xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/adduser/adduser.8 (revision e6bfd18d21b225af6a0ed67ceeaf1293b7b9eba5)
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3.\" Copyright (c) 2002-2004 Michael Telahun Makonnen <mtm@FreeBSD.org>
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27.\" $FreeBSD$
28.\"
29.Dd September 15, 2012
30.Dt ADDUSER 8
31.Os
32.Sh NAME
33.Nm adduser
34.Nd command for adding new users
35.Sh SYNOPSIS
36.Nm
37.Op Fl CDENShq
38.Op Fl G Ar groups
39.Op Fl L Ar login_class
40.Op Fl M Ar mode
41.Op Fl d Ar partition
42.Op Fl f Ar file
43.Op Fl g Ar login_group
44.Op Fl k Ar dotdir
45.Op Fl m Ar message_file
46.Op Fl s Ar shell
47.Op Fl u Ar uid_start
48.Op Fl w Ar type
49.Sh DESCRIPTION
50The
51.Nm
52utility is a shell script, implemented around the
53.Xr pw 8
54command, for adding new users.
55It creates passwd/group entries, a home directory,
56copies dotfiles and sends the new user a welcome message.
57It supports two modes of operation.
58It may be used interactively
59at the command line to add one user at a time, or it may be directed
60to get the list of new users from a file and operate in batch mode
61without requiring any user interaction.
62.Sh RESTRICTIONS
63.Bl -tag -width indent
64.It username
65Login name.
66The user name is restricted to whatever
67.Xr pw 8
68will accept.
69Generally this means it
70may contain only lowercase characters or digits but cannot begin with the
71.Ql -
72character.
73Maximum length
74is 16 characters.
75The reasons for this limit are historical.
76Given that people have traditionally wanted to break this
77limit for aesthetic reasons, it has never been of great importance to break
78such a basic fundamental parameter in
79.Ux .
80You can change
81.Dv UT_NAMESIZE
82in
83.In utmp.h
84and recompile the
85world; people have done this and it works, but you will have problems
86with any precompiled programs, or source that assumes the 8-character
87name limit, such as NIS.
88The NIS protocol mandates an 8-character username.
89If you need a longer login name for e-mail addresses,
90you can define an alias in
91.Pa /etc/mail/aliases .
92.It "full name"
93This is typically known as the gecos field and usually contains
94the user's full name.
95Additionally, it may contain a comma separated
96list of values such as office number and work and home phones.
97If the
98name contains an ampersand it will be replaced by the capitalized
99login name when displayed by other programs.
100The
101.Ql \&:
102character is not allowed.
103.It shell
104Unless the
105.Fl S
106argument is supplied only valid shells from the shell database
107.Pq Pa /etc/shells
108are allowed.
109In addition,
110either the base name or the full path of the shell may be supplied.
111.It UID
112Automatically generated or your choice.
113It must be less than 32000.
114.It "GID/login group"
115Automatically generated or your choice.
116It must be less than 32000.
117.It password
118You may choose an empty password, disable the password, use a
119randomly generated password or specify your own plaintext password,
120which will be encrypted before being stored in the user database.
121.El
122.Sh UNIQUE GROUPS
123Perhaps you are missing what
124.Em can
125be done with this scheme that falls apart
126with most other schemes.
127With each user in their own group,
128they can safely run with a umask of 002 instead of the usual 022
129and create files in their home directory
130without worrying about others being able to change them.
131.Pp
132For a shared area you create a separate UID/GID, you place each person
133that should be able to access this area into that new group.
134.Pp
135This model of UID/GID administration allows far greater flexibility than lumping
136users into groups and having to muck with the umask when working in a shared
137area.
138.Pp
139I have been using this model for almost 10 years and found that it works
140for most situations, and has never gotten in the way.
141(Rod Grimes)
142.Sh CONFIGURATION
143The
144.Nm
145utility reads its configuration information from
146.Pa /etc/adduser.conf .
147If this file does not exist, it will use predefined defaults.
148While this file may be edited by hand,
149the safer option is to use the
150.Fl C
151command line argument.
152With this argument,
153.Nm
154will start interactive input, save the answers to its prompts in
155.Pa /etc/adduser.conf ,
156and promptly exit without modifying the user
157database.
158Options specified on the command line will take precedence over
159any values saved in this file.
160.Sh OPTIONS
161.Bl -tag -width indent
162.It Fl C
163Create new configuration file and exit.
164This option is mutually exclusive with the
165.Fl f
166option.
167.It Fl d Ar partition
168Home partition.
169Default partition, under which all user directories
170will be located.
171The
172.Pa /nonexistent
173partition is considered special.
174The
175.Nm
176script will not create and populate a home directory by that name.
177Otherwise,
178by default it attempts to create a home directory.
179.It Fl D
180Do not attempt to create the home directory.
181.It Fl E
182Disable the account.
183This option will lock the account by prepending the string
184.Dq Li *LOCKED*
185to the password field.
186The account may be unlocked
187by the super-user with the
188.Xr pw 8
189command:
190.Pp
191.D1 Nm pw Cm unlock Op Ar name | uid
192.It Fl f Ar file
193Get the list of accounts to create from
194.Ar file .
195If
196.Ar file
197is
198.Dq Fl ,
199then get the list from standard input.
200If this option is specified,
201.Nm
202will operate in batch mode and will not seek any user input.
203If an error is encountered while processing an account, it will write a
204message to standard error and move to the next account.
205The format
206of the input file is described below.
207.It Fl g Ar login_group
208Normally,
209if no login group is specified,
210it is assumed to be the same as the username.
211This option makes
212.Ar login_group
213the default.
214.It Fl G Ar groups
215Space-separated list of additional groups.
