There is another way:
Webmin's samba config interface has a couple of options for:
"Convert Unix users to Samba users"
and
"Configure automatic Unix and Samba user synchronisation"
I haven't played with either, myself, but they look promising.
--
Mike Burger
http://www.bubbanfriends.org
Vi
Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
Dude, fix the date on your 'puter. =)
rhugga
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On Thu, 2003-08-28 at 23:44, Michael H. Warfield wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 20, 2006 at 02:39:34PM -0300, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
> > My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
>
> > There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
>
> Simple answer...
>
On Sun, Aug 20, 2006 at 02:39:34PM -0300, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
> My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
> There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
Simple answer...
No, of course not. If there were, that would be a bug.
Longer
e Souza Trazzini wrote:
>
> > Hey I've already set the clock yet
> >
> > How "John The Ripper" is running from about 20 hours without
> > success It try lot of different passwords.
> >
> > 3 Days ?? Isn't any email fro
. But that is after all,
> the point of good passwords, no? Was using a PIII 1Ghz.
--
Marcos S. Trazzini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Servmicro Informática LTDA.
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Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
Hey I've already set the clock yet
How "John The Ripper" is running from about 20 hours without
success It try lot of different passwords.
3 Days ?? Isn't any email from you to me in my Mailbox...
HHHmm. Wonde
t that is after all,
the point of good passwords, no? Was using a PIII 1Ghz.
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On 15:12 21 Aug 2003, Marcos de Souza Trazzini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| Hey I've already set the clock yet
[...]
| And aim't ignoring those requests, when i've "warned" (Yesterday), solve
| the problem on the same instant.
Thanks!
--
Cameron Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> DoD#743
http:/
Hey I've already set the clock yet
How "John The Ripper" is running from about 20 hours without
success It try lot of different passwords.
3 Days ?? Isn't any email from you to me in my Mailbox...
And aim't ignoring those requests, when
Jason Dixon wrote:
On Sun, 2006-08-20 at 13:39, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
My request is very simple. Fix your system clock, or face a filter to
my trash folder. This is the 2nd time
On Wed, 2003-08-20 at 14:36, Ivan Roseland wrote:
>
> Yes, it is called brute force.
>
> John the ripper might help
>
>
> http://www.openwall.com/john/
>
>
> If its a good password though it could take a very long time to crack
> the password.
>
> Ivan
You know I have always been curious a
Yes, it is called brute force.
John the ripper might help
http://www.openwall.com/john/
If its a good password though it could take a very long time to crack
the password.
Ivan
Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in
On 20 Aug 2003, Jason Dixon wrote:
> On Sun, 2006-08-20 at 13:39, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
> > My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
> >
> > There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
>
> My request is very simple. Fix your system clock, or
On Sun, 2006-08-20 at 13:39, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
> My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
>
> There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
My request is very simple. Fix your system clock, or face a filter to
my trash folder. This is the 2nd time I'
You can try with John the ripper or crack.
On 20 Aug 2006, Marcos de Souza Trazzini wrote:
> My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
>
> There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
>
>
>
>
>
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My question is very _SIMPLE_ :
There-s a form to decrypt the passwords stored in /etc/shadow file?
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...does this mean people at the client machines need to use both passwd
and yppasswd to change their passwords? And will that allow people to
login with their new password and still access their home directory
information?
steve
--
Steve Strong
Math/Computer Science Teacher
Washington High
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003, Steve Strong wrote:
> ...does this mean people at the client machines need to use both passwd
> and yppasswd to change their passwords? And will that allow people to
> login with their new password and still access their home directory
> information?
>
Hi Tony,
> The commands in 'pem' work ok if I type them
> at the command line. Why will they not work
> in a script?
>
> Red Hat Linux release 7.1 (Seawolf)
> Kernel 2.4.2-2 on an i686
Please update your system.
