My Admin has written a shell script (Filepermission.ksh) with the following commands and provided me 'exeutive' privileges. However, when I try to run the script, I am getting the following error message. Can some one tell me what could be missing? Thank you for your continued support.
Script:
... (0 Replies)
folks;
How can i give a group a sudo permission to execute only some command "like start/stop Apache", so every user in that group can sudo to use this as himself, i mean when he tries to sudo, he will be asked for a password (and make it so he must use his own NT password not a generic one) then... (6 Replies)
Hello All,
I receive a file from another server with file permission rw-r--r-- and owner of the file is the sFTP login id and group is also different from my login id.
Due to this I cannot move the file from and also cannot do anything on it.
Can anyone help on how to change the file... (2 Replies)
We have a script which will move the files from the each user home directory to other location to process the file in the server.
The users put files in their home directory using FTP and the user home dir have 775 permission so the the application user can move the files from the home path to... (11 Replies)
hello
I m trying to enter in a folder through my script but getting permission denied error ..
Is there any command or somthing else so that i can access these folder through my script. (3 Replies)
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 1676 Jul 8 13:40 group
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 3669 Feb 25 2010 passwd
-r--r----- 1 root wheel 1242 Jan 26 2010 sudoers
I can read group and passwd, but i cant read sudoers.. why?
I am curenttly a staff member. (1 Reply)
Good day guys,
I am very new in UNIX and am trying to install an application which uses an application ID that requires administrative privileges (Full control). In most cases, we use SUDO to grant access to this ID however the customer insisted NOT to use SUDO and Root ID is not to be used to... (1 Reply)
I have a file, the long listing output by 'ls -l' is
-rw-r--r-- 1 usera agroup 1246 Jul 7 14:44 temp.R
The file is under a Solaris ZFS file system. As a different user (userb), I did
cp temp.R /tmp
ls -l /tmp/temp.R
-rw-r--r-- 1 userb agroup 1246 Nov 16 14:45 /tmp/temp.R
... (14 Replies)
Hi all,
I am running CentOS6.3 and NFS is giving me a real hard time here:
on my server a folder called /networkh has created with 777 permissions. I have setup NFS server on this server and it is supposed to serve a network.
On my client machine I configed my auto.master:
/nethome... (1 Reply)
This is unfortunately for a Tru64 5.1 PK4 system.
I have Autofs running and it seems to read and mount the NIS maps, however, on a couple of maps, eventhough is says (rw), the user home directory of /home is (ro). See cut and paste Below. This prevents the automounting of Users home... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrmurdock
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
sulog
sulog(4) File Formats sulog(4)NAME
sulog - su command log file
SYNOPSIS
/var/adm/sulog
DESCRIPTION
The sulog file is a record of all attempts by users on the system to execute the su(1M) command. Each time su(1M) is executed, an entry
is added to the sulog file.
Each entry in the sulog file is a single line of the form:
SU date time
result port user-newuser
where
date The month and date su(1M) was executed. date is displayed in the form mm/dd where mm is the month number and dd is the
day number in the month.
time The time su(1M) was executed. time is displayed in the form HH/MM where HH is the hour number (24 hour system) and MM
is the minute number.
result The result of the su(1M) command. A ` + ' sign is displayed in this field if the su attempt was successful; otherwise a
` - ' sign is displayed.
port The name of the terminal device from which su(1M) was executed.
user The user id of the user executing the su(1M) command.
newuser The user id being switched to with su(1M).
EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample sulog file.
Here is a sample sulog file:
SU 02/25 09:29 + console root-sys
SU 02/25 09:32 + pts/3 user1-root
SU 03/02 08:03 + pts/5 user1-root
SU 03/03 08:19 + pts/5 user1-root
SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root
SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root
SU 03/14 08:31 + pts/4 user1-root
FILES
/var/adm/sulog su log file
/etc/default/su contains the default location of sulog
SEE ALSO su(1M)SunOS 5.10 6 Jun 1994 sulog(4)