Hi there,
It might seem tricky, I confess.
We use sudo to allow people to initiate priviledged commands (but not all commands) on our Unix systems.
To by pass this, some people initiate the sudo su - command ;
The main issue is to 'know' what those people do when they gain root access.... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I have two problems, My system is SunOS 5.9:
1- I have installed sudo but I have a problem logging user activities on other hosts, the way I installed it is that I installed sudo and the sudoers file in a shared directory on a NFS server which is mounted by all computers on the... (1 Reply)
Hi everybody, ]
I would like to ask just simpe and short question. I am using freeBSD 6.0 and Debian Sarge.
From Debian console I can log as root using ssh to bsd mashine but not vice versa.
When I say in bsd console su I got sorry output, it does not allow me to su to root when I am logged... (5 Replies)
Dear All,
Could I change password while login in to ftp server(solaris 10)? I tried to use fileZilla and command prompt(window) to change my password but It can't. Do you have any suggestion ?
Ps. I can't telnet and ssh to the server because of poicy for ftpuser.
Thank in advance (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have a directory with 45 kshell scripts .
I would like to grant sudo to specific account on this DIRECTORY and not on each and every files. Is it possible ?
(note: I have the same scripts and directory both on linux redhat + hpux)
Best Regards (1 Reply)
Hi All
I have a requirement in which during sudo logging, I must get the year details also in sudo log file. As below output is not mentioning the year due to this I will not able to idenfiy that this log belong to 2012 or 2011 or 2010
Dec 12 11:30:21 XYZ sudo: user1 : TTY=pts/5 ;... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I am fairly new to shell scripting and I am trying the following:
My shell script creates a tar file with files with the ending ~. The directory - where the files and sub directories are located - comes as a parameter when I call the script. Files that are archived will be written in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: neg42
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mtailrc
mtailrc(5) User Manuals mtailrc(5)NAME
mtailrc - Configuration file for monkeytail
DESCRIPTION
A monkeytail configuration uses Apache-style syntax to declare "groups" of files to be tailed.
Best explained with an example:
<group testgroup>
prefix 'server2: '
sudo yes
<file>
filename /var/log/apache2/access.log
prefix 'server1: '
host server1.example.com
</file>
<file>
filename /var/log/apache2/access.log
host server2.example.com
sudo no
</file>
</group>
OPTIONS
All options can be either put inside a group or file block. Options inside a file block override those in the group block.
filename filename
filename defines the filename for this block.
host remote-host (optional)
host defines that this block's file is to be tailed on a remote server.
sudo yes|no|1|0
sudo is a boolean specifying whether this file should be tailed as root. This option is supported for both local and remote files
(in both cases you will potentially be prompted for your password).
prefix "string: "
prefix allows you to specify a short string that will be prepended to every line that is displayed for that given file.
FILES
~/.mtailrc - user specific monkeytail config
SEE ALSO mtail(1), tail(1)AUTHOR
Martyn Smith <martyn@dollyfish.net.nz>
mtail May 2008 mtailrc(5)