Displaying 11 results from an estimated 11 matches for "decri".
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2015 Mar 31
6
How to decrypt rootpassword form kickstart file
Hi Team,
I have the kick start file where my root password is store like
# Root password
rootpw --iscrypted $1$1SItJOAg$UM9n7lRFK1/OCs./rgQtQ/
# System authorization information
auth --useshadow --passalgo=sha512
Is there any way to decry pt the password and get it as plain text.
I know single user mode works but my case it in remote site.
Thanks,
Jegadeesh
2015 Mar 31
0
How to decrypt rootpassword form kickstart file
2015-03-31 8:08 GMT+03:00 Jegadeesh Kumar <jegasmile at gmail.com>:
> Hi Team,
>
> I have the kick start file where my root password is store like
>
>
> # Root password
> rootpw --iscrypted $1$1SItJOAg$UM9n7lRFK1/OCs./rgQtQ/
> # System authorization information
> auth --useshadow --passalgo=sha512
>
>
>
> Is there any way to decry pt the password and
2015 Apr 01
0
How to decrypt rootpassword form kickstart file
On Mar 30, 2015, at 11:08 PM, Jegadeesh Kumar <jegasmile at gmail.com> wrote:
> # Root password
> rootpw --iscrypted $1$1SItJOAg$UM9n7lRFK1/OCs./rgQtQ/
> # System authorization information
> auth --useshadow --passalgo=sha512
Those two settings are inconsistent. The $1 at the beginning of that crypt(3) string means it?s an MD5 password.
> Is there any way to decry pt the
2004 Jan 07
0
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2016 Sep 28
0
Virtualization Networking
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Virtualization Networking
From: Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com>
Date: Wed, September 28, 2016 1:19 pm
To: CentOS mailing list <centos at centos.org>
On Sep 28, 2016, at 9:43 AM, <tdukes at palmettoshopper.com>
<tdukes at palmettoshopper.com> wrote:
>
> The first one, I created in my / file system but
2015 Apr 01
4
How to decrypt rootpassword form kickstart file
Warren Young wrote:
> On Mar 30, 2015, at 11:08 PM, Jegadeesh Kumar <jegasmile at gmail.com> wrote:
>> # Root password
>> rootpw --iscrypted $1$1SItJOAg$UM9n7lRFK1/OCs./rgQtQ/
>> # System authorization information
>> auth --useshadow --passalgo=sha512
>
> Those two settings are inconsistent. The $1 at the beginning of that
> crypt(3) string means it?s
2018 Feb 01
1
Migrate utils/ Python 2 scripts to Python 3
Nope.
Regarding "python" potentially pointing to python3:
Arch Linux has done that for years. That unilateral decision on their part
was widely-decried as a mistake at the time, and spawned the python doc you
reference saying that shouldn't be done. However, Fedora is now making
noises about doing the same, in a few years, after driving a change in the
upstream recommendation. While it's certainly not finalized, I'd fully
expect this...
2014 Oct 14
1
[OT]] CentOS 7 docs, tutorials, etc...
I apologize in advance for the subject and length of this reply. I debated
just letting things pass without comment. But, security has many levels. And
the first level is recognition of the threat.
Whether we recognize it or not. Whether we agree of disagree with the politics
that lie beneath this situation or not; Whether we consider this a
non-technical issue or not; By virtue of our
2016 Sep 28
4
Virtualization Networking
Hello,
I'm a little confused on which networking option I need to choose when
setting up a VM.
I set up two VMs this past weekend both with NAT. Both able to were
access the internet.
The first one, I created in my / file system but didn't really have the
space so I deleted it.
The second one, I created in /home/kvm, but deleted it as well when I
couldn't access it FROM the
2018 Feb 01
0
Migrate utils/ Python 2 scripts to Python 3
As mentioned in https://docs.python.org/3/using/unix.html#miscellaneous, for Python 3 the shebang line should be:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
For Python 2 the shebang line should probably be:
#!/usr/bin/env python2
but as Python 3 should never install its executable under the name "python", you could also let it stay at:
#!/usr/bin/env python
instead.
-Dimitry
> On 1 Feb 2018, at
2018 Feb 01
5
Migrate utils/ Python 2 scripts to Python 3
Sadly, neither the latest version of RedHat (released in 2014), nor the
latest version of macOS (released in 2017) have any version of python3
available with the default system. On the other hand, TTBOMK, every system
that does have python3 available also makes python2.7 also easily available.
LLVM is not a primarily python project, so keeping up with the latest
features of the language, and