10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hello everybody, hope you all are having a good day.
Here is our (my) situation...
We have a process where we clone Solaris 8 hard disk drives then have to configure each drive for the system they will be used in. In the old cloning image the root password never expired. We also have... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Wrongway
7 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
What happens to sftp when unix password expires / changes ? Do we need to regenerate keys again ? Please help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vegasluxor
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3. Solaris
Never expired for root password
Guy's
I want to change the setting to keep the root password to be nerved expired!
Please advice with the sitting! (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: top.level
9 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello folks,
I have few linux machines and one server from which I can connect to others without password (of course ssh key). On some server when root password will expired is asking me for change passord but on some servers no. When I can find some configuration of this behavior?
Thx for any... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vikus
1 Replies
5. AIX
My SSH version is OpenSSH_5.0p1 and it is not prompting for new password and it is saying that when password expired "Permission denied". Please some one help me regarding this
$ ssh devdhq4
"Use is subject to monitoring by First American CREDCO personnel. Any
Criminal activity or wrongdoing... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: choudarysuresh
1 Replies
6. Solaris
Recently, the root pass expired on a Solaris box. And then, i can't log into the system anymore.....Below are two issues i met:
1. I tried to login the system via telnet and ssh. Only the ssh prompt me to set a new password. The system only told me that the pass is expired and turn it off during... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sleepy_11
1 Replies
7. AIX
Hallo, can anybody help me with my issue? Iīd like to know if it is possible to send me a mail (to @mail.com for example) when some account password will expired? eg. few days ago of this expiration. We donīt use this account every day, it is used for DB2 and DB2 has problem every 90īs day because... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: JiriVenera
2 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi
When i try to login with my username/password i get the following message
'Password for user 'lmathew' has expired - use passwd(1) to update it'
please let me know what to do
Thanks in advane
Ammu (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ammu
2 Replies
9. Solaris
We have expiration set on the root password for 30 days. the only way to login as root remotley is login as another user and then su as root. I logged in to the machine today tried to su as root, and got the message
password has expired, use passwd to change
but i cant get in as root..
If... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: csaunders
1 Replies
10. AIX
Hi,
I am into production support and handling some of the AIX servers. We are planning to have a user id on a AIX system with non-expired password. Now the question is that if I have a non expired password then I cannot do a interactive login to AIX machine ( i:e cannot do Telnet ,SSH etc)... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: siddhhuu
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
image::exiftool::shift
Image::ExifTool::Shift(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Image::ExifTool::Shift(3)
NAME
Image::ExifTool::Shift.pl - ExifTool time shifting routines
DESCRIPTION
This module contains routines used by ExifTool to shift date and time values.
DETAILS
Time shifts are applied to standard EXIF-formatted date/time values (ie. "2005:03:14 18:55:00"). Date-only and time-only values may also
be shifted, and an optional timezone (ie. "-05:00") is also supported. Here are some general rules and examples to explain how shift
strings are interpreted:
Date-only values are shifted using the following formats:
'Y:M:D' - shift date by 'Y' years, 'M' months and 'D' days
'M:D' - shift months and days only
'D' - shift specified number of days
Time-only values are shifted using the following formats:
'h:m:s' - shift time by 'h' hours, 'm' minutes and 's' seconds
'h:m' - shift hours and minutes only
'h' - shift specified number of hours
Timezone shifts are specified in the following formats:
'+h:m' - shift timezone by 'h' hours and 'm' minutes
'-h:m' - negative shift of timezone hours and minutes
'+h' - shift timezone hours only
'-h' - negative shift of timezone hours only
A valid shift value consists of one or two arguments, separated by a space. If only one is provided, it is assumed to be a time shift when
applied to a time-only or a date/time value, or a date shift when applied to a date-only value. For example:
'7' - shift by 1 hour if applied to a time or date/time
value, or by one day if applied to a date value
'2:0' - shift 2 hours (time, date/time), or 2 months (date)
'5:0:0' - shift 5 hours (time, date/time), or 5 years (date)
'0:0:1' - shift 1 s (time, date/time), or 1 day (date)
If two arguments are given, the date shift is first, followed by the time shift:
'3:0:0 0' - shift date by 3 years
'0 15:30' - shift time by 15 hours and 30 minutes
'1:0:0 0:0:0+5:0' - shift date by 1 year and timezone by 5 hours
A date shift is simply ignored if applied to a time value or visa versa.
Numbers specified in shift fields may contain a decimal point:
'1.5' - 1 hour 30 minutes (time, date/time), or 1 day (date)
'2.5 0' - 2 days 12 hours (date/time), 12 hours (time) or
2 days (date)
And to save typing, a zero is assumed for any missing numbers:
'1::' - shift by 1 hour (time, date/time) or 1 year (date)
'26:: 0' - shift date by 26 years
'+:30 - shift timezone by 30 minutes
Below are some specific examples applied to real date and/or time values ('Dir' is the applied shift direction: '+' is positive, '-' is
negative):
Original Value Shift Dir Shifted Value
--------------------- ------- --- ---------------------
'20:30:00' '5' + '01:30:00'
'2005:01:27' '5' + '2005:02:01'
'11:54:00' '2.5 0' - '23:54:00'
'2005:11:02' '2.5 0' - '2005:10:31'
'2005:11:02 11:54:00' '2.5 0' - '2005:10:30 23:54:00'
'2004:02:28 08:00:00' '1 1.3' + '2004:02:29 09:18:00'
'07:00:00' '-5' + '07:00:00'
'07:00:00+01:00' '-5' + '07:00:00-04:00'
'07:00:00Z' '+2:30' - '07:00:00-02:30'
'1970:01:01' '35::' + '2005:01:01'
'2005:01:01' '400' + '2006:02:05'
'10:00:00.00' '::1.33' + '09:59:58.67'
NOTES
The format of the original date/time value is not changed when the time shift is applied. This means that the length of the date/time
string will not change, and only the numbers in the string will be modified. The only exception to this rule is that a 'Z' timezone is
changed to '+00:00' notation if a timezone shift is applied. A timezone will not be added to the date/time string.
TRICKY
This module is perhaps more complicated than it needs to be because it is designed to be very flexible in the way time shifts are specified
and applied...
The ability to shift dates by Y years, M months, etc, is somewhat contradictory to the goal of maintaining a constant shift for all time
values when applying a batch shift. This is because shifting by 1 month can be equivalent to anything from 28 to 31 days, and 1 year can
be 365 or 366 days, depending on the starting date.
The inconsistency is handled by shifting the first tag found with the actual specified shift, then calculating the equivalent time
difference in seconds for this shift and applying this difference to subsequent tags in a batch conversion. So if it works as designed,
the behaviour should be both intuitive and mathematically correct, and the user shouldn't have to worry about details such as this (in
keeping with Perl's "do the right thing" philosophy).
AUTHOR
Copyright 2003-2010, Phil Harvey (phil at owl.phy.queensu.ca)
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Image::ExifTool(3pm)
perl v5.12.1 2010-01-04 Image::ExifTool::Shift(3)