Le mer 05/02/2003 � 20:06, Migrec a �crit :

> D�marre une console root et v�rifie PATH
> # echo $PATH
> Si dans la liste, ti vois /usr/sbin et /sbin (entre autre), c'est bon, 

 Il semblerait que non :

A:~# echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/games


tu peux 
> r�essayer. Sinon :
> 
> # export PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin;/usr/sbin:/sbin

 R�sultat :

 : ~# export PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin;/usr/sbin:/sbin
bash: /usr/sbin:/sbin: Aucun fichier ou r�pertoire de ce type

Ci-joint mon /etc/login.defs
Quoiqu'on fait maintenant ??


> # dpkg --configure -a
> 
> La variable PATH contient les chemins (les raccourcis) pour �x�cuter une 
> commande quand tu n'as que son nom. Exemple :
> $ uname est �quivalent � : 
> $ /bin/uname
> 
> Pour savoir ou se situe une commande :
> $ which commandeachercher 
> 
> (au d�but des commandes, # veut dire que tu es root et $ signifie utilisateur 
> normal)
> -- 
> Migrec
> 
> 
> -- 
> To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 

#
# /etc/login.defs - Configuration control definitions for the login package.
#
#       $Id: login.defs.linux,v 1.11 1999/08/27 19:02:50 marekm Exp $
#
# Three items must be defined:  MAIL_DIR, ENV_SUPATH, and ENV_PATH.
# If unspecified, some arbitrary (and possibly incorrect) value will
# be assumed.  All other items are optional - if not specified then
# the described action or option will be inhibited.
#
# Comment lines (lines beginning with "#") and blank lines are ignored.
#
# Modified for Linux.  --marekm

#
# *REQUIRED*
#   Directory where mailboxes reside, _or_ name of file, relative to the
#   home directory.  If you _do_ define both, MAIL_DIR takes precedence.
#   QMAIL_DIR is for Qmail (or any maildir-compatible MTA, such as Exim or
#   Postfix when suitably configured).
# 
#   Essentially, MAIL_DIR defines the $MAIL environmental variable
#   (for mbox use) by appending the username to MAIL_DIR as defined
#   below.  MAIL_FILE defines the $MAIL environment variable as the
#   fully-qualified filename obtained by prepending the user home
#   directory before $MAIL_FILE, and QMAIL_DIR defines the MAIL
#   environment variable as the fully-qualified directory name
#   obtained by prepending the user home directory before $QMAIL_DIR.
#
# NOTE: This is used to setup your MAIL environment variable, and also
# used by userdel to determine if any mail spools need to be removed when
# removing a user. If you change this, you should also change the
# pam_mail.so module setup in /etc/pam.d/login, which affects the "You
# have mail" message on login, and, in default setup, overrides this setting
# in determining the $MAIL environmental variable.
# 
#QMAIL_DIR      Maildir/
MAIL_DIR        /var/mail
#MAIL_FILE      .mail

#
# Delay in seconds before being allowed another attempt after a login failure
#
FAIL_DELAY              3

#
# Enable logging and display of /var/log/faillog login failure info.
#
FAILLOG_ENAB            yes

#
# Enable display of unknown usernames when login failures are recorded.
#
LOG_UNKFAIL_ENAB        no

#
# Enable logging of successful logins
#
LOG_OK_LOGINS           no

#
# Enable setting of ulimit, umask, and niceness from passwd gecos field.
#
QUOTAS_ENAB             yes

#
# Enable "syslog" logging of su activity - in addition to sulog file logging.
# SYSLOG_SG_ENAB does the same for newgrp and sg.
#
SYSLOG_SU_ENAB          yes
SYSLOG_SG_ENAB          yes

#
# If defined, all su activity is logged to this file.
#
#SULOG_FILE     /var/log/sulog

#
# If defined, file which maps tty line to TERM environment parameter.
# Each line of the file is in a format something like "vt100  tty01".
#
#TTYTYPE_FILE   /etc/ttytype

