Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to disconnect telnet prompt with port no in script. Post 302684543 by kapil514 on Thursday 9th of August 2012 05:30:17 PM
Old 08-09-2012
Thanks Corona ,Will try your suggestion Smilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

disabled telnet now need port 23 or port 22

we disabled telnet on solaris 9 via previous a thread. We use CMS (call management system) supervisor which used port 23 (telnet). We cannot use telnet via local directive and it was shut down as stated when we shut down telnet in the inetd file. I cannot now log into the CMS box since port 23 is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: panzerkw
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Telnet IP and Port Script

Hi, I would like to create a simple script that will telnet a number of IP and Ports one after the other to confirm connectivity to those addresses. I don't need to log on, just output to a file what the response is, i.e Escape Character, connectivity refused etc. Complete newbie to... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: asou
6 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Telnet in command prompt

Hi, i have typed telnet yahoo.com 80 in command prompt it displays as a blank command prompt page titling as Telnet Yahoo.com Other than that i am not able to get anything. can anyone sort me out the reason for this (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: satheeshkr_cse
12 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

how do i access db2 instance via telnet command prompt

Hi I have a perl script code in which connecting with db2 database and doing some process. My perl script code and db2 database server present in the same unix server. I am connecting and executing perl script code via windows telnet. Now my question is i could not able to connect db2 server... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: solo123
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Net::Telnet (match prompt)

Hi, The code below is used to telnet to list of devices and configure them. The program executes in this manner: 1. telnet to the first device in file.txt 2. one the telnet command is executed a "press any key to continue" prompts. 3. once a return key is executed it ask for username,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sureshcisco
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Auto-exit from telnet prompt

Hi, Hope all your are doing well. Need a suggestion from you. I am writing an automated shell script that will effectively check the telnet connectivity with different backends from present deployment server. Ideally, this script reads each backend hostname from a configuration file and fires... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhaskar_m
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

how do I infinite loop (reconnect) to auto disconnect telnet server

I want the text based Star Wars movie at towel.blinkenlights.nl to loop infinitely. It plays the movie and then disconnects my session? Can anyone think of a way to make my unix machine automatically reconnect over and over? EDIT no commands are required are the connection its just in and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: herot
3 Replies

8. IP Networking

telnet for port 5433 is not working while it works for port 22

Hi, I am trying to set up a dev environment and I have Ubuntu server (10.16.1.92) and a CentOS VM (10.16.3.235) on this. On the CentOS I have a program running on port 5433. Now my problem is that I am unable to telnet this port from another Windows server whereas I can telnet port 22 from... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rishav
5 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Shell Script to test telnet connection using port

Hello, I need to test telnet connections using port number for few hosts. Could you please help me? Thanks !! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: skhichi
1 Replies

10. Solaris

SSH and telnet long delay to recieve prompt.

Hi guys. You'd have to excuse me a bit, as I'm a noob. I really try to avoid asking questions and do research for whatever linux issues that may arise. I am experiencing a long wait for the shell to come up when I ssh or telnet into a Sunos 5.10 environment. It takes 70 seconds to give me... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: gpenco
12 Replies
LOGPROF(8)							     AppArmor								LOGPROF(8)

NAME
aa-logprof - utility program for managing AppArmor security profiles SYNOPSIS
aa-logprof [-d /path/to/profiles] [-f /path/to/logfile] [-m <mark in logfile>] OPTIONS
-d --dir /path/to/profiles The path to where the AppArmor security profiles are stored -f --file /path/to/logfile The path to the location of the logfile that contains AppArmor security events. -m --logmark "mark" aa-logprof will ignore all events in the system log before the specified mark is seen. If the mark contains spaces, it must be surrounded with quotes to work correctly. DESCRIPTION
aa-logprof is an interactive tool used to review AppArmor's complain mode output and generate new entries for AppArmor security profiles. Running aa-logprof will scan the log file and if there are new AppArmor events that are not covered by the existing profile set, the user will be prompted with suggested modifications to augment the profile. When aa-logprof exits profile changes are saved to disk. If AppArmor is running, the updated profiles are reloaded and if any processes that generated AppArmor events are still running in the null-complain-profile, those processes are set to run under their proper profiles. Responding to AppArmor Events aa-logprof will generate a list of suggested profile changes that the user can choose from, or they can create their own, to modifiy the permission set of the profile so that the generated access violation will not re-occur. The user is then presented with info about the access including profile, path, old mode if there was a previous entry in the profile for this path, new mode, the suggestion list, and given these options: (A)llow, (D)eny, (N)ew, (G)lob last piece, (Q)uit If the AppArmor profile was in complain mode when the event was generated, the default for this option is (A)llow, otherwise, it's (D)eny. The suggestion list is presented as a numbered list with includes at the top, the literal path in the middle, and the suggested globs at the bottom. If any globs are being suggested, the shortest glob is the selected option, otherwise, the literal path is selected. Picking includes from the list must be done manually. Hitting a numbered key will change the selected option to the corresponding numbered entry in the list. If the user selects (N)ew, they'll be prompted to enter their own globbed entry to match the path. If the user-entered glob does not match the path for this event, they'll be informed and have the option to fix it. If the user selects (G)lob last piece then, taking the currently selected option, aa-logprof will remove the last path element and replace it with /*. If the last path element already was /*, aa-logprof will go up a directory level and replace it with /**. This new globbed entry is then added to the suggestion list and marked as the selected option. So /usr/share/themes/foo/bar/baz.gif can be turned into /usr/share/themes/** by hitting "g" three times. If the user selects (A)llow, aa-logprof will take the current selection and add it to the profile, deleting other entries in the profile that are matched by the new entry. Adding r access to /usr/share/themes/** would delete an entry for r access to /usr/share/themes/foo/*.gif if it exists in the profile. If (Q)uit is selected at this point, aa-logprof will ignore all new pending capability and path accesses. After all of the path accesses have been handled, logrof will write all updated profiles to the disk and reload them if AppArmor is running. New Process (Execution) Events If there are unhandled x accesses generated by the execve(2) of a new process, aa-logprof will display the parent profile and the target program that's being executed and prompt the user to select and execute modifier. These modifiers will allow a choice for the target to: have it's own profile (px), inherit the parent's profile (ix), run unconstrained (ux), or deny access for the target. See apparmor.d(5) for details. If there is a corresponding entry for the target in the qualifiers section of /etc/apparmor/logprof.conf, the presented list will contain only the allowed modes. The default option for this question is selected using this logic-- # if px mode is allowed and profile exists for the target # px is default. # else if ix mode is allowed # ix is default # else # deny is default aa-logprof will never suggest "ux" as the default. ChangeHat Events If unknown change_hat(2) events are found, the user is prompted to add a new hat, if the events should go into the default hat for this profile based on the corresponding entry in the defaulthat section of logprof.conf, or if the following events that run under that hat should be denied altogether. Capability Events If there are capability accesses, the user is shown each capability access and asked if the capability should be allowed, denied, or if the user wants to quit. See capability(7) for details. BUGS
None. Please report any you find to bugzilla at <http://bugzilla.novell.com>. SEE ALSO
klogd(8), auditd(8), apparmor(7), apparmor.d(5), change_hat(2), logprof.conf(5), aa-genprof(1), aa-complain(1), aa-enforce(1), and <http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?apparmor>. NOVELL
/SUSE 2008-06-11 LOGPROF(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:50 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy