I am unable to enforce password complexity policy for root user. (other users are working) on RHEL 6.2. Anything wrong with system-auth parameters? PLease help..
Last edited by Don Cragun; 10-12-2015 at 01:57 PM..
Reason: Add CODE tags.
Hello All,
I have several solaris boxes running Solaris 8. When changing root passwords on them, all will simply ask for the new root password to change and of course to re-type the new password. One of the systems however asks for the existing root password before it will display the new password... (8 Replies)
Hi Solaris's expert
I need to change user password on Solaris10 2 servers.
With the same password I can change it just only one.
Try to check everything but not found difference??
password pattern: abcdeFgh9Jk
server1 check all characters but server2 check only first 8 characters.Why??... (10 Replies)
Today i was going through some of security guides written on linux .
Under shadow file security following points were mentioned.
1)The encrypted password stored under /etc/shadow file should have more than 14-25 characters.
2)Usernames in shadow file must satisfy to all the same rules as... (14 Replies)
Hi,
I am running NIS server on redhat linux 5 and I want to implement password restrictions for the yppasswd, how can I do it.Please help me.
I can implement password restriction for passwd by configuring /etc/pam.d/system-auth and setting crack_lib.so but I don't know how to implent the same... (3 Replies)
hi folk,
i try to setup a new password policy for our solaris box user, below are the /etc/default/passwd/, but then when i tried to create a user, it didn't ask for numeric character, and the new password also didn't ask for special characters.
# useradd testing
# passwd testing
New... (7 Replies)
Hi linux expert,
i would like to create a script for listing all user with there password policy. It should be in the following format:
Last password change : Sep 19, 2011
Password expires : never
Password inactive : never
Account... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts,
i would like to know the description of the following:
Minimum: 0
Maximum: 90
Warning: 7
Inactive: -1
Last Change: Never
Password Expires: Never
Password Inactive: Never
Account Expires: Never
Does this means that... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I have Sun DSEE7 (11g) on Solaris 10.
I have run idsconfig and initialized ldap client with profile created using idsconfig.
My ldap authentication works. Here is my pam.conf
# Authentication management
#
# login service (explicit because of pam_dial_auth)
#
login ... (3 Replies)
Hello Team,
I am using Lubuntu & have DRBL remote boot setup with open Ldap authentication. Currently there is no password expire policy. I want to set Password Policy so that user's password will expire after a month & they will get prompt to change their password.
Using PAM we can do it,... (1 Reply)
I need help. I have set a password policy. But I want to dis allow setting user name as password.
My policy is as below...
min length =8
min diff=2
min alpha=2
max repeats=2
dictionary= /usr/share/dict/words
Still user can set his username as password (i.e. Jackie1234).
Code tags for... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: powerAIX
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
dsenableroot
dsenableroot(8) BSD System Manager's Manual dsenableroot(8)NAME
dsenableroot -- enables or disables the root account.
SYNOPSIS
dsenableroot [-d] [-u username] [-p password] [-r rootPassword]
DESCRIPTION
dsenableroot sets the password for the root account if enabling the root user account. Otherwise, if disable [-d] is chosen, the root
account passwords are removed and the root user is disabled.
A list of flags and their descriptions:
-u username
Username of a user that has administrative privileges on this computer.
-p password
Password to use in conjunction with the specified username. If this is not specified, you will be prompted for entry.
-r rootPassword
Password to be used for the root account. If this is not specified for enabling, you will be prompted for entry.
EXAMPLES -dsenableroot
Your username will be used and you will be queried for both your password and the new root password to be set to enable the root
account.
-dsenableroot -d
Your username will be used and you will be queried for only your password to disable the root account.
-dsenableroot -u username -p userpassword -r rootpassword
The supplied arguments will be used to enable the root account.
-dsenableroot -d -u username -p userpassword
The supplied arguments will be used to disable the root account.
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