From e8ec7aa8e38a93f5b034ac74cebce5de23710317 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: hongbotian Date: Mon, 30 Nov 2015 01:45:08 -0500 Subject: upload http JIRA: BOTTLENECK-10 Change-Id: I7598427ff904df438ce77c2819ee48ac75ffa8da Signed-off-by: hongbotian --- .../docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en | 193 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 193 insertions(+) create mode 100644 rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en (limited to 'rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en') diff --git a/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en b/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en new file mode 100644 index 00000000..bd533d1f --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/docs/manual/programs/dbmmanage.html.en @@ -0,0 +1,193 @@ + + + +dbmmanage - Manage user authentication files in DBM format - Apache HTTP Server + + + + + +
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dbmmanage - Manage user authentication files in DBM format

+
+

Available Languages:  en  | + ko  | + tr 

+
+ +

dbmmanage is used to create and update the DBM format files + used to store usernames and password for basic authentication of HTTP users + via mod_auth_dbm. + Resources available from the Apache HTTP server can be restricted to just + the users listed in the files created by dbmmanage. This + program can only be used when the usernames are stored in a DBM file. To + use a flat-file database see htpasswd.

+ +

This manual page only lists the command line arguments. For details of + the directives necessary to configure user authentication in + httpd see the httpd manual, which is part of + the Apache distribution or can be found at http://httpd.apache.org/.

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+

Synopsis

+

dbmmanage [ encoding ] + filename add|adduser|check|delete|update + username + [ encpasswd + [ group[,group...] + [ comment ] ] ]

+ +

dbmmanage filename + view [ username ]

+ +

dbmmanage filename import

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+

Options

+
+
filename
+
The filename of the DBM format file. Usually without the extension + .db, .pag, or .dir.
+ +
username
+
The user for which the operations are performed. The username + may not contain a colon (:).
+ +
encpasswd
+
This is the already encrypted password to use for the + update and add commands. You may use a hyphen + (-) if you want to get prompted for the password, but fill + in the fields afterwards. Additionally when using the update + command, a period (.) keeps the original password + untouched.
+ +
group
+
A group, which the user is member of. A groupname may not contain a + colon (:). You may use a hyphen (-) if you don't + want to assign the user to a group, but fill in the comment field. + Additionally when using the update command, a period + (.) keeps the original groups untouched.
+ +
comment
+
This is the place for your opaque comments about the user, like + realname, mailaddress or such things. The server will ignore this + field.
+
+ +

Encodings

+
+
-d
+
crypt encryption (default, except on Win32, Netware)
+ +
-m
+
MD5 encryption (default on Win32, Netware)
+ +
-s
+
SHA1 encryption
+ +
-p
+
plaintext (not recommended)
+
+ + +

Commands

+
+
add
+
Adds an entry for username to filename using the + encrypted password encpasswd. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat add rbowen foKntnEF3KSXA

+
+ +
adduser
+
Asks for a password and then adds an entry for username to + filename. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat adduser krietz

+
+ +
check
+
Asks for a password and then checks if username is in + filename and if it's password matches the specified one. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat check rbowen

+
+ +
delete
+
Deletes the username entry from filename. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat delete rbowen

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+ +
import
+
Reads username:password entries + (one per line) from STDIN and adds them to + filename. The passwords already have to be crypted.
+ +
update
+
Same as the adduser command, except that it makes + sure username already exists in filename. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat update rbowen

+
+ +
view
+
Just displays the contents of the DBM file. If you specify a + username, it displays the particular record only. + +

dbmmanage passwords.dat view

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+

Bugs

+

One should be aware that there are a number of different DBM file formats + in existence, and with all likelihood, libraries for more than one format + may exist on your system. The three primary examples are SDBM, NDBM, the GNU + project's GDBM, and Berkeley DB 2. Unfortunately, all these libraries use + different file formats, and you must make sure that the file format used + by filename is the same format that dbmmanage + expects to see. dbmmanage currently has no way of determining + what type of DBM file it is looking at. If used against the wrong format, + will simply return nothing, or may create a different DBM file with a + different name, or at worst, it may corrupt the DBM file if you were + attempting to write to it.

+ +

dbmmanage has a list of DBM format preferences, defined by + the @AnyDBM::ISA array near the beginning of the program. Since + we prefer the Berkeley DB 2 file format, the order in which + dbmmanage will look for system libraries is Berkeley DB 2, + then NDBM, then GDBM and then SDBM. The first library found will be the + library dbmmanage will attempt to use for all DBM file + transactions. This ordering is slightly different than the standard + @AnyDBM::ISA ordering in Perl, as well as the ordering used by + the simple dbmopen() call in Perl, so if you use any other + utilities to manage your DBM files, they must also follow this preference + ordering. Similar care must be taken if using programs in other languages, + like C, to access these files.

+ +

One can usually use the file program supplied with most + Unix systems to see what format a DBM file is in.

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Available Languages:  en  | + ko  | + tr 

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