Hi All,
How can i give permission for a specific user ( eg. admin ) ?
I tried with chmod admin+r prog.sh
which doesnt work.
Is there any way i can specify a user's name and give the permission?
Thanks in advance.
Saneesh Joseph. (1 Reply)
Hi,
In a Unix Server when i 'su' to my name and type in crontab it says " You are not authorised......".
Pls suggest what to do? How do i give myself permission so that I can schedule a cron. (2 Replies)
I want to Kill a process without using kill command as i don't have privileges to kill the process. I know the pid and i am using Linux 2.6.9 OS. (6 Replies)
I want to give tester only the account tester to view the file /var/mail/root nobody else but him and of course the owner root w/o changing the permisions of /var/mail/root -rw-------.
$ cat /var/mail/root
cat: /var/mail/root: Permission denied (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to provide "/usr/bin/kill -HUP" command to one of the user using sudo file. I have configured sudo as following:
$cat /etc/sudoers
User_Alias AA=conadmin
Cmnd_Alias KILL1=/usr/bin/kill -HUPAA ALL=NOPASSWD:KILL1
When I login as the user and execute 'sudo -l' command, it... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have enabled the Apache webserver on my machime.
Apache root directory is /etc/apache2 and the user in which the web server is configured is webservd,I guess.
I have another user called perf.
Under perf user there is /export/home/perf/v9 directory.
I want to give the OS user of... (3 Replies)
I'm on AIX. I have triggered an infinite loop process (to keep looking for input file availability for further process). At present only I can kill the process.
In case my colleague wants to kill the process for any reason, how do I provide permission to others to kill the process?
Currently... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krishmaths
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
kill
kill(1) General Commands Manual kill(1)Name
kill - send a signal to a process
Syntax
kill [-sig] processid...
kill -l
Description
The command sends the TERM (terminate, 15) signal to the specified processes. If a signal name or number preceded by `-' is given as first
argument, that signal is sent instead of terminate. For further information, see
The terminate signal kills processes that do not catch the signal; `kill -9 ...' is a sure kill, as the KILL (9) signal cannot be caught.
By convention, if process number 0 is specified, all members in the process group (that is, processes resulting from the current login) are
signaled. This works only if you use and not if you use To kill a process it must either belong to you or you must be superuser.
The process number of an asynchronous process started with `&' is reported by the shell. Process numbers can also be found by using It
allows job specifiers ``%...'' so process ID's are not as often used as arguments. See for details.
Options-l Lists signal names. The signal names are listed by `kill -l', and are as given in /usr/include/signal.h, stripped of the common SIG
prefix.
See Alsocsh(1), ps(1), kill(2), sigvec(2)kill(1)