4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
Does anyone know about the license of System V Release 4 & SunOS 4.1.4 source codes?
I have found them online in some archives but I am not sure if I am 'supposed' to download them (not sure if it is legal)
Can anyone tell me?
EDIT: A little bit wrong category. Please move it. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: anapplegeek
1 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
Someone was asking the below on our mailing list and i thought of sharing with you guys, what do you think?
P.S: if this is the wrong forum i couldn't find something related to 'opensource' as main forum so i posted here, moderators feel free to move.
Hello,
I want to opensource something... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Bashar
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm comparing a table from two databases on two different servers to check for equality.
1. How do I use rlogin from a script , is it like this ?
rlogin -l $username $server1
where $username and $server1 are passed from the command line.
2.create a copy of that table, compress it and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: seaten
3 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi ppl,
Need help setting licenses!
When I add licenses with lit_tty, it says:
Duplicate of Feature FTAM Version 9.000 found in file /etc/opt/licenses/licenses_combined.
Duplicate of Feature FTAM Version 9.000 found in file /opt/SUNWconn/license_dir/osiftm9.0.lic,1.
Rereading License File... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: andryk
0 Replies
RLOGIN(1) General Commands Manual RLOGIN(1)
NAME
rlogin - remote login
SYNOPSIS
rlogin [-8EL] [-e char] [-l username] rhost
rhost [-8EL] [-e char] [-l username]
DESCRIPTION
Rlogin connects your terminal on the current local host system lhost to the remote host system rhost.
Each host has a file /etc/hosts.equiv which contains a list of rhost's with which it shares account names. (The host names must be the
standard names as described in rsh(1).) When you rlogin as the same user on an equivalent host, you don't need to give a password. Each
user may also have a private equivalence list in a file .rhosts in his login directory. Each line in this file should contain an rhost and
a username separated by a space, giving additional cases where logins without passwords are to be permitted. If the originating user is
not equivalent to the remote user, then a login and password will be prompted for on the remote machine as in login(1). To avoid some
security problems, the .rhosts file must be owned by either the remote user or root.
The remote terminal type is the same as your local terminal type (as given in your environment TERM variable). The terminal or window size
is also copied to the remote system if the server supports the option, and changes in size are reflected as well. All echoing takes place
at the remote site, so that (except for delays) the rlogin is transparent. Flow control via ^S and ^Q and flushing of input and output on
interrupts are handled properly. The optional argument -8 allows an eight-bit input data path at all times; otherwise parity bits are
stripped except when the remote side's stop and start characters are other than ^S/^Q. The argument -L allows the rlogin session to be run
in litout mode. A line of the form ``~.'' disconnects from the remote host, where ``~'' is the escape character. Similarly, the line
``~^Z'' (where ^Z, control-Z, is the suspend character) will suspend the rlogin session. Substitution of the delayed-suspend character
(normally ^Y) for the suspend character suspends the send portion of the rlogin, but allows output from the remote system. A different
escape character may be specified by the -e option. There is no space separating this option flag and the argument character. With the -E
option the escape can be turned off.
SEE ALSO
rsh(1), rhosts(5).
BUGS
More of the environment should be propagated.
4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 12, 1986 RLOGIN(1)