive, you will need to have a certificate and corresponding private key -- together called an ``identity'' -- in one of
your accessible keychains. To add a signature, specify the name of the identity using the --sign option. The identity's name is the same as
the ``Common Name'' of the certificate.
If you want to search for the identity in a specific keychain, specify the path to the keychain file using the --keychain option. Otherwise,
the default keychain search path is used.
productsign will embed the signing certificate in the product archive, as well as any intermediate certificates that are found in the key-
chain. If you need to embed additional certificates to form a chain of trust between the signing certificate and a trusted root certificate
on the system, use the --cert option to give the Common Name of the intermediate certificate. Multiple --cert options may be used to embed
multiple intermediate certificates.
The signature can optionally include a trusted timestamp. This is enabled by default when signing with a Developer ID identity, but it can be
enabled explicitly using the --timestamp option. A timestamp server must be contacted to embed a trusted timestamp. If you aren't connected
to the Internet, you can use --timestamp=none to disable timestamps, even for a Developer ID identity.
ARGUMENTS AND OPTIONS --sign identity-name
The name of the identity to use for signing the product archive.
--keychain keychain-path
Specify a specific keychain to search for the signing identity.
--cert certificate-name
Specify an intermediate certificate to be embedded in the product archive.
--timestamp
Include a trusted timestamp with the signature.
--timestamp=none
Disable trusted timestamp, regardless of identity.
input-product-path
The product archive to be signed.
output-product-path
The path to which the signed product archive will be written. Must not be the same as input-product-path.
SEE ALSO productbuild(1)Mac OS September 15, 2010 Mac OS