Greetings all:
I am still new to Unix environment and I need help with the following requirement.
I have a large sequential file sorted on a field (say store#) that is being split into several smaller files, one for each store. That means if there are 500 stores, there will be 500 files. This... (1 Reply)
Hello Gurus,
We are facing some performance issue in UNIX. If someone had faced such kind of issue in past please provide your suggestions on this .
Problem Definition:
/Few of load processes of our Finance Application are facing issue in UNIX when they uses a shell script having below... (19 Replies)
Hello,
I have got one file with more than 120+ million records(35 GB in size). I have to extract some relevant data from file based on some parameter and generate other output file.
What will be the besat and fastest way to extract the ne file.
sample file format :--... (2 Replies)
I have been doing automation of daily check activity for a server, i have been using sqls to retrive the data and while loop for reading the data from the file for several activities. BUT i got a show stopper the below one.. where the data is getting store in $temp_file, but not being read by while... (1 Reply)
Background
-------------
The Unix flavor can be any amongst Solaris, AIX, HP-UX and Linux. I have below 2 flat files.
File-1
------
Contains 50,000 rows with 2 fields in each row, separated by pipe.
Row structure is like Object_Id|Object_Name, as following:
111|XXX
222|YYY
333|ZZZ
... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a CentOS operating system installed. I work with really huge number of files which are not only huge in number but some of them really huge in size. Minimum number of files could be 1 million to 2 million in one directory itself. Some of the files are even several Gigabytes in... (2 Replies)
I have a huge file semicolon( ; ) separated records are Pipe(|) delimited.
e.g
abc;def;ghi|jkl;mno;pqr|123;456;789
I need to replace the 50th field(semicolon separated) of each record with 9006. The 50th field can have no value e.g. ;;
Can someone help me with the appropriate command. (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am running into an issue. I have a very big file. Wants to split it in smaller chunks. This file has multiple header/ trailers. Also, between each header/trailer there are records. Number of records in each header trailer combination can vary. Also, headers can start with... (3 Replies)
I have a program that output the ownership and permission on each directory and file on the server to a csv file. I am getting error message
when I run the program. The program is not outputting to the csv file.
Error:
the file access permissions do not allow the specified action
cannot... (2 Replies)
The OS version is
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.10
I have a script to mask some columns with **** in a data file which is delimeted with Ç ,
I am using awk for the masking , when I try to mask a small file the awk works fine and masks the required column ,
but when the file is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: LinuxUser8092
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PLAN9
setuid
SETUID(1) General Commands Manual SETUID(1)NAME
setuid - run a command with a different uid.
SYNOPSIS
setuid username|uid command [ args ]
DESCRIPTION
Setuid changes user id, then executes the specified command. Unlike some versions of su(1), this program doesn't ever ask for a password
when executed with effective uid=root. This program doesn't change the environment; it only changes the uid and then uses execvp() to find
the command in the path, and execute it. (If the command is a script, execvp() passes the command name to /bin/sh for processing.)
For example,
setuid some_user $SHELL
can be used to start a shell running as another user.
Setuid is useful inside scripts that are being run by a setuid-root user -- such as a script invoked with super, so that the script can
execute some commands using the uid of the original user, instead of root. This allows unsafe commands (such as editors and pagers) to be
used in a non-root mode inside a super script. For example, an operator with permission to modify a certain protected_file could use a
super command that simply does:
cp protected_file temp_file
setuid $ORIG_USER ${EDITOR:-/bin/vi} temp_file
cp temp_file protected_file
(Note: don't use this example directly. If the temp_file can somehow be replaced by another user, as might be the case if it's kept in a
temporary directory, there will be a race condition in the time between editing the temporary file and copying it back to the protected
file.)
AUTHOR
Will Deich
local SETUID(1)