> # ls -l pem
> -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 94 Jul 8 19:44 pem
>
> #
The commands in 'pem' work ok if I type themat
the command line. Why will they not workin a script?
Red Hat Linux release 7.1 (Seawolf)Kernel 2.4.2-2 on an i686
# ls -l pem-rwxrwxrwx 1 root
root 94 Jul 8
19:44 pem
# cat pem/usr/sbin/useradd -g popusers -s /bin/false me
i'm looking for how to prevent users from submitting clear text
passwords, and i'm stumbling..
closing port 110 might force pop clients to use port 995, but i've read
that tls is preferred over ssl, and tls uses port 110?
i've also got openwebmail set up, and i tried tweakin
On Thu, 2003-02-13 at 18:52, Kirby Clements wrote:
> I am having trouble finding out which line to put into /etc/passwd and
> /etc/group and so on.
None. Just use 'authconfig' to configure NIS authentication. That's
it.
> I have read that the line: +::
> will work for all users
This is an issue regarding NIS - if this is not appropriate for this
list, no fret taken.
I am having trouble finding out which line to put into /etc/passwd and
/etc/group and so on. I have read that the line: +::
will work for all users in the passwd file, as long as one places
it
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On 04 Feb 2003 23:39:13 +1100, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> BTW, being that it happened twice with the same configuration under RH
> 8.0, it has been determined that the kernel parameters that were passed
> on this particular motherboard caused file system c
On Tue, 2003-02-04 at 17:55, Joshua Schmidlkofer wrote:
> > > It's too late to analyze the problem when all evidence has been
> > > removed.
Deadlines speak louder than the time that someone has - hence no time to
muck around, only time to get application installed.
BTW, being that it happened twi
g to do with using "KUSER" - I used KUSER before the first hose
> up; second installation, did the same right after the 45 minutes to
> install everything I needed; used "KUSER" then it all went south.
> Rebooted and all the passwords for all the accounts I cr
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On 03 Feb 2003 21:31:58 +1100, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 21:07, Michael Schwendt wrote:
>
> > Why? Surely you can reboot the machine and get past the passwd
> > check.
> >
> Tried that, no go. Did the exact same thing
Um, at reboo
d installation, did the same right after the 45 minutes to
install everything I needed; used "KUSER" then it all went south.
Rebooted and all the passwords for all the accounts I created don't
work. So, it has to be file system corruption - something - something
has to have hos
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On 03 Feb 2003 16:46:40 +1100, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On my relatively NEW load of RH 8.0, I was trying to compile a program's
> dependencies with CPAN - after about 15 minutes or so, the screensaver
> in KDE kicked on...but I let it continue to run. A
On my relatively NEW load of RH 8.0, I was trying to compile a program's
dependencies with CPAN - after about 15 minutes or so, the screensaver
in KDE kicked on...but I let it continue to run. After about 20 minutes,
I tried to get past the screensaver - password bad. I then tried to ssh
into the b
Hi all,
I am trying to setup rsync to create a mirror of a production server using
-e ssh. In my scenario an anonymous rsync server won't work.
I can get the rsync to do what I want perfectly except that that ssh is
requiring I enter either the password or passphrase depending on the
iteration of
- Original Message -
From: "Bret Hughes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:28 AM
Subject: Re: Problems trying to change passwords with RH7.3
> On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 06:52, Billy Davis wrote:
> > We have just done
- Original Message -
From: "Mike Burger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:26 AM
Subject: Re: Problems trying to change passwords with RH7.3
> On Tue, 28 Jan 2003, Billy Davis wrote:
>
> > We have just done
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 06:52, Billy Davis wrote:
> We have just done a FRESH install of RH7.3 right out of a retail box,
and have encountered two problems:
>
> 1. We set up several users with temporary passwords for testing.
