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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to store the passwords securely and use in scripts? Post 303034023 by karumudi7 on Tuesday 16th of April 2019 09:55:09 PM
Old 04-16-2019
How to store the passwords securely and use in scripts?

I want to store the passwords in a global file, so that all the users will not use them to login but a process should use it. One way is to keep the passwords in a .ini file and execute the file in the start of the script and use that variable.

But with this, one can echo the variable in the script and see the value.

How are you guys storing, let's say production database password, and use that in the script while writing the database connect statements.
 

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osql(1) 							 FreeTDS Utilities							   osql(1)

NAME
osql - utility to test FreeTDS connections and queries SYNOPSIS
osql -S dsn -U username -P password [-I ini_dir] DESCRIPTION
osql is a diagnostic tool provided as part of FreeTDS. It is a Bourne shell script that checks and reports on your configuration files. If everything checks out OK, it invokes isql. osql works only with the isql that comes with unixODBC. OPTIONS
-S dsn the Data Source Name to which to connect, as known to odbc.ini. -U username database login name. -P password database password. -I ini_dir override odbc.ini file location. EXAMPLE
If you have an odbc.ini with a section like this: [myDSN] servername = myserver TDS_Version = 5.0 You would invoke osql as: osql -S myDSN [...] NOTES
If you can connect with "osql -S servername -U user -P passwd", your FreeTDS ODBC installation is working. osql guesses where unixODBC might look for its odbc.ini by examining the binary. This is not always an effective approach. If it doesn't work, you'll receive a report of candidate strings. Kindly pass along the output to help improve the guessing. If osql cannot intuit your odbc.ini directory, you can force the issue with the -I option. However, you're instructing osql what to test, not where unixODBC will eventually look. Your override is therefore only as good as you are. Look carefully at the error output before overriding. If you have suggestions for ways to make osql more useful as a diagnostic tool, please post them to the FreeTDS mailing list. HISTORY
osql first appeared in FreeTDS 0.65. AUTHORS
The osql utility was written by James K. Lowden doc 13 November 2011 osql(1)
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