9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
Three days ago we received an expected notice from our long time data center that they were going dark on Sept 12th.
About one and a half hours ago, after three days of marathon work, I just cut over the unix.com to a new data center with a completely new OS and Ubuntu distribution. (22 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
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2. Solaris
I have recently upgraded my Supermicro X10SAT motherboard. I have also a SSD with a Windows10 partition and a Solaris 11.3 partition. Upon boot I press F11 and choose which partition I want to boot into. But after the bios upgrade, I cannot see the Solaris partition when I press "F11" to choose... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: kebabbert
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3. What is on Your Mind?
Hello,
FYI, I upgraded our Tapatalk Version to version 4.8.1 today (from version 4.3.2). All seem to be OK but we never know!
Please post in this thread if you see any problems after the upgrade.
Thanks! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Neo
1 Replies
4. What is on Your Mind?
Remember this thread from a few years ago? What a difference just a few years make!
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I running a unix command using sudo option inside shell script. Its working well. But in crontab the same command is not working and its throwing
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
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#!/bin/bash
rsync /path/on/local/machine/ foo.com:path/on/remote/machine/
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi! I'm very new to unix, so please keep that in mind with the level of language used if you choose to help :D Thanks!
When attempting to use sudo on and AIX machine with oslevel 5.1.0.0, I get the following error:
exec(): 0509-036 Cannot load program sudo because of the following errors:... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Chloe123
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8. Programming
I am getting the a random failure after upgrading the gcc version 3.1 to 3.4.6. My code where it is failing contains some STL and shared memory concepts.It is perfectly working on old version of gcc.I want to know what are possible causes that made this random error after upgrading gcc 3.4.6. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kapilkumawat
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9. Solaris
I'm having issues after upgrading to Sol10 from 8. I have developers who have ksh scripts which execute profiles and such. I get errors from "/dev/null: cannon create" to "stty:no such device or address", to "bad string", etc. I have checked the link to /dev/null (its fine). I have a case open with... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: buffsluft
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bioutil(1) BSD General Commands Manual bioutil(1)
NAME
bioutil -- tool for viewing/changing Touch ID configuration and listing/deleting enrolled fingerprints
SYNOPSIS
bioutil {-r | -w [-f { 0 | 1 }] [-u { 0 | 1 }] [-a { 0 | 1 }]} | [-c] | [-p] | [-d <uid>] [-s]
DESCRIPTION
bioutil provides the possibility of viewing and changing Touch ID configuration, both system-wide and user-specific. It also allows listing
and deleting enrolled fingerprints.
OPTIONS
-r, --read
Read Touch ID configuration.
-w, --write
Write Touch ID configuration.
-s, --system
Indicates that system-wide configuration is to be read/written (user-specific configuration is the default) or that a system-wide
list/delete operation is to be performed.
-f, --function
Enables (1) or disables (0) overall Touch ID functionality (system-wide configuration only).
-u, --unlock
Enables (1) or disables (0) Touch ID for unlock.
-a, --applepay
Enables (1) or disables (0) Touch ID for ApplePay (user-specific configuration only).
-c, --count
Provides number of enrolled fingerprints of the current user or of all users (when run with -s as an administrator)
-p, --purge
Deletes all enrolled fingerprints of the current user or of all users (when run with -s as an administrator)
-d, --delete
Deletes all enrolled fingerprints of the user with given user ID (must be run as an administrator)
EXAMPLES
bioutil -r
Reads Touch ID configuration for the current user.
bioutil -r -s
Reads system-wide Touch ID configuration.
bioutil -w -u 1
Enables Touch ID for unlock for the current user.
sudo bioutil -w -s -u 0
Disables Touch ID for unlock for the whole system.
bioutil -c
Prints the number of enrolled fingerprints of the current user.
bioutil -p
Deletes all enrolled fingerprints of the current user.
sudo bioutil -c -s
Prints numbers of enrolled fingerprints of all enrolled users.
sudo bioutil -p -s
Deletes all fingerprints from the system.
sudo bioutil -s -d 501
Deletes all fingerprints of user 501.
Darwin May 31, 2019 Darwin