Later we logged into the Graphical login screen as root, and
On Tue, 28 Jan 2003, Billy Davis wrote:
> We have just done a FRESH install of RH7.3 right out of a retail box, and have
>encountered two problems:
>
> 1. We set up several users with temporary passwords for testing. Later we logged
>into the Graphical login screen as roo
We have just done a FRESH install of RH7.3 right
out of a retail box, and have encountered two problems:
1. We set up several users with temporary
passwords for testing. Later we logged into the Graphical login screen as
root, and selected System Settings-->User Manager. Then
i got some tips from other lists, they told me to use 'sudo' for it.
because only root is allowed to change passwords to single chars. the
harder workaround, for me(because im not well adept with hacking codes),
is to make changes to the source code of pam. havent gone that deep y
PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of pilip
Sent: Monday, January 27, 2003 12:03 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: allowing short passwords
yes sir, i could actually go with any password lesser than 5 but im
trying to aim for a single char. only root can change the passwrds of
users to a single char but ordi
did that before asking here, try logging on as that user or just 'su -'
to that user and change your password to another single char password.
it won't allow that user to change it
Bret Hughes wrote:
On Sun, 2003-01-26 at 22:52, pilip wrote:
like what i've stated.security is not an issue. it's
On Sun, 2003-01-26 at 22:52, pilip wrote:
> like what i've stated.security is not an issue. it's the possibility.
> thanks anyways for your comments.
>
Since you have been given all the warnings but no help.
I was able to do this as root:
[root@bretsony root]# adduser testdude
[root@bretsony r
yes sir, i could actually go with any password lesser than 5 but im
trying to aim for a single char. only root can change the passwrds of
users to a single char but ordinary users can't change their passwords
to single characters. im on rh8.0 too. maybe a prayer will do it :D
Buck
om: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of pilip
Sent: Sunday, January 26, 2003 11:28 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: allowing short passwords
it's not on a networked environment sir, i know this is possible in
linux (to use single character passwords) i just need to kn
#x27;t.
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, pilip wrote:
Good day,
how do you allow the use of short passwords in linux? short passwords as
in single character passwords. I've tried making changes to
'/etc/login.defs' and to the pam config '/etc/pam.d/system-auth' to no
avail.
tha
Like he said...as root, change the user's password via "passwd user"
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, pilip wrote:
> it's not on a networked environment sir, i know this is possible in
> linux (to use single character passwords) i just need to know how to do it.
>
> [EM
27;t need security on a stand alone
> machine that's underneath my table. :)
>
> Mike Burger wrote:
> > In all honesty, if you value the security of your system, you don't.
> >
> > On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, pilip wrote:
> >
> >
> >>Go
On Sun, 26 Jan 2003, gabriel wrote:
> > Hi Pilip. root can set a user's passwd to anything you want, but..
> >
> > DON'T DO IT !!
> >
> > Passwords this short are just a waste of the user's time at login. If you
> > are going to have th
it's not on a networked environment sir, i know this is possible in
linux (to use single character passwords) i just need to know how to do it.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 10:53:47AM +0800, pilip wrote:
how do you allow the use of short passwords in linux? short pass
it's a testing environment. i don't need security on a stand alone
machine that's underneath my table. :)
Mike Burger wrote:
In all honesty, if you value the security of your system, you don't.
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, pilip wrote:
Good day,
how do you allow the use of shor
> Hi Pilip. root can set a user's passwd to anything you want, but..
>
> DON'T DO IT !!
>
> Passwords this short are just a waste of the user's time at login. If you
> are going to have them that short you might as well not have any at all.
>
> Cracki
In all honesty, if you value the security of your system, you don't.
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, pilip wrote:
> Good day,
>
> how do you allow the use of short passwords in linux? short passwords as
> in single character passwords. I've tried making changes to
> '/
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 10:53:47AM +0800, pilip wrote:
> how do you allow the use of short passwords in linux? short passwords as
> in single character passwords. I've tried making changes to
> '/etc/login.defs' and to the pam config '/etc/pam.d/system-auth' to
Good day,
how do you allow the use of short passwords in linux? short passwords as
in single character passwords. I've tried making changes to
'/etc/login.defs' and to the pam config '/etc/pam.d/system-auth' to no
avail.
thanks in advance
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redhat-list mailin
Bruno Negrao wrote:
Yes Nate, I checked it - since the user is created, if I cut and paste the
crypted password from the /etc/shadow of the origin machine and paste it to
the /etc/shadow of the second machine, the user can logon with the same
password!!
