Hello everyone,
I need to make a OS full backup. I am using the vdump command but first, I must to switch to the single-user mode.
I am working on a Compaq Tru64 Unix V4.0G.
Please, could somebody tell me which is/are the commands to do it?
I appreciate your help
Gastón (1 Reply)
I am writing a script that has some tasks that must be run as root, then set of tasks to be run as normal user, then again as root.
is there a way to switch between users in a script?
any other alternatives?
thx (3 Replies)
Running the following shell script,
#!/usr/bin/ksh
set -x
swdofile=/opt/SWDO_IN1V01P001_1.csv
USER='myusername'
PASSWD='mypassword'
HOST='myhostname'
ftp -n $HOST << SCRIPT
quote USER $USER
quote PASS $PASSWD
su - BRA -c put $swdofile
quit
SCRIPT
exit 0
but not managing to get the... (1 Reply)
Good day Guys!!!
I am currently making a script in AIX, the script runs a SAS job, the owner of the script is the root, but the SAS jobs cannot be run by the root, as it should be run by a user 'sasia'. But inside the script, root creates a logfile, so what I need is just to su to sasia for the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a shell script in which I need to switch to another user and execute some commands and then come back to the original user.
To make it more clear -
I have to log in as user root then 'su' to jag - execute a script called backup.sh and then logout and come back to root again..
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
what is the use of the double quotes and !! in the following code segment:
su - user1 << ""!! > /dev/null 2>&1
echo "welcome user1"
EOF
!!
also what is the difference between below:
su - user1 << ""!! > /dev/null 2>&1 and
su - $USER << ""!!!> /dev/null 2>&1.
Note: $USER =... (1 Reply)
Hi,
what is the use of the double quotes and !! in the following code segment:
su - user1 << ""!! > /dev/null 2>&1
echo "welcome user1"
EOF
!!
also what is the difference between below:
su - user1 << ""!! > /dev/null 2>&1 and
su - $USER << ""!!!> /dev/null 2>&1.
Note: $USER =... (2 Replies)
I need to do a switch user in an automated mode and do a ftp using that switched id.
Scenario:
initial login xx.
switch to user-yy without manually entering the password.
ftp some files from user yy to another user zz - automated mode.
Can any unix experts can help me for my above query? (1 Reply)
I need to do a switch user in an automated mode and do a ftp using that switched id.
Scenario:
initial login xx.
switch to user-yy without manually entering the password.
ftp some files from user yy to another user zz - automated mode.
Can any unix experts can help me for my above query? (9 Replies)
Whenever i switch from root to another user, by doing su - user, it takes me to home directory of user. This is very annoying as i want to be in same dir to run different commands as root sometimes and sometimes as normal user.
How to fix this? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: syncmaster
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
pam_issue
PAM_ISSUE(8) Linux-PAM Manual PAM_ISSUE(8)NAME
pam_issue - PAM module to add issue file to user prompt
SYNOPSIS
pam_issue.so [noesc] [issue=issue-file-name]
DESCRIPTION
pam_issue is a PAM module to prepend an issue file to the username prompt. It also by default parses escape codes in the issue file similar
to some common getty's (using x format).
Recognized escapes:
d
current day
l
name of this tty
m
machine architecture (uname -m)
machine's network node hostname (uname -n)
o
domain name of this system
release number of operating system (uname -r)
current time
s
operating system name (uname -s)
u
number of users currently logged in
U
same as u except it is suffixed with "user" or "users" (eg. "1 user" or "10 users")
v
operating system version and build date (uname -v)
OPTIONS
noesc
Turns off escape code parsing.
issue=issue-file-name
The file to output if not using the default.
MODULE TYPES PROVIDED
Only the auth module type is provided.
RETURN VALUES
PAM_BUF_ERR
Memory buffer error.
PAM_IGNORE
The prompt was already changed.
PAM_SERVICE_ERR
A service module error occurred.
PAM_SUCCESS
The new prompt was set successfully.
EXAMPLES
Add the following line to /etc/pam.d/login to set the user specific issue at login:
auth optional pam_issue.so issue=/etc/issue
SEE ALSO pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(7)AUTHOR
pam_issue was written by Ben Collins <bcollins@debian.org>.
Linux-PAM Manual 06/04/2011 PAM_ISSUE(8)