Hi,
I'm trying find out if there is a way to stop a brute force attack on a Webmail site. I'm trying to setup a webmail access, but I would like to prevent too many invalid logins from the same IP.
I've looked into Snort, but I was wondering if there was an application level firewall that can... (1 Reply)
Im currently experiancing a brute force attack on my server
Nov 26 15:27:04 ws096 saslauthd: do_auth : auth failure:
Nov 26 15:27:13 ws096 saslauthd: do_auth : auth failure:
Nov 26 15:27:22 ws096 saslauthd: do_auth : auth failure:
Nov 26 15:27:29 ws096... (4 Replies)
Guys,
I know this is tricky.. I'm trying to write a script to pull info from a MMI device.
Following script logins into the server and then changes to super user. Opens MMI session and then exits out. I need to run the command under the MMI session "dsp_alarm_span all" Is there any other way to... (2 Replies)
Ok, i don't know if anyone else here have had to deal with something like this before, but here's my situation.
I have about 1000+ servers I need to log into to do something.
What i need to do is to log into each server, go to a certain directory on each of the servers, copy the files that... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to connect to some host with "ssh". I have googled and got some commands of "expect" and "spawn". I was not aware of these commands and tried below script.
$ cat auto.sh
set host xx.xx.xx.xx
set password abcd@1234
set user root
spawn ssh $user@$host
expect "*?assword:*"... (4 Replies)
How can I pass password in SSH command without using expect in a shell program.
I don't have expect installed on my Solaris server.
#!/bin/bash
ssh user@hotname (how to supply pass in script?:wall:)
Experts please help its very urgent.
Shrawan Kumar Sahu (4 Replies)
Dear All,
I have a requirement where I have to SFTP or SCP a file in a batch script. Unfortunately, the destination server setup is such that it doesn't allow for shell command line login. So, I am not able to set up SSH keys. My source server is having issues with Expect. So, unable to use... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ss112233
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::expect
Test::Expect(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Expect(3pm)NAME
Test::Expect - Automated driving and testing of terminal-based programs
SYNOPSIS
# in a t/*.t file:
use Test::Expect;
use Test::More tests => 13;
expect_run(
command => "perl testme.pl",
prompt => 'testme: ',
quit => 'quit',
);
expect("ping", "pong", "expect");
expect_send("ping", "expect_send");
expect_is("* Hi there, to testme", "expect_is");
expect_like(qr/Hi there, to testme/, "expect_like");
DESCRIPTION
Test::Expect is a module for automated driving and testing of terminal-based programs. It is handy for testing interactive programs which
have a prompt, and is based on the same concepts as the Tcl Expect tool. As in Expect::Simple, the Expect object is made available for
tweaking.
Test::Expect is intended for use in a test script.
SUBROUTINES
expect_run
The expect_run subroutine sets up Test::Expect. You must pass in the interactive program to run, what the prompt of the program is, and
which command quits the program:
expect_run(
command => "perl testme.pl",
prompt => 'testme: ',
quit => 'quit',
);
expect
The expect subroutine is the catch all subroutine. You pass in the command, the expected output of the subroutine and an optional comment.
expect("ping", "pong", "expect");
expect_send
The expect_send subroutine sends a command to the program. You pass in the command and an optional comment.
expect_send("ping", "expect_send");
expect_is
The expect_is subroutine tests the output of the program like Test::More's is. It has an optional comment:
expect_is("* Hi there, to testme", "expect_is");
expect_like
The expect_like subroutine tests the output of the program like Test::More's like. It has an optional comment:
expect_like(qr/Hi there, to testme/, "expect_like");
expect_handle
This returns the Expect object.
expect_quit
Closes the Expect handle.
SEE ALSO
Expect, Expect::Simple.
AUTHOR
Leon Brocard, "<acme@astray.com>"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2005, Leon Brocard
This module is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.3 2011-06-12 Test::Expect(3pm)