A better way might be to use usermod with
13. Re: How to copy users passwords from one machine to another? (Bruno Negrao)
There are utilities called pwconv, pwunconv grpconv and grpunconv.
I have used the above commands without any problem.
Refer the man pages.
trysaran
Get Your Private, Free E-mail from Indiatimes at http
It's one way to make it more difficult to guess somebody's
password, the salt and the password are encrypted together.
One example of usage is when two users have the same password,
they can not tell it both have the same by looking at the
passwords file.
raymundo
Bruno Negrao w
Copying the shadow entries from the old system to the new should be
sufficient, yes.
On Wed, 22 Jan 2003, Bruno Negrao wrote:
> Hi all, I have a redhat 6.0 running a radiusd server to authenticate my RAS
> dialin users.
> I'll deactivate this machine.
>
> So, I need to migrate this users to a r
Hi Raymundo,
>
> in MD5 $1$ is always present, the 8 char string that folows is
> the salt and the last 22 chars is the encrypted password.
What is this 'salt' thing?
>
> For DES the first two char is the salt and the last 11 is the
> encrypted password.
>
> and if both systems use the same encryp
;nate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2003 4:34 PM
Subject: Re: How to copy users passwords from one machine to another?
Bruno Negrao said:
> Hi all, I have a redhat 6.0 running a radiusd server to authenticate my
> RAS dialin users.
&g
The two encription methods i have seen are DES and MD5, they are
easy to recognize:
MD5: $1$8 chars$ 22 chars
DES: 13 chars
in MD5 $1$ is always present, the 8 char string that folows is
the salt and the last 22 chars is the encrypted password.
For DES the first two char is the salt and
Bruno Negrao said:
> Hi all, I have a redhat 6.0 running a radiusd server to authenticate my
> RAS dialin users.
> I'll deactivate this machine.
>
> So, I need to migrate this users to a redhat 8.0 machine, already running
> with Qmail + Vpopmail.
>
> How to migrate all these dialin users from one
Hi all, I have a redhat 6.0 running a radiusd server to authenticate my RAS
dialin users.
I'll deactivate this machine.
So, I need to migrate this users to a redhat 8.0 machine, already running
with Qmail + Vpopmail.
How to migrate all these dialin users from one machine to the other? If I
cut an
Gordon Messmer wrote:
-
Are you entering the user's password?
-
Yes. I'm testing out ldap that I have running on a server that I built
using real users. The migrate scripts populated the userPassword field and
I want to set all these to a default value whi
On Wed, 2002-12-11 at 15:14, Patrick Nelson wrote:
>
> When I (as root) try to change a password of a user using passwd like:
> passwd
> I get a prompt like:
> Enter login(LDAP) password:
> and anything I enter isn't accepted. Any idea what I'm a doing wrong?
Are you entering the user's pas
When I (as root) try to change a password of a user using passwd like:
passwd
I get a prompt like:
Enter login(LDAP) password:
and anything I enter isn't accepted. Any idea what I'm a doing wrong?
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h
On Fri, 2002-12-06 at 12:22, Aly S.P Dharshi wrote:
> Gordon,
>
> I agree, and after a test that the passwd utility does indeed change
> the password the only question is that it encodes it as a {CRYPT} and I
> want to use MD5 as my hashing scheme
>From /usr/share/doc/nss_ldap-198/README.pa
e whole
> reason it exists. You're suggesting that users ignore PAM, and stick
> with the "bad old days" when interfaces weren't shared.
