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 rpc.passw(1) -- server for modifying NIS password file
    rpc.passwd is a server that handles password change requests from yppasswd(1). It changes a password entry in the passwd file or if present, the shadow file. These files provide the basis for the passwd.byname and passwd.byuid maps. Entries in the passwd or shadow files are only changed if the password presented by yppasswd(1) matches the encrypted password of the entry. If the -D option is given the passwd or shadow files are located under the directory path specified with -D. The default direc...
 rpcbind(1) -- universal addresses to RPC program number mapper
    rpcbind is a server that converts RPC program numbers into universal addresses. It must be running to make RPC calls. When an RPC service is started, it will tell rpcbind at what address it is listening, and what RPC program numbers it is prepared to serve. When a client wishes to make an RPC call to a given program number, it will first contact rpcbind on the server machine to determine the address where RPC packets should be sent. ...
 rpcclient.1(1) -- tool for executing client side MS-RPC functions
    This tool is part of the Samba suite. rpcclient is a utility initially developed to test MS-RPC functionality in Samba itself. It has undergone several stages of development and stability. Many system administrators have now written scripts around it to manage Windows NT clients from their UNIX workstation.
 rpcgen(1) -- an RPC protocol compiler
    rpcgen is a tool that generates C code to implement an RPC protocol. rpcgen will produce file to be used with libc [see intro.3n(1)]. To produce file to be used with libnsl see rpcgen_tli(1). The input to rpcgen is a language similar to C known as RPC Language (Remote Procedure Call Language). rpcgen is normally used as in the first synopsis where it takes an input file and ...
 rpcgen_tli(1) -- an RPC protocol compiler
    rpcgen_tli is a tool that generates C code to implement an RPC protocol. rpcgen_tli will produce files to be used with libnsl [see intro.3n(1)]. To produce files to be used with the libc see rpcgen(1). The input to rpcgen_tli is a language similar to C known as RPC Language (Remote Procedure Call Language). rpcgen_tli is normally used as in the fir...
 rpcinfo(1) -- report RPC information
    rpcinfo makes an RPC call to an RPC server and reports what it finds.
 rqs(1) -- Make 32-bit executable or shared object QUICKSTARTable
    IRIX systems
 rqs64(1) -- Fixes up 64-bit executable or shared object to be QUICKSTARTable
    IRIX systems
 rqsall(1) -- requickstarts out-of-sync ELF shared objects/executables on a system
    The rqsall command is used to requickstart ELF files that are out of sync on a system. This command reads a description of the ELF files that have been recorded (in an undocumented plain text format) in ifile. Those descriptions are generated using the rqsread command. Using those descriptions this command determines which ELF files will not quickstart when executed. For each of those files, this command will normally execute the command /usr/etc/rqs or /usr/etc/rqs64 (as appropriate) on that fi...
 rqsprint(1) -- displays information about a collection of ELF files on a system
    The rqsprint command is display information relating to a collection of ELF files on a system. This command reads a description of the ELF files that have been recorded in file. Those descriptions are generated using the rqsread command. Using those descriptions this command can be used to determine which files will not quickstart, which files have conflict symbols, the set of files that will be loaded when executing a particular file, etc. This command takes two set of options. The preoptions a...
 rqsread(1) -- reads the information out of an ELF file that is needed to determine if the file needs to be requickstarted
    The rqsread extracts the information needed by the program rqsall from files, so that rqsall can determine whether the files should be requickstarted or if other files that depend on files need to be requickstarted. If no files are specified and no other list of files has been specified using the -l option, then this command will read a list of files (one per line) to process from stdin. -c outfile Causes the output to be written to outfile. outfile is truncated if it already exists. -f outfile ...
 rquotad(1) -- remote quota server
    rquotad is an rpc(4) server that returns quotas for a user of a local filesystem that is mounted by a remote machine using NFS. The results are used by quota(1) to display user quotas for remote filesystems. The rquotad daemon is normally invoked by inetd(1M).
 rshd(1) -- remote shell server
    Rshd is the server for the rcmd(3N) routine and, consequently, for the rsh(1C) program. The server provides remote execution facilities with authentication based on privileged port numbers from trusted hosts. The -a option verifies the remote host name and address match on all incoming connections. Normally this check is performed only for connections from hosts in the local domain. The -l option disables validation using .rhosts files. Transport-level keep-alive messages are enabled unless the ...
 rsh_bsd(1) -- remote shell
    rsh connects to the specified host, and executes the specified command. rsh copies its standard input to the remote command, the standard output of the remote command to its standard output, and the standard error of the remote command to its standard error. Interrupt, quit, and terminate signals are propagated to the remote command; rsh normally terminates when the remote command does. The remote username used is the same as your local username, unless you specify a different remote name with t...
 rstat(1) -- show resource reservation status
    Rstat displays the RSVP reservation state on the local system or on any specific remote node. In default operation, rstat displays reservation state for each interface and each session (destination address and port) for which there is a reservation. Each line contains the interface name, the style, the session address and port, the filter spec selecting sender(s), and the next hop address. If there is path state but no reservation, rstat simply lists the session with the notation "(no resv)". ...
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