Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux
-
@coliver No unfortunately.
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
-
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
So someone left / was termed?
su root
sudo passwd [login] [new pass]
-
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
So someone left / was termed?
su root
sudo passwd [login] [new pass]
That's what I was thinking.
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Yeah, okay, so login as root and change the user password. Why would it matter if you have to access their account now? The business gives you permission, right?
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
You can do something like this:
find /home/ -name .bash_history 2>/dev/null | cat .bash_history
-
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
It could end in
.py
or any other extension.Or very likely, no extension at all. Most of mine don't have one.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
It could end in
.py
or any other extension.Or very likely, no extension at all. Most of mine don't have one.
I create my own extensions for labeling purposes
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
It could end in
.py
or any other extension.Or very likely, no extension at all. Most of mine don't have one.
Doesn't that just make it annoying to run a script without knowing what language it was written in? (not that an extension is any indicator of the language used, but still).
-
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
So someone left / was termed?
su root
sudo passwd [login] [new pass]
Even easier...
sudo -i su username
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
How do you do into Windows as another user without their password? or resetting their password to something you know?
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
I do this all of the time. I get a CYA in writing and just go. Forget all about the user lol
-
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
It could end in
.py
or any other extension.Or very likely, no extension at all. Most of mine don't have one.
Doesn't that just make it annoying to run a script without knowing what language it was written in? (not that an extension is any indicator of the language used, but still).
If you were on Windows, yes. But not on Linux since you don't have any need to know what language it is in, they just run.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
I just don't know how this was setup or what it is doing. If I change the pw there is no chance that I could break something due to it being used like a service account for scripts?
-
@Dashrender said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
How do you do into Windows as another user without their password? or resetting their password to something you know?
You'd change the password if you had to login as that user. Otherwise as the admin you'd grant yourself access to the user files.
-
@Dashrender said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
How do you do into Windows as another user without their password? or resetting their password to something you know?
net user name password
-
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
I just don't know how this was setup or what it is doing. If I change the pw there is no chance that I could break something due to it being used like a service account for scripts?
Even if it was a service, it would run with the new password just as well. If it's setup to use the user password in some config, you should be able to see that pretty easily.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@Dashrender said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@scottalanmiller said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@DustinB3403 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@wirestyle22 said in Locating a script that you don't know the name of in Linux:
@coliver No unfortunately.
Are there additional users on this system? If so you might need to login as them and check the history for each of them.
The problem is that I can't. They are local accounts and there was no transfer of information. No one knows the passwords. Can't reach out to these people as they left on bad terms apparently.
Very inconvenient
The admin can just reset passwords or log in as people. There is never a need to know the local user account passwords (and that goes for Windows, too.)
How do you do into Windows as another user without their password? or resetting their password to something you know?
net user name password
Doesn't that just offer you the ability to change the password?