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Operating Systems Solaris Passwd,shadow files deleted and abort sequence disabled Post 302644621 by satish51392111 on Tuesday 22nd of May 2012 08:00:20 AM
Old 05-22-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by solaris040
Your query is already answered by others here, I am sure your onsite guy or someone senior should have access to that console or a engineer would be in datacenter with that sun keyboard.

Get them to do Stop+a, you get to single usermode, copy over the files. and reset the password using the CD/DVD rom

/tmp gets cleared when you do a reboot, you should have checked it first Smilie

1. This is not a server in a remote datacentre. Its my brother's box. If that were my client's box.. I would have received my bye-bye letter by now. (Believe me, when I explained this scenario to my senior, he was like Smilie as if I had done the unthinkable.)
2. It doesn't have a console.
3. I disabled stop+a keystroke. That means, I cannot get the ok> prompt.
But, my sa200 doc says that stop+a, even if disabled, will work during booting. Will test it once I get home.
3. The /tmp dir is not a tmpfs. It is a part of /.. hence will be avaialable across reboots.
 

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VLOCK(1)						      General Commands Manual							  VLOCK(1)

NAME
vlock - Virtual Console lock program SYNOPSIS
vlock vlock [ -a,--all ] [ -c,--current ] [ -h,--help ] [ -v,--version ] DESCRIPTION
vlock is a program to lock one or more sessions on the Linux console. This is especially useful for Linux machines which have multiple users with access to the console. One user may lock his or her session(s) while still allowing other users to use the system on other vir- tual consoles. If desired, the entire console may be locked and virtual console switching disabled. By default, only the current VC (virtual console) is locked. With the -a,-all option all VCs are locked. The locked VCs cannot be unlocked without the invoker's password or the root password. The root password will always be able to unlock any or all sessions. And, for the paranoid, vlock makes it a trying experience for those attempting to guess the password, so unauthorized access to session(s) is highly unlikely. Please note that it is entirely possible to completely lock yourself out of the console with the -a,--all option if you cannot remember your password! Unless you are able to kill vlock by logging in remotely via a serial terminal or network, a hard reset is the only method of ``unlocking'' the display. vlock works for console sessions primarily. However, there is support for trying to lock non-console sessions as well, but that support has not been well tested. OPTIONS
-a,--all Lock all console sessions and disable VC switching. -c,--current Lock the current session (this is the default). -h,--help Print a brief help message. -v,--version Print the version number of vlock. AUTHOR
Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> Linux User's Manual 16 May 1996 VLOCK(1)
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