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Full Discussion: User password reset
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat User password reset Post 302956743 by Don Cragun on Friday 2nd of October 2015 09:03:42 PM
Old 10-02-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by frank_rizzo
Try this instead so the password is not logged to the history.

Code:
passwd --stdin username</tmp/secret

I assume this is obvious, but if you do it this way, be sure that the permissions on /tmp/secret only allow read and write access to the file's owner and be sure that the file's owner is root.
 

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PASSWD(1)							      OpenSSL								 PASSWD(1)

NAME
passwd - compute password hashes SYNOPSIS
openssl passwd [-crypt] [-1] [-apr1] [-salt string] [-in file] [-stdin] [-noverify] [-quiet] [-table] {password} DESCRIPTION
The passwd command computes the hash of a password typed at run-time or the hash of each password in a list. The password list is taken from the named file for option -in file, from stdin for option -stdin, or from the command line, or from the terminal otherwise. The Unix standard algorithm crypt and the MD5-based BSD password algorithm 1 and its Apache variant apr1 are available. OPTIONS
-crypt Use the crypt algorithm (default). -1 Use the MD5 based BSD password algorithm 1. -apr1 Use the apr1 algorithm (Apache variant of the BSD algorithm). -salt string Use the specified salt. When reading a password from the terminal, this implies -noverify. -in file Read passwords from file. -stdin Read passwords from stdin. -noverify Don't verify when reading a password from the terminal. -quiet Don't output warnings when passwords given at the command line are truncated. -table In the output list, prepend the cleartext password and a TAB character to each password hash. EXAMPLES
openssl passwd -crypt -salt xx password prints xxj31ZMTZzkVA. openssl passwd -1 -salt xxxxxxxx password prints $1$xxxxxxxx$UYCIxa628.9qXjpQCjM4a.. openssl passwd -apr1 -salt xxxxxxxx password prints $apr1$xxxxxxxx$dxHfLAsjHkDRmG83UXe8K0. 0.9.7a 2002-10-03 PASSWD(1)
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