#
# If defined, login failures will be logged here in a utmp format.
# last, when invoked as lastb, will read /var/log/btmp, so...
#
FTMP_FILE       /var/log/btmp

#
# If defined, the command name to display when running "su -".  For
# example, if this is defined as "su" then a "ps" will display the
# command is "-su".  If not defined, then "ps" would display the
# name of the shell actually being run, e.g. something like "-sh".
#
SU_NAME         su

#
# If defined, file which inhibits all the usual chatter during the login
# sequence.  If a full pathname, then hushed mode will be enabled if the
# user's name or shell are found in the file.  If not a full pathname, then
# hushed mode will be enabled if the file exists in the user's home directory.
#
HUSHLOGIN_FILE  .hushlogin
#HUSHLOGIN_FILE /etc/hushlogins

#
# If defined, the presence of this value in an /etc/passwd "shell" field will
# disable logins for that user, although "su" will still be allowed.
#
# XXX this does not seem to be implemented yet...  --marekm
# no, it was implemented but I ripped it out ;-) -- jfh
NOLOGIN_STR     NOLOGIN

#
# If defined, either a TZ environment parameter spec or the
# fully-rooted pathname of a file containing such a spec.
#
#ENV_TZ         TZ=CST6CDT
#ENV_TZ         /etc/tzname

#
# If defined, an HZ environment parameter spec.
#
# for Linux/x86
ENV_HZ          HZ=100
# For Linux/Alpha...
#ENV_HZ         HZ=1024

#
# *REQUIRED*  The default PATH settings, for superuser and normal users.
#
# (they are minimal, add the rest in the shell startup files)
ENV_SUPATH      
PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin
ENV_PATH        PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/games

#
# Terminal permissions
#
#       TTYGROUP        Login tty will be assigned this group ownership.
#       TTYPERM         Login tty will be set to this permission.
#
# If you have a "write" program which is "setgid" to a special group
# which owns the terminals, define TTYGROUP to the group number and
# TTYPERM to 0620.  Otherwise leave TTYGROUP commented out and assign
# TTYPERM to either 622 or 600.
#
TTYGROUP        tty
TTYPERM         0600

#
# Login configuration initializations:
#
#       ERASECHAR       Terminal ERASE character ('\010' = backspace).
#       KILLCHAR        Terminal KILL character ('\025' = CTRL/U).
#       UMASK           Default "umask" value.
#       ULIMIT          Default "ulimit" value.
#
# The ERASECHAR and KILLCHAR are used only on System V machines.
# The ULIMIT is used only if the system supports it.
# (now it works with setrlimit too; ulimit is in 512-byte units)
#
# Prefix these values with "0" to get octal, "0x" to get hexadecimal.
#
ERASECHAR       0177
KILLCHAR        025
UMASK           022
#ULIMIT         2097152

#
# Password aging controls:
#
#       PASS_MAX_DAYS   Maximum number of days a password may be used.
#       PASS_MIN_DAYS   Minimum number of days allowed between password changes.
#       PASS_WARN_AGE   Number of days warning given before a password expires.
#
PASS_MAX_DAYS   99999
PASS_MIN_DAYS   0
PASS_WARN_AGE   7

#
# Min/max values for automatic uid selection in useradd
#
UID_MIN                  1000
UID_MAX                 60000

#
# Min/max values for automatic gid selection in groupadd
#
GID_MIN                   100
GID_MAX                 60000

#
# Max number of login retries if password is bad. This will most likely be
# overriden by PAM, since the default pam_unix module has it's own built
# in of 3 retries However, this is a safe fallback in case you are using
# and authentication module that does not enforce PAM_MAXTRIES.
#
LOGIN_RETRIES           5

#
# Max time in seconds for login
#
LOGIN_TIMEOUT           60

#
# Number of significant characters in the password for crypt().
# Default is 8, don't change unless your crypt() is better.
# If using MD5 in your PAM configuration, set this higher.
#
PASS_MAX_LEN            8

