10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hello,
I'm able to mount NFSv3 shares permanently (/etc/filesystems) via smitty nfs.
/>lsfs -a
Name Nodename Mount Pt VFS Size Options Auto Accounting
/dev/hd4 -- / jfs2 2097152 -- yes no
/dev/hd1 -- ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: System Admin 77
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I am writing a shell script where I want that # should be added in all those lines as the first character where the pattern matches.
file has lot of functions defined
a.sh
#!/bin/bash
fn a {
beautiful evening
sunny day
}
fn b {
}
fn c {
hello world .its a beautiful day
... (12 Replies)
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3. Solaris
Greetings,
I am using solaris10 x86 OS. I configured IP address using the command.
>ifconfig e1000g0 plumb
>ifconfig e1000g0 200.200.0.1 up
How to make this configured IP as permanent.. to solaris os. (2 Replies)
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4. Solaris
Hi
If suppose there is a MAC address of NIC port. I have change the MAC address through following command
# ifconfig hme0 ether a:0:30:f0.ad:51
The change MAC address will be there till reboot.
Now I would like to know how to make the change MAC address permanent. I believe that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amity
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
How can i set a environment variable in unix shell ?? I can set it using setenv or export but when i close & open the terminal again i couldn't see that environment variable, how can i make that change permanent ?? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: chaditya
1 Replies
6. Solaris
how do I make sure that the entry in the routing table on Solaris 8 stay permanent after rebooting the server.
For example
route add 172.20.1.60 -netmask 255.255.255.0 172.20.255.253
Each time the server reboots the entry disappears when using the command netstat -nr (2 Replies)
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi!
i want to replace ; by ok in a file as below
test1(filename) containt:-
Hi i am kaushlesh; i am new to Unix.
i want permanent change in the file like below:-
Hi i am kaushlesh ok i am new to unix
How i will complite this..? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaushelsh168
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
ulimit -a gives the following output:$ulimit -a
time(seconds) unlimited
file(blocks) 2097152
data(kbytes) 131072
stack(kbytes) 16384
memory(kbytes) unlimited
coredump(blocks) 32768
nofiles(descriptors) 400
vmemory(kbytes) 147456
Abot output... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nervous
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9. SCO
Hi .. can anyone help with this pleeaasse ..
I have a Sco Unixware 7.1.0 server which has been running fine for nearly 10 years ... we have not had to do any os changes for several years.
We tend to reboot it about once a month just to keep everthing clean!
My issue is that we have just... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: DickTutton
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10. Solaris
I have 4 V440 servers running Solaris 9. I have their interfaces configured (ce0) and have connectivity to our network. However, after reboot,...the connectivity is lost although the interface shows that its still up after an ifconfig -a.
Only after I reconfigure the interface do I restore... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: StorageGuy
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SYSTEM-AUTH-AC(5) File Formats Manual SYSTEM-AUTH-AC(5)
NAME
system-auth-ac, password-auth-ac, smartcard-auth-ac, fingerprint-auth-ac, postlogin-ac - Common configuration files for PAMified services
written by authconfig(8)
SYNOPSIS
/etc/pam.d/system-auth-ac
DESCRIPTION
The purpose of this configuration file is to provide common configuration file for all applications and service daemons calling PAM
library.
The system-auth configuration file is included from all individual service configuration files with the help of the include directive. When
authconfig(8) writes the system PAM configuration file it replaces the default system-auth file with a symlink pointing to system-auth-ac
and writes the configuration to this file. The symlink is not changed on subsequent configuration changes even if it points elsewhere. This
allows system administrators to override the configuration written by authconfig.
The authconfig now writes the authentication modules also into additional PAM configuration files /etc/pam.d/password-auth-ac,
/etc/pam.d/smartcard-auth-ac, and /etc/pam.d/fingerprint-auth-ac. These configuration files contain only modules which perform authentica-
tion with the respective kinds of authentication tokens. For example /etc/pam.d/smartcard-auth[-ac] will not contain pam_unix and pam_ldap
modules and /etc/pam.d/password-auth[-ac] will not contain pam_pkcs11 and pam_fprintd modules.
The file /etc/pam.d/postlogin-ac contains common services to be invoked after login. An example can be a module that encrypts an user's
filesystem or user's keyring and is decrypted by his password.
The PAM configuration files of services which are accessed by remote connections such as sshd or ftpd now include the /etc/pam.d/password-
auth configuration file instead of /etc/pam.d/system-auth.
EXAMPLE
Configure system to use pam_tally2 for configuration of maximum number of failed logins. Also call pam_access to verify if access is
allowed.
Make system-auth symlink point to system-auth-local which contains:
auth requisite pam_access.so
auth requisite pam_tally2.so deny=3 lock_time=30
unlock_time=3600
auth include system-auth-ac
account required pam_tally2.so
account include system-auth-ac
password include system-auth-ac
session include system-auth-ac
BUGS
None known.
SEE ALSO
authconfig(8), authconfig-gtk(8), pam(8), system-auth(5)
Red Hat, Inc. 2010 March 31 SYSTEM-AUTH-AC(5)