Privilege Manager for Unix provides command line utilities to help you manage your policy servers. They can be used to check the status of your policy servers, edit the policy, or to simply report the information.
Privilege Manager for Unix provides command line utilities to help you manage your policy servers. They can be used to check the status of your policy servers, edit the policy, or to simply report the information.
To report basic information about the configuration of a policy server
From the command line, enter:
# pmsrvinfo
This command returns output similar to this:
Policy Server Configuration: ---------------------------- Privilege Manager for Unix version : 7.2.3.0 (nnn) Listening port for pmmasterd daemon : 12345 Comms failover method : random Comms timeout(in seconds) : 10 Policy type in use : pmpolicy Group ownership of logs : pmlog Group ownership of policy repository : pmpolicy Policy server type : primary Primary policy server for this group : myhost.example.com Group name for this group : MyPolicyGroup Location of the repository : file: ////var/opt/quest/qpm4u/.qpm4u/.repository/sudo_repos/trunk Hosts in the group : myhost.example.com
The "master" copy of the policy file resides in a repository on the primary policy server. Each primary and secondary policy server maintains a "production" copy of the policy file or files. Use the pmpolicy utility to verify that the production copy is current with the master policy.
To compare the production policy file against the master policy on the primary server
# pmpolicy masterstatus
If the files are in sync, the Current Revision number will match the Latest Trunk Revision number. If someone hand-edited the local copy without using pmpolicy utility commands to commit the changes, "Locally modified" will indicate "YES".
If the production policy is not current with the master policy you can update the production policy with pmpolicy sync.
When the policy server is not working as expected, use the pmsrvcheck command to determine the state of the server and its configuration.
To verify the policy server is running
# pmsrvcheck
This command returns output similar to this:
testing policy server [ Pass ]
If the policy server is working properly, the output returns 'pass', otherwise it returns, 'fail'.
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