Assuming you don't care about preserving the hundreds of spaces at the ends of some of your input lines (since the spacing in your sample output lines does not match the spacing in your sample input lines), you could also try:
which strips off all of the trailing spaces.
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hello
A couple of weeks ago, I added a user to an AIX 5.3 system.
I go to add one today, and it appears that when creating a user in smit, I cannot see any groups.
No primary groups
No Group set
No Admin Groups
The /etc/group and etc/secuity/group files seem to be intact.
I did... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
need info on using putty as group.
I am having huge numbers of servers. (say 100)
I am using putty to login remotely. i want to group each 25 hostnames or a set of servers into one putty instance. (see image attached.)
Currently i have to scroll down to see all the 100 servers.
... (2 Replies)
I have some groups and when i issue a command like
groups $LOGNAME
it displays in one line
rfautosys c2ru cash2
I want to fetch only group starting with c2 but when i grep i am getting full line. Can someone advise
on this please as how i can get output as c2ru? (2 Replies)
Hi all,
Can someone tell me how I can get around this problem. Basically I use the HP-UX OS and I work with 2 top level directories.
/z/group1
/z/group2
these 2 dirs are managed where group1 can only be access by one set of users and group2 another. This is managed by adding the 2... (3 Replies)
Hi
cat /etc/group :
....
oinstall:x:401:
dba:x:400:oracle
...
cat /etc/passwd|grep oracle
oracle:x:130:401::/home/oracle:/bin/ksh
1. Is that mean that :
ORACLE user has OINSTALL as it Primary group and DBA as secondary group ?
2. What is the linux comman to set ORACLE user with... (2 Replies)
I have a requirement - replace specified positions in a string with a character. I found perl regex useful for this approach. however, I am facing the following issue.
The target file 'temp' contains -
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
The goal is to convert... (5 Replies)
Must I be in a group? I am using Ubuntu and am the only user on my PC. I know how to change groups but do not see a way to not be in a group. Any help would be appreciated. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nthepines
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
rbash
RBASH(1) General Commands Manual RBASH(1)NAME
rbash - restricted bash, see bash(1)RESTRICTED SHELL
If bash is started with the name rbash, or the -r option is supplied at invocation, the shell becomes restricted. A restricted shell is
used to set up an environment more controlled than the standard shell. It behaves identically to bash with the exception that the follow-
ing are disallowed or not performed:
o changing directories with cd
o setting or unsetting the values of SHELL, PATH, ENV, or BASH_ENV
o specifying command names containing /
o specifying a file name containing a / as an argument to the . builtin command
o specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the -p option to the hash builtin command
o importing function definitions from the shell environment at startup
o parsing the value of SHELLOPTS from the shell environment at startup
o redirecting output using the >, >|, <>, >&, &>, and >> redirection operators
o using the exec builtin command to replace the shell with another command
o adding or deleting builtin commands with the -f and -d options to the enable builtin command
o using the enable builtin command to enable disabled shell builtins
o specifying the -p option to the command builtin command
o turning off restricted mode with set +r or set +o restricted.
These restrictions are enforced after any startup files are read.
When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed, rbash turns off any restrictions in the shell spawned to execute the script.
SEE ALSO bash(1)GNU Bash-4.0 2004 Apr 20 RBASH(1)