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Special Forums Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions Remsh permission denied from HP-UX to W2k3 R2 Post 302615941 by Vraiages on Friday 30th of March 2012 09:34:30 AM
Old 03-30-2012
Thanks methyl,

I think you're right, maybe remsh wasn't supported by sua. And it explain why i can login with remsh without any command, if you said it's a rlogin command.

So anyway, i solve my problem.

I uninstall all sua components, and installed sfu 3.5 like on my old 2k server.

I set parameters like before, and it works exactly the same on my new 2003 R2 server.

I'm really dissapointed to do that, but i've no choice now because my server need to be up soon.

The stranger was it shouldn't work with sfu 3.5, all the posts i can see about it on google said it's not. But for me it is.

So thanks again for your help, methyl

Did i have to change the name of my post by including something like [solved] ?
 

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Time::Seconds(3pm)					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					Time::Seconds(3pm)

NAME
Time::Seconds - a simple API to convert seconds to other date values SYNOPSIS
use Time::Piece; use Time::Seconds; my $t = localtime; $t += ONE_DAY; my $t2 = localtime; my $s = $t - $t2; print "Difference is: ", $s->days, " "; DESCRIPTION
This module is part of the Time::Piece distribution. It allows the user to find out the number of minutes, hours, days, weeks or years in a given number of seconds. It is returned by Time::Piece when you delta two Time::Piece objects. Time::Seconds also exports the following constants: ONE_DAY ONE_WEEK ONE_HOUR ONE_MINUTE ONE_MONTH ONE_YEAR ONE_FINANCIAL_MONTH LEAP_YEAR NON_LEAP_YEAR Since perl does not (yet?) support constant objects, these constants are in seconds only, so you cannot, for example, do this: "print ONE_WEEK->minutes;" METHODS
The following methods are available: my $val = Time::Seconds->new(SECONDS) $val->seconds; $val->minutes; $val->hours; $val->days; $val->weeks; $val->months; $val->financial_months; # 30 days $val->years; The methods make the assumption that there are 24 hours in a day, 7 days in a week, 365.24225 days in a year and 12 months in a year. (from The Calendar FAQ at http://www.tondering.dk/claus/calendar.html) AUTHOR
Matt Sergeant, matt@sergeant.org Tobias Brox, tobiasb@tobiasb.funcom.com BalieXXzs SzabieXX (dLux), dlux@kapu.hu LICENSE
Please see Time::Piece for the license. Bugs Currently the methods aren't as efficient as they could be, for reasons of clarity. This is probably a bad idea. perl v5.12.1 2010-04-26 Time::Seconds(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:02 PM.
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