Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users LDAP Query - host allowed option Post 303020471 by CarloM on Friday 20th of July 2018 09:03:46 AM
Old 07-20-2018
Without knowing how access is controlled on the hosts, there's no way to say what you need to search for...
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Ldap dn chars allowed

Hi Is it possible to add the following to an ldif entry: dn=estmmartín i.e Note the charchter 'í' Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tom123
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl and Net::LDAP, objects and arrays query

Hi I'm not a programmer but am muddling through as best I can. I am trying to set up a PostSearchHook for Radiator (RADIUS server), that carries out an LDAP lookup, and, based on the string returned ("staff" or "student") in the "businessCategory" attribute, will set the $role to be either 40... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mikie
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

LDAP search query help

I would like to do an ldap search which looks for entries which do not actually have a certain attribute. Not that the attribute is Null, but where the attribute does not exist. Is this possible using ldapsearch? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dopple
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

CRON JOB SCHEDULER throwing "option not allowed error"

Hi All, Pardon me if this turns out to be a dumb question. But I am trying to schedule a cron job for a my script which takes input options. So an entry in crontab would be something like: 1 * * * * run_report.sh -o out.csv -m monthly -e somename@email.com > cron_output.log 2> cron_error.log... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: trueharsh
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Mail issue solution query- host map: lookup (domain): deferred

Hi all I had a mail issue earlier today where I was not receiving any emails from the servers of one of our clients. The mail queue just showed this: -----Q-ID----- --Size-- -----Q-Time----- ------------Sender/Recipient----------- o8S7eSpp020274* 5858 Tue Sep 28 10:42... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: notreallyhere
0 Replies

6. Red Hat

SMB can't locate LDAP on another host

Hi, We have a mail server which has Zimbra installed on it and a file server. Folks use the same login information they use to access their email to access the file server. So the file server is using the same LDAP server as the mail server. Couple days ago, at around 12 PM all of the sudden,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tezarin
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Ldap search query

Hi All, I have a existing Ldap query which take a HOME as variable and gives the result where i grep for a particular line. ldapsearch -h server_domain_name -p 389 -D "uid=user,ou=appadm,o=ent" -w PaB -b "ou=roles,o=ent" "cidx=$HOME" | grep -w "ent: xyz" Now i have 330K Homes in a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: posner
1 Replies

8. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

LDAP and AD Authentication Query

Hi Friends, I have below scenarios . dom1.test.com - LDAP dom2.test.com - AD Requirement is establish a trust relation between LDAP and AD server in such a way that if any user login on LDAP managed authentication server with dom1\username -> get authenticated by LDAP host ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shirishlnx
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Db2 query on other host

Hello, i need some help with a script. I made a script, which connect to different hosts to get some informations. But i got now some problems with getting informations of a database (db2) which is on a other host. I tried something like var=$(rsh HOST su - db2adm -c "db2 connect to database;... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Cyver
2 Replies

10. UNIX and Linux Applications

LDAP Group query

I need to write LDAP group query where I need to find if a particular user is a member of a 2 specific Groups. This is LDAP Novell edirectory implementation. Below are the details - ================ LDIF entry for OndotAPI group dn: cn=OndotAPI,ou=Groups,o=CNS changetype: add ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jhamaks
0 Replies
hosts.equiv(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						    hosts.equiv(4)

NAME
hosts.equiv - A file containing the names of remote systems and users that can execute commands on the local system SYNOPSIS
/etc/hosts.equiv DESCRIPTION
The /etc/hosts.equiv file and the .rhosts file in a user's home directory contain the names of remote hosts and users that are equivalent to the local host or user. An equivalent host or user is allowed to access a local nonsuperuser account with the rsh command or rcp com- mand, or to log in to such an account without having to supply a password. The /etc/hosts.equiv file specifies equivalence for an entire system, while a user's .rhosts file specifies equivalence between that user and remote users. The local user and the target system exist in the same area as the hosts.equiv file. The .rhosts file must be owned by the user in whose home directory the file is located, or by the superuser. It cannot be a symbolic link. Each line, or entry, in hosts.equiv or .rhosts may consist of the following: A blank line. A comment (begins with a #). A host name (a string of any printable characters except newline, #, or white space). In addition, an NIS netgroup can be specified in place of the host name. A host name followed by white space and a user name. In addition, an NIS netgroup can be specified in place of the host name, user name, or both. A single plus (+) character. This means any host and user. The keyword NO_PLUS. This keyword disallows the use of the plus character (+) to match any host or user on a system-wide basis. By default, the line containing this keyword is a comment. Remove the com- ment character to disallow the use of the plus character. Entries in the hosts.equiv file are either positive or negative. Positive entries allow access; negative entries deny access. The following entries are positive: host name user name +@netgroup In addition, the plus sign (+) can be used in place of the host name or user name. In place of the host name, it means any remote host. In place of the user name, it means any user. The following entries are negative: -host name -user name -@netgroup To be allowed access or denied access, a user's remote host name and user name must match an entry in hosts.equiv or .rhosts. The hosts.equiv file is searched first; if a match is found, the search ends. Therefore, the order in which the positive and negative entries appear is important. If a match is not found, .rhosts is searched if it exists in the user's home directory. A host name or user name can match an entry in hosts.equiv in one of the following ways: The official host name (not an alias) of the remote host matches a host name in hosts.equiv. The remote user name matches a user name in hosts.equiv. If a user name parameter is included in the hosts.equiv file, this means that the remote user is a trusted user and is allowed to rlogin to any local user account without being prompted for a password. Otherwise, if the user name parameter is not specified in the hosts.equiv file, the name of the remote user must match that of the local user. If the remote user name does not match a user name in hosts.equiv, the remote user name matches the local user name. CAUTIONS
For security purposes, the files /etc/hosts.equiv and .rhosts should exist and be readable and writable only by the owner, even if they are empty. EXAMPLES
The following are sample entries in an /etc/hosts.equiv file: # Allows access to users on host1 and host2 that have accounts on this host: host1 host2 # Allows access to user johnson on host1 to any local user: host1 johnson # Allows access to all users on systems specified in netgroup chicago +@chicago # Denies access to users specified in netgroup finance on host5 host5 -@finance # Allows access to all users on all systems except root + -root RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: rcp(1), rlogin(1), rsh(1) Functions: ruserok(3). Files: netgroup(4) Daemons: rlogind(8), rshd(8) delim off hosts.equiv(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:42 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy