Thanks a lot, I tried to separate the command, and everything seem ok.
But I had a problem with the command "addprinc", since the java exec pass to it like a single string (the command was interpreted like "addprinc [EMAIL PROTECTED]" and not like "addprinc"). So, my solution was to create a script with parameter separated by spaces and call it from Java... lovely. Thanks a lot Jonathan Córdoba Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) GIAC Certified Forensics Analyst (GCFA) CompTIA Security+ Certified Professional Ing. Seguridad Universidad de los Andes Dirección de Tecnologías de Información (D.T.I.) Bogotá - Colombia -----Original Message----- From: Ken Raeburn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Martes, 13 de Noviembre de 2007 01:32 p.m. To: Jonathan Javier Cordoba Gonzalez Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: Java Kadmin On Nov 13, 2007, at 13:09, Jonathan Javier Cordoba Gonzalez wrote: > Well Im try to do a interface that admin the user database on > java. My > first solution was call kadmin.local from java through > > Runtime.getRuntime().exec("kadmin.local q \"addprinc pw lola > [EMAIL PROTECTED]"") > > Well there seems ok, but when I execute on a linux box the process > on Java > tries to connect with the user [EMAIL PROTECTED] (funny isnt it?) > and kadmin > doesnt found on KDC. Sounds like exec isn't parsing the string the way a shell would, and kadmin.local sees a separate "-pw" argument and takes that as an indication that the principal name is "w". According to http:// java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/lang/Runtime.html#exec (java.lang.String) the string is parsed using a StringTokenizer that doesn't understand quoted strings in the input. Probably you want to use the exec(String[]) method instead, and construct the argument array yourself, either as an array directly, or by more shell-like tokenization. Ken ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
