groupmems

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Langue: en

Version: 05/25/2008 (fedora - 06/07/09)

Section: 8 (Commandes administrateur)

NAME

groupmems - administer members of a user's primary group

SYNOPSIS

groupmems -a user_name | -d user_name | -l | -p | [-g group_name]

DESCRIPTION

The groupmems command allows a user to administer his/her own group membership list without the requirement of superuser privileges. The groupmems utility is for systems that configure its users to be in their own name sake primary group (i.e., guest / guest).

Only the superuser, as administrator, can use groupmems to alter the memberships of other groups.

OPTIONS

The options which apply to the groupmems command are:

-a user_name

Add a new user to the group membership list.

-d user_name

Delete a user from the group membership list.

-p

Purge all users from the group membership list.

-g group_name

The superuser can specify which group membership list to modify.

-l

List the group membership list.

SETUP

The groupmems executable should be in mode 2770 as user root and in group groups. The system administrator can add users to group groups to allow or disallow them using the groupmems utility to manage their own group membership list.

         $ groupadd -r groups
         $ chmod 2770 groupmems
         $ chown root.groups groupmems
         $ groupmems -g groups -a gk4
     
 

CONFIGURATION

The following configuration variables in /etc/login.defs change the behavior of this tool:

MAX_MEMBERS_PER_GROUP (number)

Maximum members per group entry. When the maximum is reached, a new group entry (line) is started in /etc/group (with the same name, same password, and same GID).
The default value is 0, meaning that there are no limits in the number of members in a group.
This feature (split group) permits to limit the length of lines in the group file. This is useful to make sure that lines for NIS groups are not larger than 1024 characters.
If you need to enforce such limit, you can use 25.
Note: split groups may not be supported by all tools (even in the Shadow toolsuite. You should not use this variable unless you really need it.

FILES

/etc/group

Group account information.

/etc/gshadow

secure group account information

SEE ALSO

chfn(1), chsh(1), passwd(1), groupadd(8), groupdel(8), useradd(8), userdel(8), usermod(8).