Just wanted options of this - first 'real' Perl script and I'm not positive of all the quirks in Perl. Any suggestions are welcome.
Especially since I'm messing with /etc/shadow! Running Solaris 2.6, Perl 5.005.03
#!/u/bin/perl
#
# Change the user's old password to the new in /etc/shadow ... (3 Replies)
Here is my situation. On a RedHat 7.3 box, I have a user named jody.
When I log in with jody and type in "id", I get the expected output:
uid=1(jody) gid=1(jody) groups=1(jody), 510(test)
However, I cannot figure which "id" option allows me to change the effective gid. I tried the options... (2 Replies)
Hi everyone,
Need help with an issue. The group ownership of files on my Solaris system is getting changed automatically. Could someone tell me the reason why? And how could I correct it? One more info- everytime the ownership changes, it changes to "x".
Thanks :confused: (1 Reply)
My current GID are all < 100, however I am having issues now with this. Does anyone know of a way to change all GID's to perhaps add 100, IE so GID now = 23 will = 123. I am running an NIS network so changing the table is easy , however finding all the files on all my filesystems and modifying... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I want to write a ksh script about changing UID and changing group with GID. There are multiple servers i want to perform that job.
linux1
linux2
linux3
linux4
linux5 ......
.
.
.
.
.
1.) How can i enter "password" in script rather asking me?
I was trying this...
ssh... (2 Replies)
I need to find all the files that have group Read or Write permission or files that have user write permission.
This is what I have so far:
find . -exec ls -l {} \; | awk '/-...rw..w./ {print $1 " " $3 " " $4 " " $9}'
It shows me all files where group read = true, group write = true... (5 Replies)
I had posted previously about this problem I had.
I have multiple text files with hundreds of lines of the following type:
2000001 34 54 234 2000001
32 545 2000001 -2000001 77 2000001 44 2000001 998 2000001
77 32 2000001 45 23 111 89
98 75 23 34 999
.
.
.
etc...
What I wanted was... (2 Replies)
i am able to change the mode using chmod and able to change permission.
but i am not able to change group and ownership. getting as invalid
can any one help me regarding this . (4 Replies)
Hello,
I have a small problem and would be happy if someone could help me to find a solution:
A machine ("server") makes backups of different computers ("clients") using rsync. Users and groups are keept, so that it's possible to copy them back to the client if required. The number of groups... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tracer
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
deliver
DELIVER(8) System Manager's Manual DELIVER(8)
*
NAME
deliver - deliver mail to an IMAP mailbox
SYNOPSIS
deliver [ -C config-file ] [ -d ] [ -r address ]
[ -f address ] [ -m mailbox ] [ -a auth-id ]
[ -q ] [ userid ]...
deliver [ -C config-file ] -l
DESCRIPTION
Deliver reads a message from the standard input and delivers it to one or more IMAP mailboxes.
Deliver reads its configuration options out of the imapd.conf(5) file unless specified otherwise by -C.
OPTIONS -C config-file
Read configuration options from config-file.
-d Ignored for compatability with /bin/mail.
-r address
Insert a Return-Path: header containing address
-f address
Insert a Return-Path: header containing address
-m mailbox
Deliver to mailbox. If any userids are specified, attempts to deliver to user.userid.mailbox for each userid. If the ACL on any
such mailbox does not grant the sender the "p" right or if -m is not specified, then delivers to the INBOX for the userid, regard-
less of the ACL on the INBOX.
If no userids are specified, attempts to deliver to mailbox. If the ACL on mailbox does not grant the sender the "p" right, the
delivery fails.
-a auth-id
Specify the authorization id of the sender. Defaults to "anonymous".
-q Deliver message even when receiving mailbox is over quota.
-l Accept messages using the LMTP protocol.
NOTES
Depending on the setting of reject8bit in imapd.conf(5), deliver either rejects/accepts messages with 8-bit-set characters in the headers.
If we accept messages with 8-bit-set characters in the headers, then depending on the setting of munge8bit, these characters are either
left un-touched or changed to `X'. This is because such characters can't be interpreted since the character set is not known, although
some communities not well-served by US-ASCII assume that those characters can be used to represent characters not present in US-ASCII.
A method for encoding 8-bit-set characters is provided by RFC 2047.
FILES
/etc/imapd.conf
SEE ALSO lmtpd(8)CMU Project Cyrus DELIVER(8)