My Admin has written a shell script (Filepermission.ksh) with the following commands and provided me 'exeutive' privileges. However, when I try to run the script, I am getting the following error message. Can some one tell me what could be missing? Thank you for your continued support.
Script:
... (0 Replies)
folks;
How can i give a group a sudo permission to execute only some command "like start/stop Apache", so every user in that group can sudo to use this as himself, i mean when he tries to sudo, he will be asked for a password (and make it so he must use his own NT password not a generic one) then... (6 Replies)
Hello All,
I receive a file from another server with file permission rw-r--r-- and owner of the file is the sFTP login id and group is also different from my login id.
Due to this I cannot move the file from and also cannot do anything on it.
Can anyone help on how to change the file... (2 Replies)
We have a script which will move the files from the each user home directory to other location to process the file in the server.
The users put files in their home directory using FTP and the user home dir have 775 permission so the the application user can move the files from the home path to... (11 Replies)
I am using tcsh
what could possibly be a problem, when using crontab to invoke a shell script. ?
The script has the read, write and execute permission to all users. And the script works as expected while executing it in stand-alone mode.
Is there a way to trace (like log) what error... (9 Replies)
hello
I m trying to enter in a folder through my script but getting permission denied error ..
Is there any command or somthing else so that i can access these folder through my script. (3 Replies)
Good day guys,
I am very new in UNIX and am trying to install an application which uses an application ID that requires administrative privileges (Full control). In most cases, we use SUDO to grant access to this ID however the customer insisted NOT to use SUDO and Root ID is not to be used to... (1 Reply)
I have a file, the long listing output by 'ls -l' is
-rw-r--r-- 1 usera agroup 1246 Jul 7 14:44 temp.R
The file is under a Solaris ZFS file system. As a different user (userb), I did
cp temp.R /tmp
ls -l /tmp/temp.R
-rw-r--r-- 1 userb agroup 1246 Nov 16 14:45 /tmp/temp.R
... (14 Replies)
Hi Team,
I am using AIX 6.1 version. I have two log id IDs say (user1 and user2)
Both users primary group is same. ex (group1)
I have created directory called /logs/app using user1 and permissions are like below
/logs ------ drwxrwxr-x
/logs/app ----- drwxrwxrwx
But all the process... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I am running CentOS6.3 and NFS is giving me a real hard time here:
on my server a folder called /networkh has created with 777 permissions. I have setup NFS server on this server and it is supposed to serve a network.
On my client machine I configed my auto.master:
/nethome... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bashily
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
gshadow
GSHADOW(5) File Formats and Conversions GSHADOW(5)NAME
gshadow - shadowed group file
DESCRIPTION
/etc/gshadow contains the shadowed information for group accounts.
This file must not be readable by regular users if password security is to be maintained.
Each line of this file contains the following colon-separated fields:
group name
It must be a valid group name, which exist on the system.
encrypted password
Refer to crypt(3) for details on how this string is interpreted.
If the password field contains some string that is not a valid result of crypt(3), for instance ! or *, users will not be able to use a
unix password to access the group (but group members do not need the password).
The password is used when a user who is not a member of the group wants to gain the permissions of this group (see newgrp(1)).
This field may be empty, in which case only the group members can gain the group permissions.
A password field which starts with an exclamation mark means that the password is locked. The remaining characters on the line
represent the password field before the password was locked.
This password supersedes any password specified in /etc/group.
administrators
It must be a comma-separated list of user names.
Administrators can change the password or the members of the group.
Administrators also have the same permissions as the members (see below).
members
It must be a comma-separated list of user names.
Members can access the group without being prompted for a password.
You should use the same list of users as in /etc/group.
FILES
/etc/group
Group account information.
/etc/gshadow
Secure group account information.
SEE ALSO gpasswd(5), group(5), grpck(8), grpconv(8), newgrp(1).
shadow-utils 4.5 01/25/2018 GSHADOW(5)