#
# Require password before chfn/chsh can make any changes.
#
CHFN_AUTH               yes

#
# Which fields may be changed by regular users using chfn - use
# any combination of letters "frwh" (full name, room number, work
# phone, home phone).  If not defined, no changes are allowed.
# For backward compatibility, "yes" = "rwh" and "no" = "frwh".
# 
CHFN_RESTRICT           rwh

#
# Password prompt (%s will be replaced by user name).
#
# XXX - it doesn't work correctly yet, for now leave it commented out
# to use the default which is just "Password: ".
#LOGIN_STRING           "%s's Password: "

#
# Should login be allowed if we can't cd to the home directory?
# Default in no.
#
DEFAULT_HOME    yes

#
# If defined, this command is run when removing a user.
# It should remove any at/cron/print jobs etc. owned by
# the user to be removed (passed as the first argument).
#
#USERDEL_CMD    /usr/sbin/userdel_local

#
# If defined, either full pathname of a file containing device names or
# a ":" delimited list of device names.  No password is required to log in
# as a non-root user on these devices.
#
#NO_PASSWORD_CONSOLE tty1:tty2:tty3:tty4:tty5:tty6

#
# When prompting for password without echo, getpass() can optionally
# display a random number (in the range 1 to GETPASS_ASTERISKS) of '*'
# characters for each character typed.  This feature is designed to
# confuse people looking over your shoulder when you enter a password :-).
# Also, the new getpass() accepts both Backspace (8) and Delete (127)
# keys to delete previous character (to cope with different terminal
# types), Control-U to delete all characters, and beeps when there are
# no more characters to delete, or too many characters entered.
#
# Setting GETPASS_ASTERISKS to 1 results in more traditional behaviour -
# exactly one '*' displayed for each character typed.
#
# Setting GETPASS_ASTERISKS to 0 disables the '*' characters (Backspace,
# Delete, Control-U and beep continue to work as described above).
#
# Setting GETPASS_ASTERISKS to -1 reverts to the traditional getpass()
# without any new features.  This is the default.
#
#GETPASS_ASTERISKS 1

#
# Enable setting of the umask group bits to be the same as owner bits
# (examples: 022 -> 002, 077 -> 007) for non-root users, if the uid is
# the same as gid, and username is the same as the primary group name.
#
# This also enables userdel to remove user groups if no members exist.
#
USERGROUPS_ENAB yes

#
# Instead of the real user shell, the program specified by this parameter
# will be launched, although its visible name (argv[0]) will be the shell's.
# The program may do whatever it wants (logging, additional authentification,
# banner, ...) before running the actual shell.
#
# FAKE_SHELL /bin/fakeshell

#
# Enable pam_close_session() calling. When using normal (pam_unix.so)
# session handling modules, this is not needed. However with modules
# (such as kerberos or other persistent session models), login and su
# need to fork and wait for the shell to exit so that sessions can be
# cleaned up.
#
CLOSE_SESSIONS no

################# OBSOLETED BY PAM ##############
#                                               #
# These options are now handled by PAM. Please  #
# edit the appropriate file in /etc/pam.d/ to   #
# enable the equivelants of them.
#
###############

#MOTD_FILE
#DIALUPS_CHECK_ENAB
#LASTLOG_ENAB
#MAIL_CHECK_ENAB
#OBSCURE_CHECKS_ENAB
#PORTTIME_CHECKS_ENAB
#CONSOLE
#SU_WHEEL_ONLY
#CRACKLIB_DICTPATH
#PASS_CHANGE_TRIES
#PASS_ALWAYS_WARN
#MD5_CRYPT_ENAB
#CONSOLE_GROUPS
#ENVIRON_FILE
#NOLOGINS_FILE
#ISSUE_FILE
#PASS_MIN_LEN

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