Which of the following can you do to have the application execute, and not have the security of the system low
The computer you are currently using is running Linux, and you are logged into the system with
your normal user account. An application you wish to run requires root access to execute. Which
of the following can you do to have the application execute, and not have the security of the
system lowered?
Where is the umask setting located?
You have decided to alter the default permissions of files on your SuSe Linux system. To do so,
you are going to change the umask settings. Where is the umask setting located?
Which of the following pieces of information are found in the Inode, on a Linux system?
Which of the following pieces of information are found in the Inode, on a Linux system?
Which of the following tools will allow you to accomplish your task?
You wish to manage your Linux system remotely, using a web browser. Which of the following
tools will allow you to accomplish your task?
What command will you run to see the CPU percentage per application in real-time?
You fear an unauthorized program has taken control of your CPU in your Linux system. What
command will you run to see the CPU percentage per application in real-time?
What will be the level of permission given to the user if you assign an Octal value of 7?
You are setting the permissions on a new file in Linux. What will be the level of permission given to
the user if you assign an Octal value of 7?
What will be the level of permission given to the user if you assign an Octal value of 6?
You are setting the permissions on a new file in Linux. What will be the level of permission given to
the user if you assign an Octal value of 6?
What command do you use to perform this action?
After installing a new application on your SuSe Linux server, you need to read through the log
files.
When you open the files, you notice they are very long, and you only wish to check the newest
entries to the file. What command do you use to perform this action?
What command will allow you to achieve this?
You have a file on your Linux system, and you need to modify the file’s permissions. The
permissions you wish to apply are: Read, Write, and Execute for the User; Read and Write for the
Group: and Read for the Others. What command will allow you to achieve this?
what values are assigned to the user account?
When a new user account is created in Linux, what values are assigned to the user account?