A buddy of mine bought an older RS/6000 CAD workstation runing AIX to learn on, and had me put it on his LAN at home. I used smit to change the hostname/IP. After a reboot I try to login, and get a message saying that DTMessage cannot start, and gives a changed hostname as one of the possible... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I am trying to get the authentication logs of FTP,Telnet,SSH,inetd from the syslog file. But my output for every type of authentications - success & failure keep differing everytime i view them.
The output does not show the priority code (emerg, or 0, in any case). How do I get the... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I am new to Solaris.
I am using stand alone Solaris 10.0 for test/study purpose and connecting to internet via an ADSL modem which has DHCP server. My Solaris is working on VMWare within winXP. My WinXP and Solaris connects to internet by the same ADSL modem via its DHCP at the same... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
So we added a new HP-UX 11.31 machine. Copied OS via Ignite-UX (DVD)over from this machine called machine_a. It was supposed to be named machine_c. And it is when you log in...however when I'm in the ILO console before logging in, it says:
It should say:
What gives? And how do... (4 Replies)
Hello, I'm configuring sendmail on an AIX 7.1 server (bos.net.tcp.client 7.1.1.15).
I've gotten sendmail to send mail through our Novell GroupWise server, so that mail from a user on the server appears to come from their GroupWise account, and replies to the email would go to their GroupWise... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I am trying to exchange hostname and IP address of two AIX machines.
But i am confused as how to change it ?
do i need to use "smitty mktcpip" or "smitty tcpip" ?
what is the difference between smitty mktcpip and smitty tcpip ?
Also anymore steps to follow or just updating... (3 Replies)
Dear Community,
I have just registered to the forum, and I am very glad I have joined.
I have a question about the syslog logging facility.
I am doing a security assessment for some servers that run on AIX. The admins have set up a syslog server and the following parameters are enabled in... (8 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a requirement where I need to get all https URL's under config file SIT. example :
config environment="SIT"
<URL>https://yahoo.com</URL>
There are 100 files.xml and I need to search every .xml file and get URL's.
I tried with below command , but I'm getting URL's from... (9 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I am trying to configure AIX 6.1 using syslogd to send syslog event to syslog server configured on RHEL. However, RHEL never receives the events.
I have tried to redirect the syslog event on AIX to a local file and successful. Only forwarding to remote server fails.
Firewall... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: michael_hoang
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
hosts.equiv
HOSTS.EQUIV(5) Linux Programmer's Manual HOSTS.EQUIV(5)NAME
/etc/hosts.equiv - list of hosts and users that are granted "trusted" r command access to your system
DESCRIPTION
The hosts.equiv file allows or denies hosts and users to use the r-commands (e.g. rlogin, rsh or rcp) without supplying a password.
The file uses the following format:
[ + | - ] [hostname] [username]
The hostname is the name of a host which is logically equivalent to the local host. Users logged into that host are allowed to access like-
named user accounts on the local host without supplying a password. The hostname may be (optionally) preceded by a plus (+) sign. If the
plus sign is used alone it allows any host to access your system. You can expicitly deny access to a host by preceding the hostname by a
minus (-) sign. Users from that host must always supply a password. For security reasons you should always use the FQDN of the hostname
and not the short hostname.
The username entry grants a specific user access to all user accounts (except root) without supplying a password. That means the user is
NOT restricted to like-named accounts. The username may be (optionally) preceded by a plus (+) sign. You can also explicitly deny access to
a specific user by preceding the username with a minus (-) sign. This says that the user is not trusted no matter what other entries for
that host exist.
Netgroups can be specified by preceding the netgroup by an @ sign.
Be extremely careful when using the plus (+) sign. A simple typographical error could result in a standalone plus sign. A standalone plus
sign is a wildcard character that means "any host"!
FILES
/etc/hosts.equiv
NOTE
Some systems will only honor the contents of this file when it has owner root and no write permission for anybody else. Some exceptionally
paranoid systems even require that there be no other hard links to the file.
SEE ALSO rhosts(5), rshd(8), rlogind(8)Linux 1995-01-29 HOSTS.EQUIV(5)