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1 Day 2 Logging in, Passwords, Man, talk, write. 2 Logging in Unix is a multi user system –Many people can be using it at the same time. –Connections.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Day 2 Logging in, Passwords, Man, talk, write. 2 Logging in Unix is a multi user system –Many people can be using it at the same time. –Connections."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Day 2 Logging in, Passwords, Man, talk, write

2 2 Logging in Unix is a multi user system –Many people can be using it at the same time. –Connections are made through a text connection telnet –A simple text based window which allows you to type commands and see the response. ssh –Secure shell. Makes the text typed between you and the UNIX machine unreadable to anyone on the Internet. ftp –Allows you to transfer files from your machine to the UNIX machine and back again.

3 3 Telnet Application To connect to a UNIX machine from a MS- Windows machine, you will need a telnet program. –All versions of Windows have a built in program called “telnet”. You can run it by clicking on “Start” – “Run” and type telnet. However, it does not support SSH, and is frequently confused by the terminal emulation. –Putty.exe is another telnet application. We will be using it in this class.

4 4 Putty Putty is a free piece of software. –Available from the class web site: http://newcollege.clayton.edu/ITSK1601 –Runs on any version of windows.

5 5 Logging in The unix machine we will be using is called –kahuna.clayton.edu –It does not accept regular “telnet” connections. You must connect via “SSH” –You will need your username and password. –Username: First part of email address. E.g. csu1111@mail.clayton.edu wouldcsu1111@mail.clayton.edu –log in with csu1111 –Password: Social security number E.g. 111223333

6 6 Start Putty

7 7 Login

8 8 Logged in

9 9 Exercise: Download putty from our class web site: –http://newcollege.clayton.edu/ITSK1601 Log into kahuna.clayton.edu with your username and password –When you get done, help your partner. –If you are both done, type the following command: –tetris-bsd Learn to play and have fun for a few minutes while we get everyone logged in.

10 10 Passwords Passwords help us prove to the machine that we are who we say we are. –Often a UNIX machine performs an important function. Its important to know if someone has authorization to do what he/she says to –Each user should keep their password very secure If someone knew your password here they could: –Send email pretending it came from you –Read your email on kahuna –Get to any of your files, possibly steal your homework

11 11 Good/Bad passwords You should choose a password which would be hard for someone to guess. –Bad ideas: Social Security number, Phone number, Date of birth, Name, parents names. Any word in any language dictionary –Good ideas: User CAPITAL letters and numbers as much as possible User special characters like: []{}-_=+!@#$%^&*()?/><‘:’” Length is important

12 12 Examples Good passwords: –First letter of each word in a rhyme/sentence Jajwuahtfapow [Jack and Jill went up a hill to fetch a pail of water] –A group of words together with numbers substituted for letters B4its0Ver [Before it’s over] Just be sure you will remember the password later. It sucks to have to go to the sysadmin and ask for your password to be reset.

13 13 Changing your password Type the command –passwd It will prompt you to enter your OLD password again, and then your new password twice. You should change your password approx every 6 months, and anytime you think it has been compromised.

14 14 Who is root? There is one special account on every UNIX machine: –root Anyone logged in as root, has permission to do anything on the system. –They can change passwords, view any file, setup hardware. The root password for a system must be kept very secure.

15 15 What if you forget your password? There are no back doors in UNIX. Nobody can tell you what your password was, not even the system administrator The root user can type: –passwd enda Since it is root requesting this, they will not be asked for the old password. So they can set it to some new password.

16 16 Oops…who do I get out? If you type any command and don’t know how to get out try: –Hit q –Hold down the control key and hit c One of those will work 99% of the time. For the other 1% try: –Hold down the control key and hit z –Type: kill %1 –Close the window you have and log in again.

17 17 Communicating in UNIX UNIX offers the following: –Email –Real time messages –Chat sessions

18 18 E-mail Sending an email: –mail enda@kahuna.clayton.eduenda@kahuna.clayton.edu –You will be prompted for a subject. –Type the message. When you are done, hit enter once then press the period “.” and then press enter again. –If you type mail by itself without an email address it will show you what is in your mail box.

19 19 Pine The first UNIX application we are going to look at is called PINE (Program for Internet News and Email) This is one of the many UNIX mail programs Easy to use, has menus at the bottom of the screen which tells you the options. ^C would mean “hold down the control key and hit C”

20 20 Pine basics Sending a message –Enter pine and hit C –Type the message, hit Control X to send. Viewing mail –Enter pine and hit L –Use the arrows to highlight “INBOX” click enter. –Select the message you want to see with the arrow keys and hit enter to view it. –D will mark the message for deletion, when you exit it will ask if you want them deleted.

21 21 Exercise: Send your partner a mail message on kahuna: –Their address is: ccsuxxxxx@kahuna.clayton.edu Each of you should check your mail on Kahuna and verify you got the message.

22 22 write You can send someone who is logged in on your machine a real time message –write enda –Then type what you want to say. –When you are done, hit Control D

23 23 Exercise Send your partner a message using write Remember to hold down the control key and hit D when you are done.

24 24 talk If you want a full chat session, then “talk” is what your looking for: –talk enda This would send me a message indicating that you want to talk to me. If I want to respond, I would answer with: –talk bob Now we have a window which I can see what you type, and you can see what I type.

25 25 Talking to many at once If you need to talk to 3 or more people at once, talk cannot do that. –There is a program called “ytalk” which can do that. –ytalk enda –Again, to respond I must answer with “ytalk bob” –You can add additional people with by hitting the escape key once, and then pressing a You will be prompted for the other person to add.

26 26 Feeling Anti-Social? Just incase you are feeling anti-social, or incase you are actually trying to get some work done. You can prevent people from writing to you or talking to you with: –mesg n This can be reversed with: –mesg y Each time you log in, you must run this to stop messages.

27 27 Exercise Get a talk session going with a few people around you. –Talk about how wonderful UNIX is. –Be sure to add more than 2 people.

28 28 Oh man! What if you don’t know how to use one of these programs? –Read the online manual. man talk man ytalk man pine man write man –Sometimes cryptic, but can give you a hint as to what options are supported, and how to use them.

29 29 Manual Sections Sometimes the same command can have 2 or more meanings: –Write As we just saw, this allows you to send a message to someone else who is logged in. In many programming languages including C, write means put something on the screen –To specify that you want the programming language version you would type: »man 2 write –This means you want section 2 of the manual.

30 30 Logging out To get out of a UNIX system type: –exit


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