Hi all,
How can I check if a particular user id belongs to a group?
(ie. how to check if the current user `whoami` is part of the a certain group? do i use the group name of group id?)
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
I need to find all the files that have group Read or Write permission or files that have user write permission.
This is what I have so far:
find . -exec ls -l {} \; | awk '/-...rw..w./ {print $1 " " $3 " " $4 " " $9}'
It shows me all files where group read = true, group write = true... (5 Replies)
While doing a "little" clean up job, i noticed something weird...
A ls -altr of my / showed this:
drwxr-xr-x 1549 johcham grands 102400 Jan 28 13:13 home
How can a user become the owner / modify the group of my /home??? any thoughts? Can i chown this back to bin:bin (i think that... (2 Replies)
I have setup a group quota for better disk usage.
What i am doing is to setup a quota with Samba share. I created user1,user2 and group project1 which belongs to /home/project1 dir. Quota is implemented on project1 group to write 100 MB on this share and This is working fine if a user1 and user2... (3 Replies)
How would I find out who the group openers is of a file? For example:
> ls -l myfile
-rwxr-xr-x 1 myronp hawks 20125 Oct 20 20:50 myfile
How do I return just hawks. I could do this with a series of cut or awk, but is there a more direct way.
The ls -g is better, but still... (1 Reply)
Hi,
In the following output you can see the the user "richard" is a member on the team/group "developers":
# id richard
uid=10247(richard) gid=100361(developers) groups=100361(developers),10053(testers)
but in the following details of the said group (developers), the said user... (3 Replies)
I need help with a tcl code. I have a variable "myIP" which reads IP address from socket. How do I use regex to find out if it belongs to a group for e.g., 50.65.75.240/28 or 50.65.75.128/25 etc. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ampak
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
mknetid
MKNETID(8) Reference Manual MKNETID(8)NAME
mknetid - generate data for netid map
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/yp/mknetid [ -q ] [ -h hosts ] [ -p passwd ] [ -g group ] [ -d domain ] [ -n netid ]
/usr/lib/yp/mknetid --version
DESCRIPTION
mknetid generates the netid.byname NIS map from the contents of the group(5), passwd(5), hosts(5) and netid files. It checks for multiple
entrys of netids and warn for them or filters them out. It is only called by /var/yp/Makefile when rebuilding the NIS map.
OPTIONS -q This flag turns on 'quiet' mode, don't print a warning message when finding an duplicate netid entry.
-h hosts
The -h flag can be used to specify the use of another hosts file than the default /etc/hosts.
-p passwd
The -p flag can be used to specify the use of another passwd file than the default /etc/passwd.
-g group
The -g flag can be used to specify the use of another group file than the default /etc/group.
-n netid
The -n flag can be used to specify the use of another netid file than the default /etc/netid.
-d domain
The mknetid command uses the system domainname by default. If it is not set or you whish to override it, you must use the -d parame-
ter.
--version
Prints the version number
FILES
/etc/group groups file
/etc/hosts hosts database
/etc/netid netname database
/etc/passwd password file
SEE ALSO passwd(8), group(5), hosts(5), passwd(5)AUTHOR
mknetid was written by Thorsten Kukuk <kukuk@suse.de>.
YP Server August 2001 MKNETID(8)