Manual page for useradd(1M)
useradd - administer a new user login on the system
SYNOPSIS
useradd
[
-c comment
]
[
-d dir
] [
-e expire
]
[
-f inactive
]
[
-g group
]
[
-G group
[,
group...]]
[
-m
[
-k skel_dir
]]
[
-u uid
[
-o]]
[
-s shell
]
login
useradd -D
[
-b base_dir
] [
-e expire
] [
-f inactive
]
[
-g group
]
AVAILABILITY
SUNWcsu
DESCRIPTION
useradd
adds a new user entry to the
/etc/passwd
and
/etc/shadow
files.
It also creates supplementary group memberships
for the user (-G option)
and creates the home directory (-m option)
for the user if requested.
The new login remains locked until the
passwd.1
command
is executed.
Specifying
useradd -D
with the
-g,
-b,
-f,
or
-e
options (or any combination of these)
sets the default values for the respective fields.
See the
-D
option below.
Subsequent
useradd
commands without the
-D
option use these arguments.
The system file entries created with this command have a limit of 512
characters per line.
Specifying long arguments to several options may exceed this limit.
login
is a string of printable characters that specifies the new login name
of the user.
It may not contain a colon (:) or a newline (\n).
OPTIONS
- -c comment
-
Any text string.
It is generally a short description of the login, and
is currently used as the field for the user's full name.
This information is stored in the user's
/etc/passwd
entry.
- -d dir
-
The home directory of the new user.
It defaults to
base_dir/login,
where
base_dir
is the base directory for new login home directories and
login
is the new login name.
- -e expire
-
Specify the expiration date for a login.
After this date, no user will be able to access this login.
expire
is a date entered in any format you like
(except a Julian date).
If the date format that you choose includes spaces, it must be quoted.
For example, you may enter
10/6/90 or "October 6, 1990".
A null value (" ") defeats
the status of the expired date.
This option is useful for creating temporary logins.
- -f inactive
-
The maximum number of days allowed
between uses of a login ID
before that login ID is declared invalid.
Normal values are positive integers.
A value of
0
defeats the status.
- -g group
-
An existing group's integer
ID
or character-string name.
Without the
-D
option, it defines the new user's primary
group membership and defaults to the default group.
You can reset this default value by invoking
useradd -D -g group.
- -G group
-
An existing group's integer
ID
or character-string name.
It defines the new user's supplementary group membership.
Duplicates between
group
with the
-g
and
-G
options are ignored.
No more than
NGROUPS_MAX
groups may be specified.
- -k skel_dir
-
A directory that contains skeleton information (such as
.profile)
that can be copied into a new user's home directory.
This directory must already exist.
The system provides the
/etc/skel
directory that can be used for this purpose.
- -m
-
Create the new user's home directory if it does not already exist.
If the directory already exists,
it must have read, write, and execute permissions by
group,
where
group
is the user's primary group.
- -s shell
-
Full pathname of the program used as the user's shell on login.
It defaults to an empty field causing the system to use
/sbin/sh
as the default.
The value of
shell
must be a valid executable file.
- -u uid
-
The UID
of the new user.
This UID
must be a non-negative decimal integer below
MAXUID
as defined in
<sys/param.h>.
The UID defaults to the next available (unique) number above the
highest number currently assigned.
For example, if UIDs 100, 105, and 200 are assigned, the
next default UID number will be 201.
(UIDs from 0-99 are reserved by SunOS for future applications.)
- -o
-
This option allows a UID
to be duplicated (non-unique).
- -D
-
Display the default values for
group,
base_dir,
skel_dir,
shell,
inactive,
and
expire.
When used with the
-g,
-b,
-f,
or
-e
options, the
-D
option sets the default values for the specified fields.
The default values are:
-
- group
-
other
(GID of 1)
- base_dir
-
/home
- skel_dir
-
/etc/skel
- shell
-
/sbin/sh
- inactive
-
0
- expire
-
Null (unset).
- -b base_dir
-
The default base directory for the system
if
-d dir
is not specified.
base_dir
is concatenated with the user's login to define
the home directory.
If the
-m
option is not used,
base_dir
must exist.
FILES
- /etc/passwd
-
- /etc/shadow
-
- /etc/group
-
- /etc/skel
-
SEE ALSO
passwd.1
users.1b
groupadd.1m
groupdel.1m
groupmod.1m
logins.1m
userdel.1m
usermod.1m
passwd.4
DIAGNOSTICS
In case of an error,
useradd
prints an error message and
exits with a non-zero status.
- UX: useradd: ERROR: login is already in use. Choose another.
-
The
login
specified is already in use.
- UX: useradd: ERROR: uid uid is already in use. Choose another.
-
The
uid
specified with the
-u
option is not unique.
- UX: useradd: ERROR: group group does not exist. Choose another.
-
The
group
specified with the
-g
option is already in use.
- UX: useradd: WARNING: uid uid is reserved.
-
The
uid
specified with the
-u
option is in the range of reserved UIDs (from 0-99).
- UX: useradd: ERROR: uid uid is too big. Choose another.
-
The
uid
specified with the
-u
option exceeds
MAXUID
as defined in
<sys/param.h>.
- UX: useradd: ERROR: Cannot update system files - login cannot be created.
-
The
/etc/passwd
or
/etc/shadow
files do not exist.
NOTES
useradd
only adds a user definition to the local system.
If a network nameservice such as
NIS
or
NIS+
is being used to supplement the local
/etc/passwd
file with additional entries,
useradd
cannot change information supplied by the network nameservice.
However
useradd
will verify the uniqueness of the user name and user id
and the existence of any group names specified
against the external nameservice.
Created by unroff & hp-tools.
© by Hans-Peter Bischof. All Rights Reserved (1997).
Last modified 21/April/97