>
> "passwd" remains the correct answer. Users should never have to care
> where their passwords are stored
eason it exists. You're suggesting that users ignore PAM, and stick
with the "bad old days" when interfaces weren't shared.
"passwd" remains the correct answer. Users should never have to care
where their passwords are stored in order to set them correctly.
--
On Wed, 2002-12-04 at 21:14, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On Mon, 2002-11-25 at 16:47, Patrick Nelson wrote:
> >
> > What is the best way (process) to change ldap passwords?
>
> Have you tried "passwd"? I'd expect PAM to be able to manage to change
> a pass
On Mon, 2002-11-25 at 16:47, Patrick Nelson wrote:
>
> What is the best way (process) to change ldap passwords?
Have you tried "passwd"? I'd expect PAM to be able to manage to change
a password in the directory.
> How about adding users?
>
> Is there a tool for
RH73 up2date
What is the best way (process) to change ldap passwords?
How about adding users?
Is there a tool for this I just have not found yet?
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update their password, viewmailcfg.cgi, which allows
users to view their current mail configuration, and mailcfg.cgi, which
updates the mail configuration. All programs use PAM for user
authentication. It is possible to run a script to update SAMBA
passwords or NIS configuration when a password
Most of the users on our network simply use it for checking email, and
hosting their websites. Most of them don't know how to log in through SSH
should they need to. Consequently if and when their password expires, they
don't know what to do, or where to go to get it reset. And them pickin
There are some PHP apps for changing passwords, one at www.horde.org, but
don't know how secure they are, and if you are not using horde it's a bit
uncomfortable, cause you have to install all the horde framework to get this
small app working.
On Vie 11 Oct 2002 22:38, Ashley M
successful than the simple setup that I reverted to so there are
less things to explain. I've run authconfig and setup the LDAP settings
and selected to use MD5 and shadow passwords.
I checked in /etc/ldap.conf it says at the end of the file:
pam_password md5
I set the encrypted password with
text listed.
-Greg
On 15-Aug-02 Daniel Tan wrote:
> Hi all,
> after some help from people...i am still unable to have shorter user
> passwords on my rh 7.3 machine. tried editing login.defs and in the PAM
> config directory (/etc/pam.d)and look there either for passwd or
Hi all,
after some help from people...i am still unable to have shorter user
passwords on my rh 7.3 machine. tried editing login.defs and in the PAM
config directory (/etc/pam.d)and look there either for passwd or system-auth
config file.
open it and look at a line with pam_cracklib.so
At 12:08 PM 8/13/02 +0800, Daniel Tan wrote:
Edit /etc/login.defs
>it doesn't work at all
---
Cheers,
Reynald I. Ngo
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it doesn't work at all
- Original Message -
From: "Flávio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 07, 2002 11:07 PM
Subject: RES: Short user passwords
> Dear Daniel
>
> edit /etc/login.defs
>
> PASS_MIN_LE
it doesn't work at all
- Original Message -
From: "Teodor Georgiev" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 07, 2002 3:40 PM
Subject: Re: Short user passwords
>
> go into your PAM config directory (/etc/pam.d)
> and lo
SkYE wrote:
> This is a very strange situation I've never encountered before. Both
> the root account and user account become inaccessible. Needless to say,
> without root there is little that can be done to fix the problem - I
> always have to do a complete re-install.
I don't have an ans
Hello all,
This is a very strange situation I've never encountered before. Both
the root account and user account become inaccessible. Needless to say,
without root there is little that can be done to fix the problem - I
always have to do a complete re-install.
OS: Redhat 7.3
Hardware: Sony PCG
Hello,
I am trying to disable strong passwords for 1 server
only. I am looking at the files under /etc/pam.d/ but
do not see how to do this. I checked the online
documentation "for system administrators" at the pam
site. It says to ask here since I am running Red Hat
7.x.
