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Full Discussion: password policy for new user
Operating Systems Solaris password policy for new user Post 302572895 by dehetoxic on Friday 11th of November 2011 03:20:36 PM
Old 11-11-2011
password policy for new user

hi folk,

i try to setup a new password policy for our solaris box user, below are the /etc/default/passwd/, but then when i tried to create a user, it didn't ask for numeric character, and the new password also didn't ask for special characters.

PHP Code:
# useradd testing 
# passwd testing
New Password:
Re-enter new Password
passwdpassword successfully changed for testing 
useradd <<<<<< error, it didnt ask for any special character, the username should has 1 numberic or special characters
passwd <<<< error, it didnt ask for any special character, the password should contains special characters

please helps ?

PHP Code:
MINALPHA=4
MINDIFF
=7
MINDIGIT
=1
MINSPECIAL
=1
MINUPPER
=2
MINLOWER
=2
MAXREPEATS
=1
WHITESPACE
=YES
NAMECHECK
=YES
DICTIONDBDIR
=/var/passwd
DICTIONLIST
=/usr/share/lib/dict/words
HISTORY
=12
MINWEEKS
=NONE
MAXWEEKS
=4
WARNWEEKS
=NONE
PASSLENGTH
=
 

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auths(1)                                                           User Commands                                                          auths(1)

NAME
auths - print authorizations granted to a user SYNOPSIS
auths [ user ...] DESCRIPTION
The auths command prints on standard output the authorizations that you or the optionally-specified user or role have been granted. Autho- rizations are rights that are checked by certain privileged programs to determine whether a user may execute restricted functionality. Each user may have zero or more authorizations. Authorizations are represented by fully-qualified names, which identify the organization that created the authorization and the functionality that it controls. Following the Java convention, the hierarchical components of an authorization are separated by dots (.), starting with the reverse order Internet domain name of the creating organization, and ending with the specific function within a class of authorizations. An asterisk (*) indicates all authorizations in a class. A user's authorizations are looked up in user_attr(4) and in the /etc/security/policy.conf file (see policy.conf(4)). Authorizations may be specified directly in user_attr(4) or indirectly through prof_attr(4). Authorizations may also be assigned to every user in the system directly as default authorizations or indirectly as default profiles in the /etc/security/policy.conf file. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Sample output The auths output has the following form: example% auths tester01 tester02 tester01 : solaris.system.date,solaris.jobs.admin tester02 : solaris.system.* example% Notice that there is no space after the comma separating the authorization names in tester01. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. 1 An error occurred. FILES
/etc/user_attr /etc/security/auth_attr /etc/security/policy.conf /etc/security/prof_attr ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
profiles(1), roles(1), getauthattr(3SECDB), auth_attr(4), policy.conf(4), prof_attr(4), user_attr(4), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 25 Mar 2004 auths(1)
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