i have a shell script which calls a java program with username and password arguments.
Now when i run it, the password shows up in the list of processes. I am not the admin on the server so cant change the permissions on ps process. is there any way that i can provide password to this command from a file or using any buffer and it doesn't show up in processes list.
I am doing a project in C program which requires to type in password in Unix terminal. Does anybody know how to shade or not output any words typed by user in the terminal?
I use the function scan() to read typing from user. Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hi falks,
I have the following ksh code:
echo "Enter VS Admin password:"
oldstty=`stty -g`
stty -echo intr '$-'
read password
stty $oldstty
echo
This code ask from a user to enter his password. The OS suppose to hide the entering of the... (2 Replies)
All,
In my script I am calling another script.. in that script I need to enter a password. Problem is that everyone is able to see the password when I enter that. Is there any way that when i enter that password it should not display or may look like *******.
Or if there any other way that I... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am writing a UNIX .ksh script and need to send the login password of the login id that is executing the script to a command that I am executing in the script. I don't want that password to be seen by anyone except whoever is executing the script.
Does anyone know how I can accomplish... (6 Replies)
I am writting script like
echo "ENTER USERNAME: \c "
read uName
echo "ENTER PASSWORD: \c"
read pwd
In this it is shwng password on screen, I want to hide it, how can I do that (5 Replies)
I have a properties file that contains passwords, need to hide the passwords before the properties file can be distributed.
Input file:
prop1=1
prop2=2
password=123456 this is a test pw
prop3=3
password=789abc this is a prod pw
My sed command is:
sed 's/password=.*/password=xxx/g' <... (3 Replies)
hi all,
i run sqlplus command on unix(HP-UX)
like "sqlplus username/password@serverA @deneme.sql"
but when someone run "ps -ef | grep sqlplus", it can see my username and password :(
How can i hide username and password.
thanx. (1 Reply)
Dear folks,
The title of my thread says mostly all of what I want to do. Basically I want to auto-ssh to a remote host, and run a program on it (VLC is just an example). I wrote a script which calls xterm and then runs expect on it. The code is as follow
#!/bin/bash
export PASS="xxxxxxx"... (22 Replies)
Hi
I have following problem Im writing a script (in bash ) , where need to be written login & passwd for databas client .
Its need to in following form login passwd@dbhostname .
The problem is so anybody can read it so the passwd & login are visible and thats not very safety .
Can... (8 Replies)
Hi there,
I found out a very strange behavior.
If I call ssh, my password will be invisible when I'm prompted to type it:
santiago@cassiopee:~$ ssh titan.caoba.fr "echo connected"
santiago@titan.caoba.fr's password: <--- password is hidden when typed
connected
santiago@cassiopee:~$ If I... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: chebarbudo
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
d_passwd
d_passwd(4) File Formats d_passwd(4)NAME
d_passwd - dial-up password file
SYNOPSIS
/etc/d_passwd
DESCRIPTION
A dial-up password is an additional password required of users who access the computer through a modem or dial-up port. The correct pass-
word must be entered before the user is granted access to the computer.
d_passwd is an ASCII file which contains a list of executable programs (typically shells) that require a dial-up password and the associ-
ated encrypted passwords. When a user attempts to log in on any of the ports listed in the dialups file (see dialups(4)), the login program
looks at the user's login entry stored in the passwd file (see passwd(4)), and compares the login shell field to the entries in d_passwd.
These entries determine whether the user will be required to supply a dial-up password.
Each entry in d_passwd is a single line of the form:
login-shell:password:
where
login-shell The name of the login program that will require an additional dial-up password.
password An encrypted password. Users accessing the computer through a dial-up port or modem using login-shell will be required to
enter this password before gaining access to the computer.
d_passwd should be owned by the root user and the root group. The file should have read and write permissions for the owner (root) only.
If the user's login program in the passwd file is not found in d_passwd or if the login shell field in passwd is empty, the user must sup-
ply the default password. The default password is the entry for /usr/bin/sh. If d_passwd has no entry for /usr/bin/sh, then those users
whose login shell field in passwd is empty or does not match any entry in d_passwd will not be prompted for a dial-up password.
Dial-up logins are disabled if d_passwd has only the following entry:
/usr/bin/sh:*:
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Sample d_passwd file.
Here is a sample d_passwd file:
/usr/lib/uucp/uucico:q.mJzTnu8icF0:
/usr/bin/csh:6k/7KCFRPNVXg:
/usr/bin/ksh:9df/FDf.4jkRt:
/usr/bin/sh:41FuGVzGcDJlw:
Generating An Encrypted Password
The passwd (see passwd(1)) utility can be used to generate the encrypted password for each login program. passwd generates encrypted pass-
words for users and places the password in the shadow (see shadow(4)) file. Passwords for the d_passwd file will need to be generated by
first adding a temporary user id using useradd (see useradd(1M)), and then using passwd(1) to generate the desired password in the shadow
file. Once the encrypted version of the password has been created, it can be copied to the d_passwd file.
For example:
1.
Type useradd tempuser and press Return. This creates a user named tempuser.
2. Type passwd tempuser and press Return. This creates an encrypted password for tempuser and places it in the shadow file.
3. Find the entry for tempuser in the shadow file and copy the encrypted password to the desired entry in the d_passwd file.
4. Type userdel tempuser and press Return to delete tempuser.
These steps must be executed as the root user.
FILES
/etc/d_passwd dial-up password file
/etc/dialups list of dial-up ports requiring dial-up passwords
/etc/passwd password file
/etc/shadow shadow password file
SEE ALSO passwd(1), useradd(1M), dialups(4), passwd(4), shadow(4)WARNINGS
When creating a new dial-up password, be sure to remain logged in on at least one terminal while testing the new password. This ensures
that there is an available terminal from which you can correct any mistakes that were made when the new password was added.
SunOS 5.10 2 Sep 2004 d_passwd(4)