Note that pminfo is obsolete in version 5.6 or higher and is included for backwards compatibility only.
Syntax
pminfo -v | [ -s | -d | -r [ -m <master> ] ]
Description
The pminfo program allows the local host to register with Privilege Manager for Unix. If your Privilege Manager for Unix policy server has a host license, this registration is mandatory; agents cannot communicate successfully with the policy server until registration is completed and the policy server has allocated a license slot for the agent.
During registration, information about the local host configuration is sent to the Privilege Manager for Unix policy server. This includes a list of the agent's IP addresses.
To view the information that will be sent to the Privilege Manager for Unix policy server, run pminfo with the -s option.
The pminfo program located on an agent identifies itself to the policy server using the agent's fully qualified host name and a unique registration data string.
If the host name or IP addresses of the agent are changed, then the agent must re-register with the policy server.
Options
pminfo has the following options.
Table 60: Options: pminfo
-d |
Unregisters the local host from Privilege Manager for Unix. |
-m <master> |
Specifies a single policy server host to register with. By default, pminfo attempts to register with all policy servers configured in etc/opt/quest/pm.settings. |
-r |
Registers the local host with Privilege Manager for Unix. |
-s |
Dumps the local host registration information to stdout. |
-v |
Displays the version number of Privilege Manager for Unix and exits. |
Syntax
pmjoin -h | --help [-abitv] [-d <variable>=<value>] [<policy_server_host>]
[-bv] -u --unjoin
[--accept] [--batch] [--define <variable>=<value>] [--interactive]
[--selinux] [--tunnel] [--verbose] <policy_server_host>
Description
Use the pmjoin command to join a PM Agent to the specified policy server. When you join a policy server to a policy group, it enables that host to validate security privileges against a single common policy file located on the primary policy server, instead of on the host. You must run this configuration script after installing the PM Agent package to allow this agent to communicate with the servers in the group.
Options
pmjoin has the following options.
Table 61: Options: pmjoin
-a | --accept |
Accepts the End User License Agreement (EULA), /opt/quest/qpm4u/pqm4u_eula.txt. |
-b | --batch |
Runs in batch mode, will not use colors or require user input under any circumstances. |
-d <variable>=<value> | --define <variable>=<value> |
Specifies a variable for the pm.settings file and its associated value. |
-h | --help |
Prints this help message. |
-i | --interactive |
Runs in interactive mode, prompting for configuration parameters instead of using the default values. |
-S | --selinux |
Enable support for SELinux in Privilege Manager for Unix.
A SELinux policy module will be installed, which allows the pmlocal daemon to set the security context to that of the run user when executing commands. This requires that the policycoreutils package and either the selinux-policy-devel (RHEL7 and above) or selinux-policy (RHEL6 and below) packages be installed. |
-t | --tunnel |
Configures host to allow Privilege Manager for Unix connections through a firewall. |
-u | --unjoin |
Unconfigures a Privilege Manager for Unix agent. |
-v | --verbose |
Displays verbose output while configuring the host. |
Syntax
pmkey -v | [-z on|off[:<pid>]]
-a <keyfile>
[ [-l | -r | -i <keyfile>]
[-p <passphrase>] [-f]]
Description
Use the pmkey command to generate and install configurable certificates.
In order for a policy evaluation request to run, keys must be installed on all hosts involved in the request. The keyfile must be owned by root and have permissions set so only root can read or write the keyfile.
Options
pmkey has the following options.
Table 62: Options: pmkey
-a <keyfile> |
Creates an authentication certificate. |
-i <keyfile> |
Installs an authentication certificate. |
-l |
Creates and installs a local authentication certificate to this file:
/etc/opt/quest/qpm4u/.qpm4u/.keyfiles/key_localhost
This is equivalent to running one of the following commands:
|
-f |
Forces the operation. For example:
|
-p <passphrase> |
Passes the passphrase on the command line for the -a or -l option.
If not specified, pmkey prompts the user for a passphrase. |
-r |
Installs all remote keys that have been copied to this directory:
/etc/opt/quest/qpm4u/.qpm4u/.keyfiles/key_<hostname>
This provides a quick way to install multiple remote keys. |
-v |
Displays the Privilege Manager for Unix version and exits. |
-z |
Enables or disables debug tracing.
Before using this option, see Enabling program-level tracing. |
Examples
The following command generates a new certificate, and puts it into the specified file:
pmkey -a <filename>
The following command installs the newly generated certificate from the specified file:
pmkey -i <filename>
Description
The Privilege Manager for Unix K Shell (pmksh) starts a Korn shell, an interactive command interpreter and a command programming language. The Korn shell carries out commands either interactively from a terminal keyboard or from a file. pmksh is a fully featured version of ksh, that provides transparent authorization and auditing for all commands submitted during the shell session. All standard options for ksh are supported by pmksh.
To see details of the options and the shell built-in commands supported by pmksh, run pmksh -?.
Note that pmksh supports the -B option which allows the entire shell to run in the background when used in conjunction with '&. For example, pmksh -B -c backgroundshellscript.sh & will run the specified shell script in the background using pmksh.
Using the appropriate policy file variables, you can configure each command entered during a shell session, to be:
-
forbidden by the shell without further authorization to the policy server
-
allowed by the shell without further authorization to the policy server
-
presented to the policy server for authorization
Once allowed by the shell, or authorized by the policy server, all commands run locally as the user running the shell program.