Error during command authentication.
Error - unable to initiate communication with LISTSERV (errno=10061, phase=CONNECT, target=127.0.0.1:2306). The server is probably not started.
On 5/11/12 4:09 PM, "Emmanuel" <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Did you try Smile? Its readtext - and probably its find text - expand some > files on the fly, I think. > > Emmanuel Well, that might be too easy. No, seriously, I hadn't tried Smile, but that's mainly because I was mystified by why grep wasn't doing what I expected. Thanks. Laine > > On May 11, 2012, at 8:43 PM, L. Lee wrote: > >> Yesterday, I came across an Apple knowledge base article >> (http://support.apple.com/kb/TS4272) that appeared to me to state that under >> certain circumstances, passwords might be stored in clear text in some log >> files. So I started thinking about a command line that might be used to >> return a list of log files, compressed or not, that might contain a unique, >> exact fragment of a password. >> >> To test my script, I found a file (/private/var/log/AppleJack.log.0.bz) >> that, when I decompressed and opened it in TextWrangler, appeared to contain >> the string "8CFCE322A9CB". >> >> Why isn't "/var/log/AppleJack.log.0.bz" returned in the results of the >> following terminal command on my system? What terminal command could I use >> instead to search for "8CFCE322A9CB" in text or .bz files in >> /private/var/log that would include "/var/log/AppleJack.log.0.bz" in its >> results? >> >> sudo find /private/var/log -exec bzgrep -q "8CFCE322A9CB" '{}' \; -print >> >> Thanks. >> >> Laine Lee