I am not sure what I am missing here. I have the following identical entry in /etc/sudoers on multiple Red Hat 6.4 servers.
On one server when I enter the command over SSH as follows it works fine.
On a few servers I am prompted for the sudo password when I issue the command.
If I ssh to the server that is having the issue and execute the sudo command I am not prompted for a password. What am I missing here? the /etc/sudoer files are identical on a server that is working. Is this something with SELinux that I am perhaps missing?
I've written a shell script to alter a particular preference file on OS X (10.3.9), which works fine (tested by running the script from the terminal sat in front of the box).
Problem is, I now have to run this script remotely across a number of machines via remote desktop, so where I've used the... (1 Reply)
I need to create an automated script where I have to use sudo to switch to multiple user so the script stops and prompts for password, Is there a way I can provide the password in same command only?
Remember that, I cannot disable the password settings of sudo as I dont have rights. (4 Replies)
I'm making a script that will be a double clickable .command file and I need it to prompt for the users admin password.
So far I have:
if ]; then
sudo -p "Please enter your admin password: " date 2>/dev/null 1>&2
if ; then
echo "You entered an invalid password... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I've followed the exact same steps of how to setup and enable SSH user equivalent including the right permission, but when I "ssh" it still prompts for password. Could you help to see what I did wrong?
I appreciate any helps.
:confused:
server1.com:/u01/oracle
RAC1 > mkdir... (2 Replies)
I have 3 Solaris 10 UNIX servers, the shadow and passwd file are all identical and are automatically sync every 5 minutes. A majority of the users do not have CLI access but rather use a menu. I currently have menu options that allows them to rlogin to another server and I need to have the... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am using DSEE 6.3 to authenticate and authorize my Solaris 9 and 10 users. Everything works fine except password expiration. I use built-in global password policy for all users. The policy works well. However I could not find the right pam configuration in order to prompt users at ssh... (2 Replies)
I am writing a BASH script to update a webserver and then restart Apache. It looks basically like this:
#!/bin/bash
rsync /path/on/local/machine/ foo.com:path/on/remote/machine/
ssh foo.com sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reloadrsync and ssh don't prompt for a password, because I have DSA encryption... (9 Replies)
hi,
i have a requirement where i need to sudo to another user in the shell script.suppose consider user A and B, first user A calls a shell script and then i need to sudo to user B which executes another shell script inside the earlier one.
also this needs to be automated like while sudo'ing to... (3 Replies)
We are having an issue with slow password prompts via SSH login on all of our SLES 11.2 boxes. The output from a ssh -v login attempt shows a delay here:
debug1: SSH2_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT receivedThis issue only happens on the first logon of the day; subsequent logons are normal. Adding the client's... (8 Replies)
in the /etc/sudoer file this line was added:
wtolentino ALL=(ORACLE) NOPASSWD: /bin/chmod
when i tried to run this command
sudo -u oracle /bin/chmod 775 /appshared/applications/lpa/executables/chrpt001.rep
it prompts me for a password
for example:
$ pwd
/appshared/applications/lpa... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wtolentino
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
icinga
icinga(8) nagios icinga(8)NAME
icinga - network/systems status monitoring daemon
SYNOPSIS
icinga [-h] [-v] [-s] [-d] <main_config_file>
DESCRIPTION
icinga is a daemon program that monitors the status of various network accessible systems, devices, and more. For more information, please
consult the online documentation available at http://www.icinga.org, or on your Icinga server's web page.
OPTIONS
main_config_file
The main configuration file. On debian systems this defaults to /etc/icinga/icinga.cfg
-h A helpful usage message
-v Reads all data in the configuration files and performs a basic verification/sanity check. Always make sure you verify your config
data before (re)starting Icinga.
-s Shows projected/recommended check scheduling information based on the current data in the configuration files.
-d Starts Icinga in daemon mode (instead of as a foreground process).
FILES
/etc/icinga
Default configuration directory for Icinga
AUTHOR
Icinga was started as Nagios by Ethan Galstad <nagios@nagios.org>. Icinga is maintained by the Icinga Project <info@icinga.org>. This
manual page was written by sean finney <seanius@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux operating system (but it may be freely used, modified,
and redistributed by others).
sean finney March 2010 icinga(8)