Normally a home directory is fully owned by the user, and you can do
The -h is necessary because by default chown follows a symbolic link. Imagine the user has a symlink mypasswd -> /etc/passwd ...
If you want to be safe then use "find" to only change owner to "username" if current owner is "olduser".
Both chown and find -user take a numeric UID or a username (that they automatically map to a UID).
This User Gave Thanks to MadeInGermany For This Post:
Im trying to simply share a directory on one unix server and mount that share on a different unix server.
There is no "share" command like on sun. What is the command to create a share on HP-UX? (2 Replies)
Sometimes you get the tiger...but sometimes he get you and this latest home network “project” of mine has gnawed on me pretty badly. Perhaps you can offer some technical help. It will be heartily appreciated.
I have a small home network initially comprising two computers running Windows... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Im running 32-bit solaris on sparc. We have a NAS(Network attached drive), with its IP address, username and password.
I'd like to be able to mount it on the solaris machine, and unmount it.
The best possibility would be able to mount it simulataneously on 2 or more systems.
Please... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I have two machines. M1 and M2 and having a generic id catadm, these two machines having common mount of /u/catadm directory.
with this setup, ssh autologin is failing for me and asking me to enter password when i try autologin using this generc id from M1 to M2
catadm-M1$ ssh... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I recently added a disk on a solaris 9 and I wanted to make it accessible for another machine, using the same name
here is what i did :
On the machine holding the internal disk
in vfstab i added the line
/dev/dsk/c1t1d0s4 /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s4 /SHARED2 ufs 2 yes ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am having some NFS directory consistency problems with the below setup on a local (192.) network:
1. Different permissions (chmod) for the same NFS dir are reflected on different clients.
2. (more serious) an NFS dir created on client1 cannot be accessed on client2; this applies to some... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cosmojetz
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
radtest
RADTEST(1) FreeRADIUS Daemon RADTEST(1)NAME
radtest - send packets to a RADIUS server, show reply
SYNOPSIS
radtest [-d raddb_directory] [-t pap/chap/mschap] [-x ] [-4 ] [-6 ] user password radius-server nas-port-number secret [ppphint] [nasname]
DESCRIPTION
radtest is a frontend to radclient(1). It generates a list of attribute/value pairs based on the command line arguments, and feeds these
into radclient. It's a fast and convenient way to test a radius server.
OPTIONS -d raddb_directory
The directory that contains the RADIUS dictionary files. Defaults to /etc/raddb.
-t pap/chap/mschap/eap-md5
Choose the authentiction method to use. e.g. "-t pap", "-t chap", "-t mschap", or "-t eap-md5",. Defaults to "pap". Using EAP-MD5
requires that the "radeapclient" program is installed.
-x Enables debugging output for the RADIUS client.
-4 Use NAS-IP-Address for the NAS address (default)
-6 Use NAS-IPv6-Address for the NAS address (default)
user Username to send.
password
Password of the user.
radius-server
Hostname or IP address of the radius server. Optionally, you may specify a port by appending :port
nas-port-number
The value of the NAS-Port attribute. Is an integer between 0 and 2^31, and it really doesn't matter what you put here. 10 will do
fine.
secret The shared secret for this client.
ppphint
If you put an integer > 0 here, radtest (or actually radclient) will add the attribute Framed-Protocol = PPP to the request packet.
nasname
If present, this will be resolved to an IP address and added to the request packet as the NAS-IP-Address attribute. If you don't
specify it, the local hostname of the system will be used.
SEE ALSO radiusd(8), radclient(1).
AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl.
5 April 2010 RADTEST(1)