I tri
On Fri, 24 May 2002 10:43:50 -0600
"Ashley M. Kirchner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Javier Gostling wrote:
>
> > How about a web interface? It could use a perl script to interact
> > with the passwd program, or directly modify /etc/passwd.
>
> That would work, sure. But before I reinvent
Javier Gostling wrote:
> How about a web interface? It could use a perl script to interact with
> the passwd program, or directly modify /etc/passwd.
That would work, sure. But before I reinvent the wheel, I thought I'd ask first
if anyone already has such mechanism, or know of any that ar
"Ashley M. Kirchner" wrote:
>
> How can I have users change their passwords if they don't have shell access?
>The biggest problem we have right now is people's passwords expiring (after a
>mandatory set period) and them having to call IT to get it re-issue
How can I have users change their passwords if they don't have shell access? The
biggest problem we have right now is people's passwords expiring (after a mandatory
set period) and them having to call IT to get it re-issued again. Generally they
start complaining when they st
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 14-May-2002/10:02 -0700, Isaac Liu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Are thre routines that
>generates passwords so I can programmatically
>put them in /etc/shadow?
The expect package includes mkpasswd, which can just generate a pa
Are thre routines that
generates passwords so I can programmatically
put them in /etc/shadow?
BTW, what is the password encryption algorithm? MD5? DES?
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I am making a website that allows a user to login
once the login and pasword they enter is compared to the system users and
passwords. I have installed shadows, and I have the same problem as with
out shadows installed. If I am root, I can retrieve the crypted password,
if I am not root
Hello Greg,
You should get the Shadows extension, available from
ftp://ftp.eur.nl/pub/homebrew/Shadow-0.01.tar.gz
and install it as per the instructions provided.
Then it's just a simple call at the top fo your script
Use Shadows;
and you can then use getspnam instead of getpwnam to return
I am having a problem using perl to authorize users
for a web project I am working on.
I am using getpwnam $user[1]; to
get the users password to compare to the crypted version of it.
However when running the perl script, I only get x,
the shadowed version of it. To get the right crypted
On Thu, Mar 14, 2002 at 05:58:48AM -, Peter Kiem wrote:
> Failing solving the above, is there something I could run (perhaps on a
> nightly basis) to process the shadow file and convert the crypt style
> passwords into MD5 ones?
Both DES hashes (crypt) and MD5 hashes ar
Peter Kiem,
On Thursday March 14, 2002 06:18, you said something about:
> I already use useradd for adding new users (although I dont add their
> password at that stage) but I also use chpasswd for resetting passwords.
> Can you use useradd to change passwords after a user is created?
Hi Brian,
> man useradd
> This is the standard way (chpasswd is antiquated, IMHO). It's fully script
> friendly.
I already use useradd for adding new users (although I dont add their
password at that stage) but I also use chpasswd for resetting passwords.
Can you use use
Peter Kiem,
On Thursday March 14, 2002 12:58, you said something about:
> I have 2 places where passwords are being set on a server where the
> passwords seem to be encrypted using crypt instead of MD5.
>
> 1. chpasswd command
> Scripts that setup new users, and reset passwords
I have 2 places where passwords are being set on a server where the passwords
seem to be encrypted using crypt instead of MD5.
1. chpasswd command
Scripts that setup new users, and reset passwords, are using the following
command to set the password:
echo "$user:$password" | chp
ing. So it must
be trying to change the password, right? Anyone know how to help out?
Thanks,
Jake
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 01, 2002 9:04 AM
Subject: RE: Validating passwords via php, Lil help please! (Was with
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 01, 2002 9:04 AM
Subject: RE: Validating passwords via php, Lil help please! (Was with PERL)
> There is no newpass command in the rfc standarts, is the newpass command
> working?
>
>
> -Orig
There is no newpass command in the rfc standarts, is the newpass command
working?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Jake McHenry
Sent: Freitag, 01. Februar 2002 14:17
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Validating passwords via php, Lil help
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