DataMuseum.dk

Presents historical artifacts from the history of:

DKUUG/EUUG Conference tapes

This is an automatic "excavation" of a thematic subset of
artifacts from Datamuseum.dk's BitArchive.

See our Wiki for more about DKUUG/EUUG Conference tapes

Excavated with: AutoArchaeologist - Free & Open Source Software.


top - metrics - download
Index: T i

⟦2b7f5fa5d⟧ TextFile

    Length: 992 (0x3e0)
    Types: TextFile
    Names: »is_able.chk«

Derivation

└─⟦4f9d7c866⟧ Bits:30007245 EUUGD6: Sikkerheds distributionen
    └─⟦ed5edc051⟧ »./cops/1.02/cops.102.tar« 
└─⟦4f9d7c866⟧ Bits:30007245 EUUGD6: Sikkerheds distributionen
    └─⟦db60b44f1⟧ »./cops/1.02/cops.102.tar.Z« 
        └─⟦ed5edc051⟧ 
            └─⟦this⟧ »cops/docs/is_able.chk« 

TextFile

.TH IS_ABLE.CHK 1 "Jan 4, 1991"
.UC 4
.SH NAME
is_able.chk \- Check for write/read\-ability of files listed a configuration file.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B is_able.chk
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I is_able.chk
checks all files listed in the file
.I is_able.lst
to see if files are either write/read-able by group or by
all, or if they are setuid/setgid, or a combination of these.
.PP
.I is_able.lst
is merely a list of files (or regular expressions representing a file
or files), one per line, that are checked by
.I is_able.
Any line starting with a "#" is ignored, and any file checked for
writability also checks the parent directories (if a complete path is
given) for writeability.
.SH EXAMPLE
.EX 0
#   Lines are of the format:
#	/path/to/file
/etc/*
/.profile
.EE
.SH FILES
is_able.lst
.SH Bugs
When using wildcards and checking a directory with a lot of files, overflow
of the shell variables can occur, causing incorrect arguments to be passed
to the driving program,
.I is_able
.SH See Also
is_able(1)