9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
I am planning to choose my career as Unix/Linux Admin or a DBA. But I have come to know from forums and few admins like the job will be 24/7. I have few questions on that.
Can we get "DAY" shifts in any one of the admin Job ?
Can't we have shift timings in any company ?
Eventhough the... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jacktts
7 Replies
2. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions
Hello,
I have apparently lost all domain admin privledges in Samba. I have had several problems ever since I installed the 1/31 Solaris patch cluster. I had to roll out one Samba update (146363-01), which denied all logons network access. However, this particular problem seems to have begun... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: stringman
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3. Advertise with Us
Greetings....
I have asked this question before, and gotten the "go to school response" and the "help desk job" response, the problem is, these positions require experience, and I have not found a company willing to hire me. I have complete a Unix Fundamentals course, and I plan to continue my... (24 Replies)
Discussion started by: chlordane
24 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi guys,
I believe most of you guys are guru here.
I'm actually linux/unix programmer and understand some of linux language (sh, bash, perl).
I would like to jump into more technical role which is sys admin which I need to do something like :
- Veritas backup and clustering (I heard our... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: peac3
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am writing a shell script and I am calling wc -l. I need to assign the results of this call to a varaible and it's not working the way I think it should:
xx= wc -l $1
What am I doing wrong?
Thanx (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dortoh
1 Replies
6. HP-UX
Hi All
Please somebody send me list of admin commands used for HPUX.
Thanks
Sunanda (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunanda
2 Replies
7. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
First time so excuse my ignorance please.
I may not be accurately describing the issue.
I have inherited a small lab mostly SUN V120s.
We lost power and are trying to recover.
Nope no backups...
The primary issue I have is 1 box is an Oracle Server.
It has 2 36Gb harddrives.
I am able to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: murphsr
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Quote: "Until the space is used for another file, it is not deleted and the data can be recovered (although it may require jumping through hoops)." Unquote
I know this is true in the Windows world, but I didn't think it was true of Unix. I had always been told once it was deleted in Unix, it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: wmosley2
1 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
This morning I was working by Xwindow to my unix server (hp-ux, 11 version), without any problem but this afteernoon, the connections was refused, and triying to connect using telnet, sometimes I can establish the connection and refuses me in a minute, the error message that appears is "your... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fvicente
1 Replies
lppasswd(1) Apple Inc. lppasswd(1)
NAME
lppasswd - add, change, or delete digest passwords.
SYNOPSIS
lppasswd [ username ]
lppasswd -a [ -g groupname ] username
lppasswd -x username
DESCRIPTION
lppasswd adds, changes, or deletes passwords in the CUPS digest password file, passwd.md5. When run by a normal user, lppasswd will prompt
for the old and new passwords. When run by the super-user, lppasswd can add new accounts (-a username), change existing accounts (user-
name), or delete accounts (-x username) in the digest password file. Digest usernames do not have to match local UNIX usernames.
OPTIONS
lppasswd supports the following options:
-g groupname
Specifies a group other than the default system group.
SECURITY ISSUES
By default, the lppasswd program is not installed to allow ordinary users to change their passwords. To enable this, the lppasswd command
must be made setuid to root with the command:
chmod u+s lppasswd
While every attempt has been made to make lppasswd secure against exploits that could grant super-user privileges to unprivileged users,
paranoid system administrators may wish to use Basic authentication with accounts managed by PAM instead.
SEE ALSO
lp(1), lpr(1),
http://localhost:631/help
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2007-2011 by Apple Inc.
22 February 2008 CUPS lppasswd(1)