Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers AIX Administrator - User Profile Management Post 302981825 by SteveCPayne on Tuesday 20th of September 2016 06:27:22 AM
Old 09-20-2016
AIX Administrator - User Profile Management

Good afternoon all,

Was un-sure on where to post this so I thought I would use this topic...

I was wondering what best practice people use for the deletion of user profiles on AIX systems?

At the moment, I currently don't delete any user profiles, they are just disabled as they own files. I was wondering what practice others follow?

I was thinking:
  • Create a default owner profile
  • Transferred users owned objects to default owner
  • Delete profile

Any other suggestions?

Last edited by rbatte1; 09-20-2016 at 12:25 PM.. Reason: Formatted list
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Auditing User administrator

Background: I a trying to audit user administration on a AIX box. I am trying to make sure that any changes made by the System administrator to the user accounts (Add users, changing their attributes or deleting users) are accompanied by authorization i.e. the system admin does not make any... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gladiator
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

User Profile

Hi Guys, Im really new with this stuff...could anybody help to guide me ...how do i change/edit user profiile ? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gagasan_makmur
2 Replies

3. Infrastructure Monitoring

trap in etc/profile and user .profile

Hello I really wonder what's trap in etc/profile and in each user .profile. I try to google for it but I think I have no luck. Mostly hit is SNMP traps which I think it is not the same thing. I want to know ... 1. What's a "trap 2 3" means and are there any other value I can set... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Smith
4 Replies

4. Solaris

add administrator user to system

Hello I have a new job and I need change the last user administrator, I dont know if is easier change some things about this user or add my user in the group with every permission, how can I do it. I dont know which is the group. I think is no only useradd en after modify /etc/passwd. Tank... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: cata
14 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Help on .profile for AIX

I am application admin. I used many ( more than 12 user accounts for administering diff application). My platform is AIX. My question is: I have a big list of aliases ( more than 50) I want to know is there any way that I can put all these aliases in one text and add the path into my .profile so... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: firestar
4 Replies

6. AIX

User/group management in AIX

We have an environment of around 50 AIX LPARs. We use scripts for user and group account management but it is starting to get unwieldy to document and manage the accounts. It would be doable with scripts but before we dedicate resources to that, I was wondering if there is any product that you... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wilford
2 Replies

7. Hardware

How to find Power Management Profile on CLI for Blade?

Hi, I have set the power management profile on a Blade to Max Performance. Is there and command I can run to check this when the machine is up and running Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: eeisken
2 Replies

8. AIX

AIX user administration - queue management

Dear All Please how can I create a user which would be only able to manage queue printer like creating, release, hold etc a printer queue. He would for example be able to enter commands like : - lpstat -pprintqueue where printqueue is an existing queue on the server - enable printqueue... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sobnc
0 Replies
LIST-DESKTOP-PROFILES(1)				      General Commands Manual					  LIST-DESKTOP-PROFILES(1)

NAME
list-desktop-profiles - list known profiles that meet given criteria SYNOPSIS
list-desktop-profiles [OPTION] DESCRIPTION
As the number of .listing files holding metadata grows, trying to find out which profiles are present/meet certain criteria becomes increasingly unpleasant. This script remedies that allowing you to just list your criteria, and outputting all profiles meeting those cri- teria. By default it will just output the lines from the .listing files for each (matching) profile, but you can specifying a formatstring to fancy up the output. OPTIONS
-n <regexp>, --name <regexp> Limit shown profiles to those for which the name (1st) field of the profile description needs matches the given regular expression. -k <regexp>, --kind <regexp> Limit shown profiles to those for which the kind (2nd) field of the profile description needs matches the given regular expression. -l <regexp>, --location <regexp> Limit shown profiles to those for which the location (3th) field of the profile description needs matches the given regular expres- sion. -p <comparison>, --precedence <comparison> Limit shown profiles to those for which the precedence (4th) field of the profile description succeeds the given comparison. In the comparison you can Use 'gt' for 'greater then', 'lt' for 'less then', 'ge' for 'greater then or equal to', 'le' for 'less then or equal to', 'eq' for 'equal to', and 'ne' for 'not equal to'. (NOTE: empty precedence-field, is lowest possible precedence) -r <regexp>, --requirement <regexp> Limit shown profiles to those for which the requirements (5th) field of the profile description needs matches the given regular expression. -c <regexp>, --comment <regexp>, --description <regexp> Limit shown profiles to those for which the comment (6th) field of the profile description needs matches the given regular expres- sion. -u <username>, --user <username> Limit shown profiles to those for which the given user meets the requirements. (NOTE: doesn't always give correct results! Results might be wrong when using shell command requirements that depend on the users environment. Or when 'group $USER' gives a different result as 'group' executed as $USER, which can happen when adding groups through pam_group). -d <dir>, --directory <dir> Also use .listing files found in the given directory. This option can be used multiple times to add more then 1 additional directory -e <formatstring>, --entry-format <formatstring> Show profile information according to the specified format spring (instead of just echoing the profile-line). The format string may use the following variables: NAME, LOCATION, PRECEDENCE, REQUIREMENTS, KIND, DESCRIPTION, FILE; the first 6 of these refer to the corresponding field, the last refers to the .listing file the profile is in. (e.g. '$FILE_$NAME - $DESCRIPTION'). Any characters that are interpreted specially by the shell should be escaped. -s <fieldname>|<fieldnumber>, --sort-key <fieldname>|fieldnumber Sort output on the requested field (fieldname is one of name, kind, location, precedence, requirements, or description; fieldnumbers run from 1-6). EXAMPLES
list-desktop-profiles -k KDE -s precedence -u user1 List all kde-profiles that will be activated for user1 in order of precedence. list-desktop-profiles -k 'KDE|GCONF' List all kde and gnome profiles. list-desktop-profiles -p 'gt 50' List all profiles with a precedence value greater then 50. ENVIRONMENT
NAME_FILTER, LOCATION_FILTER, PRECEDENCE_FILTER, REQUIREMENT_FILTER, KIND_FILTER, DESCRIPTION_FILTER Can be used to specify the default regular expressions and comparisons. Default to empty. OUR_USER Set the user for which the requirements need to be met. Defaults to unset. EXTRA_LISTINGS Can be used to specify a (space separated) list of extra .listing files to include. Defaults to empty FORMAT Can be used to specify the default format string. By default it will output the profile-line from the .listing file. SORT_KEY Can be used to specify the default sort-key (= field number). Defaults to 1 FILES
/etc/desktop-profiles/*.listing - Files containing the metadata about installed profiles /etc/default/desktop-profiles - File containing default settings for this script (by way of the environment variables above) BUGS
The '-u <username>' is not guaranteed to work correctly for shell command requirements. Particulary this will give incorrect results if the shell command depends on some state of the user environment. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Bart Cornelis <cobaco@skolelinux.no>. SEE ALSO
desktop-profiles(7), update-profile-cache(1), profiles-manager(1) desktop-profiles November 11, 2004 LIST-DESKTOP-PROFILES(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:31 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy