02-15-2006
These instructions are for HP-UX, not Digital Unix. Sorry, I don't know Digital Unix.
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1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I've forgotten root password on one of Solaris machines, i searched in forumes to find a similar case but there's no proceudre here to reinintialize root password, cause most of related commands & even single user mode needs root password that i don't have.
Any solution would be helpful.
--rgrds,... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikk
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2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello ...
I lost my password root !
maybe someone can to help me to log in HP_UX,
i started the server in " Singel - User" and i changed my
password to new password and it`s not working ..
what i must to do ??? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: yanly
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3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I have recently become the sys adm guy for our unix systems here for my shop. I have a pretty good understanding of the system, but there is just some stuff that I don't know. Right now one of those things is to recover the password for a unix system.
I know that there is a way that you can use... (2 Replies)
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4. Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
We have quite a few threads about this subject. I have collected some of them and arranged them by the OS which is primarily discussed in the thread. That is because the exact procedure depends on the OS involved. What's more, since you often need to interact with the boot process, the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
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5. Linux
wish to know how to access root password it root password is forgotten in linux (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: wojtyla
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6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I'm attempting to blank out the root user password on a machine that we have forgotten the password for. I have been using the advice posted on this site to boot from CDROM in single user mode, then mounting the root slice and editing the /etc/shadow file. Each time I save the shadow file and... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gonzotonka
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7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
This is a common question im sure... I bought a RS/6000 Model 240. Aix 4.3.3 loaded. No root password was supplied to me, but I do have the install media (4 disks). I want to drop into maint mode. So I place the cd into the drive, restart the box ( by pressing the power button, since i do not have... (3 Replies)
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8. SCO
I dont have the cds, what can i do? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sopapa
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9. SCO
Hi All,
It seems that someone in my organization had changed the root password
on a SCO Openserver 6 box.
Apparently, there are no emergency boot disks. I think they were never
created because there is no floppy drive on the machine. I've tried to
use the Openserver 6 media installations... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gseyforth
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10. Solaris
Hi All
Hope it's okay to post on this sub-forum, couldn't find a better place
I've got a 480R running solaris 8 with veritas volume manager managing all filesystems, including an encapsulated root disk (I believe the root disk is encapsulated as one of the root mirror disks has an entry under... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sunnyd76
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DDIS(5) File Formats Manual DDIS(5)
Name
DDIS - Digital Data Interchange Syntax / ISO ASN.1 (DDIS/ASN.1) files
Description
DDIS/ASN.1 files conform to Digital's Digital Data Interchange Syntax. DDIS conforms to syntaxes that can be defined within the specifica-
tions of International Standards Organization Abstract Syntax Notation One (ISO ASN.1), but is not itself an implementation of full ISO
ASN.1 syntax.
DDIS/ASN.1 files conform to the DDIS/ASN.1 syntax. The DDIS/ASN.1 syntax is itself used to define other syntaxes. The following are among
the syntaxes that are subsets of DDIS/ASN.1:
DDIF Digital Document Interchange Format
DTIF Digital Table Interchange Format
DOTS Data Object Transport Syntax
Files that conform to one of the DDIS/ASN.1 family of syntaxes are described as DDIS/ASN.1 files. More specifically, however, the files
are typed according to a particular DDIS/ASN.1 syntax. For example, a file that conforms to the DDIF syntax is a DDIF file, and is identi-
fied by the command as a ddis/ddif file. The command includes the string ddis/ as a part of its output if a file belongs in the DDIS fam-
ily.
See Also
ctod(1), dtoc(1), DDIF(5), DOTS(5), DTIF(5), CDA(5)
DDIS(5)