Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers [Tip] Housekeeping Tasks Made Easy - User Home directories and Leftover Files Post 303037285 by Neo on Monday 29th of July 2019 06:19:49 AM
Old 07-29-2019
I run a similar, but different, script like this to scan an enter web file system and check ownership and permissions of each file and directory in that part of the filesystem, as a security measure.

When filesystems are secure, it is difficult for malicious code from the web to write to the file system using flaws in the web code.
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Batch delete specific folder from user home directories

Hi! Need your help. How can I delete the cache folder of multiple user home directories via automatically executed shell script on a Mac OS X Server? Example: The userdata are stored on a Xsan Volume like this: /Volumes/Xsan/userdata/mike /Volumes/Xsan/userdata/peter... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nipodrom
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to verify all user home directories are writable only by their owner

Hi, I'm currently working on my school assignment on how to verify that all user home directories are writable only by their owner on Solaris with VMware. But I'm not sure why my codes take a very long time to display the results. My friend says it's the `su - $i -c "ls -ld" 2> /dev/null | grep... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: NuuBe
1 Replies

3. Homework & Coursework Questions

How to verify all user home directories are writable only by their owner

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: Need to verify that all user home directories are writable only by their owner on Solaris. The script posted below is workable but it is taking a long time to display the results, and I don't seem to be able to fix it or find any... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: NuuBe
6 Replies

4. Homework & Coursework Questions

i made this tasks. and i need some explenation or just remake my code.

Hello i hope this post is ok! and i hope that i get the point of rules :) i made this tasks by my self but few of them arent working.. and i dont know why!? u think u could help me? to give me some reasons why dont they work.. and remake my code that will work? hope to get answer soon! ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: eclip
9 Replies

5. Solaris

How to unmount user home directories ??

I've allocated /exports for all user directories by making separate directories under /exports..... :rolleyes: now i need to unmount /exports . But i'm unable to do that.. How can i troubleshoot this issue. Thanks in advance:D (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vamshigvk475
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

New user to own files made by root?

Hi, when I installed debian 8, all files are created and owned by root, when I add new user, for example marco, he can't create directory or change files created by root. I tried with ftp, permission denied. so, I am interested how to grant to user marco ownership of all files in the system so... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: alanford
5 Replies
DUREP(1)						    Disk Usage Report Generator 						  DUREP(1)

NAME
durep - disk usage report generator SYNOPSIS
durep [OPTIONS]... [DIRECTORY] DESCRIPTION
durep creates disk usage reports with bar graphs, allowing one to easily deduce which directories are using the most space. Although durep can produce text output similar to du, its real power lies in the ability to store reports in a file, which can then be viewed as a web page with the supplied cgi script. OPTIONS
Options are grouped into three distinct sections. Text Output Options These options are for controlling the text report output. -td, --text-depth=N Limit text report on directories to depth N. No directories below this level will be shown in the report. -hs, --hide-size=N[bkmg] Do not display entries using N Bytes/KB/MB/GB or less (default Bytes). This is to reduce clutter in the reports. It allows you to remove small files from the text report. -sd, --show-date Display the modification date of the file or directory in the report. -ns, --nosort Do not sort results by size. Leaves results in the order in which they were scanned, which is highly dependent on the file system. -q, --quiet Do not produce text output. This stops the creation of a text report, and is useful when you are only interested in generating a save-file for use with the web report. File Options These options control load and save files. -sf, --save-file=FILE Save the results of the scan into this file. This can be loaded for a text report, but is generally used by the cgi script to display web reports. The filename should end in .ds (it is appended if it does not). -lf, --load-file=FILE Load the results of a scan from this file. This takes the place of scanning a directory. Inclusion options (described below) will not take effect if this option is used. -d, --desc=DESCRIPTION Give a description to be stored in the save-file. This is displayed on the web report summary page. -c, --collate==DIR Collate the save-files in the given directory. This creates a durep.cds file, which is used by the cgi script to manage and display save-files. See Web Reports section below for more detail. Inclusion Options These options control which directories and files should be included in the report. -f, --files Do not descend into sub-directories, only report files. -x, --one-file-system Do not traverse file systems. This is similar to the -x option for du, allowing easy checking of an entire file system such as /. -cp, --collapse-path=PATTERN Hide entries below paths that match PATTERN. This allows you to conceal the contents of certain directories in the report. You may wish perhaps to show home directories in a report but not show their content in which case you could use the option "-cp '/home'". -ep, --exclude-path=PATTERN Ignore paths that match PATTERN. This works in a similar manner to "-cp" above, except it excludes the directory from the scan itself. -cf, --coalesce-files==N[bkmg] Coalesces entries for files below the given size into one entry. This is useful for reducing clutter in reports. WEB REPORTS
Since version 0.9, durep no longer directly generates html files for its web reports. It now uses a cgi script that reads data from save- files. The script will handle multiple save-files, potentially from multiple hosts, so you can consolidate your reports into one place. Copying save-files from other hosts is left as an exercise for the reader. It is necessary to collate the save-files before viewing them via the cgi script. This process creates the file "durep.cds" which contains meta-data about all of the save-files. From this a summary page is shown where you can choose which report you wish to view. The collation must be done any time a save-file is added or overwritten. The cgi-script has some configurable variables at the top. These tell the script where to look for the css file and the graphic used for the bar graphs. There are also options to set whether the modification date, and/or the options used to create the save-file should be shown. These are both set to 1 by default. As always, you should take care when installing the cgi script. I've done my best, but I make no guarantees about its security. It would probably be unwise to allow this script to be accessed from the Internet at large. EXAMPLES
1. durep -td 2 This would print the directory tree starting from the current directory to depth 2. 2. durep -f /var/spool/mail This might be useful for keeping a check on the mail directory. The "-f" switch tells durep to just scan files and not descend into directories. 3. durep -x -cp "/(etc|usr/share)" -ep "/var" -sf /var/lib/durep/root.ds / This more complicated version does the following. It scans the root file system only, collapses the contents of any paths beginning /etc or /usr/share and skips the contents of the /var directory. It saves the output of this report into the file /var/lib/durep/root.ds. No text report is produced. 4. durep -lf /var/lib/durep/root.ds -hs 1m This reads the save-file /var/lib/durep/root.ds and produces a text report from it, hiding any files below 1 megabyte. 5. durep -c /var/lib/durep This collates any save-files in /var/lib/durep. SEE ALSO
du(1), perl(1) AUTHOR
Damian Kramer <psiren@hibernaculum.net> durep version 0.9 2012-05-12 DUREP(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:36 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy