04-16-2005
Depending on which OS, there are various more secure methods that what I'll suggest. Which OS?
Have you tried setting the group to be the default group of the daemon user, setting the owner to be the user you want to execute your ci/co operations and then making it a setuid (chmod 4550 <script>)?
Keith
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I'm a newbie to the Linux world.
I have a script that needs to run under "UserB". But I don't want to give out the password to UserB. Is there a way to setup the script to run as "UserB" when UserA runs it.
Thanks in advance for your assistance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mikey20
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
My shell script runs fine both as a cron job and when i issue it.
However, I wish to differentiate when it runs as a cron-job so the "echo" statements are not issued (they get mailed to me, which i don't want).
I tried checking $USER but since the cron was created in my user that does not... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sentinel
5 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Good morning. I am searching for "how-to"'s for some particular questions:
1. How to write a script in HP-UX 11.
2. How to schedule a script.
3. How to "call" scripts from the original script.
4. How to su to another user from within a script.
This is the basics of what the... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: instant000
15 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a shell script file which is set to access permission 000. When I login as root (sudo su) and try to run this script, I am getting the Permission denied error. I have read somewhere that root admin user can execute any kind of permission script. Then why this behavior? However, I can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to use su (as myuser) to force another user (theuser) to run a shell script (thescript.sh):
su theuser -c /home/theuser/thescript.sh
However I'm running this from another script, and it is asking for theuser's password. I would rather avoid displaying it in the file (using echo... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: asdfgg
2 Replies
6. AIX
Hi All,
Currently our application is running on the server having AIX 5.3 OS.
What we intend to do is to run a shell script owned by another user and needs to be run as that particular user.
I was trying to create a shell script using the su command before running the actual script (which... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: acoomer
4 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi , we got autosys for scheduling our jobs. Autosys user logs in to the Linux box and need to execute a shell script. problem here is user requires admin privileges on database to complete the task. Since scheduling is maintained by different team I don't want autosys user to have admin privileges... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rush143
1 Replies
8. Solaris
Hi All,
I have problem running a command with another user who has no login shell
the os is solaris 10
i am root and doing the following:
su user -s /bin/bash "ls"
no output .. no error messages
if su - user i got No directory
Please use CODE tags as required by forum... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BF_DEV
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Linux System having all Perl, Python, PHP (and Ruby) installed
From a Shell script, can call a Perl, Python, PHP (or Ruby ?) file
eg
eg
a Shell script run in a case statement call to run a php file, also Perl or/and Python file???
Like
#!/usr/bin/bash
....
....
case $INPUT_STRING... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hoyanet
1 Replies
CHMOD(1) General Commands Manual CHMOD(1)
NAME
chmod - change access mode for files
SYNOPSIS
chmod [-R] mode file ...
OPTIONS
-R Change hierarchies recursively
EXAMPLES
chmod 755 file # Owner: rwx Group: r-x Others: r-x
chmod +x file1 file2
# Make file1 and file2 executable
chmod a-w file # Make file read only
chmod u+s file # Turn on SETUID for file
chmod -R o+w dir # Allow writing for all files in dir
DESCRIPTION
The given mode is applied to each file in the file list. If the -R flag is present, the files in a directory will be changed as well. The
mode can be either absolute or symbolic. Absolute modes are given as an octal number that represents the new file mode. The mode bits are
defined as follows:
4000 Set effective user id on execution to file's owner id
2000 Set effective group id on execution to file's group id
0400 file is readable by the owner of the file
0200 writeable by owner
0100 executable by owner
0070 same as above, for other users in the same group
0007 same as above, for all other users
Symbolic modes modify the current file mode in a specified way. The form is:
[who] op permissions { op permissions ...} {, [who] op ... }
The possibilities for who are u, g, o, and a, standing for user, group, other and all, respectively. If who is omitted, a is assumed, but
the current umask is used. The op can be +, -, or =; + turns on the given permissions, - turns them off; = sets the permissions exclu-
sively for the given who. For example g=x sets the group permissions to --x.
The possible permissions are r, w, x; which stand for read, write, and execute; s turns on the set effective user/group id bits. s only
makes sense with u and g; o+s is harmless.
SEE ALSO
ls(1), chmod(2).
CHMOD(1)