216This option allows the user to specify additional groups to add users to.
217The user is a member of these groups in addition to their login group.
218.It Fl h
219Print a summary of options and exit.
220.It Fl k Ar directory
221Copy files from
222.Ar directory
223into the home
224directory of new users;
225.Pa dot.foo
226will be renamed to
227.Pa .foo .
228.It Fl L Ar login_class
229Set default login class.
230.It Fl m Ar file
231Send new users a welcome message from
232.Ar file .
233Specifying a value of
234.Cm no
235for
236.Ar file
237causes no message to be sent to new users.
238Please note that the message
239file can reference the internal variables of the
240.Nm
241script.
242.It Fl M Ar mode
243Create the home directory with permissions set to
244.Ar mode .
245.It Fl N
246Do not read the default configuration file.
247.It Fl q
248Minimal user feedback.
249In particular, the random password will not be echoed to
250standard output.
251.It Fl s Ar shell
252Default shell for new users.
253The
254.Ar shell
255argument may be the base name of the shell or the full path.
256Unless the
257.Fl S
258argument is supplied the shell must exist in
259.Pa /etc/shells
260or be the special shell
261.Em nologin
262to be considered a valid shell.
263.It Fl S
264The existence or validity of the specified shell will not be checked.
265.It Fl u Ar uid
266Use UIDs from
267.Ar uid
268on up.
269.It Fl w Ar type
270Password type.
271The
272.Nm
273utility allows the user to specify what type of password to create.
274The
275.Ar type
276argument may have one of the following values:
277.Bl -tag -width ".Cm random"
278.It Cm no
279Disable the password.
280Instead of an encrypted string, the password field will contain a single
281.Ql *
282character.
283The user may not log in until the super-user
284manually enables the password.
285.It Cm none
286Use an empty string as the password.
287.It Cm yes
288Use a user-supplied string as the password.
289In interactive mode,
290the user will be prompted for the password.
291In batch mode, the
292last (10th) field in the line is assumed to be the password.
293.It Cm random
294Generate a random string and use it as a password.
295The password will be echoed to standard output.
296In addition, it will be available for inclusion in the message file in the
297.Va randompass
298variable.
299.El
300.El
301.Sh FORMAT
302When the
303.Fl f
304option is used, the account information must be stored in a specific
305format.
306All empty lines or lines beginning with a
307.Ql #
308will be ignored.
309All other lines must contain ten colon
310.Pq Ql \&:
311separated fields as described below.
312Command line options do not take precedence
313over values in the fields.
314Only the password field may contain a
315.Ql \&:
316character as part of the string.
317.Pp
318.Sm off
319.D1 Ar name : uid : gid : class : change : expire : gecos : home_dir : shell : password
320.Sm on
321.Bl -tag -width ".Ar password"
322.It Ar name
323Login name.
324This field may not be empty.
325.It Ar uid
326Numeric login user ID.
327If this field is left empty, it will be automatically generated.
328.It Ar gid
329Numeric primary group ID.
330If this field is left empty, a group with the
331same name as the user name will be created and its GID will be used
332instead.
333.It Ar class
334Login class.
335This field may be left empty.
336.It Ar change
337Password ageing.
338This field denotes the password change date for the account.
339The format of this field is the same as the format of the
340.Fl p
341argument to
342.Xr pw 8 .
343It may be
344.Ar dd Ns - Ns Ar mmm Ns - Ns Ar yy Ns Op Ar yy ,
345where
346.Ar dd
347is for the day,
348.Ar mmm
349is for the month in numeric or alphabetical format:
350.Dq Li 10
351or
352.Dq Li Oct ,
353and
354.Ar yy Ns Op Ar yy
355is the four or two digit year.
356To denote a time relative to the current date the format is:
357.No + Ns Ar n Ns Op Ar mhdwoy ,
358where
359.Ar n
360denotes a number, followed by the minutes, hours, days, weeks,
361months or years after which the password must be changed.
362This field may be left empty to turn it off.
363.It Ar expire
364Account expiration.
365This field denotes the expiry date of the account.
366The account may not be used after the specified date.
367The format of this field is the same as that for password ageing.
368This field may be left empty to turn it off.
369.It Ar gecos
370Full name and other extra information about the user.
371.It Ar home_dir
372Home directory.
373If this field is left empty, it will be automatically
374created by appending the username to the home partition.
375The
376.Pa /nonexistent
377home directory is considered special and
378is understood to mean that no home directory is to be
379created for the user.
380.It Ar shell
381Login shell.
382This field should contain either the base name or
383the full path to a valid login shell.
384.It Ar password
385User password.
386This field should contain a plaintext string, which will
387be encrypted before being placed in the user database.
388If the password type is
389.Cm yes
390and this field is empty, it is assumed the account will have an empty password.
391If the password type is
392.Cm random
393and this field is
394.Em not
395empty, its contents will be used
396as a password.
397This field will be ignored if the
398.Fl w
399option is used with a
400.Cm no
401or
402.Cm none
403argument.
404Be careful not to terminate this field with a closing
405.Ql \&:
406because it will be treated as part of the password.
407.El
408.Sh FILES
409.Bl -tag -width ".Pa /etc/adduser.message" -compact
410.It Pa /etc/master.passwd
411user database
412.It Pa /etc/group
413group database
414.It Pa /etc/shells
415shell database
416.It Pa /etc/login.conf
417login classes database
418.It Pa /etc/adduser.conf
419configuration file for
420.Nm
421.It Pa /etc/adduser.message
422message file for
423.Nm
424.It Pa /usr/share/skel
425skeletal login directory
426.It Pa /var/log/adduser
427logfile for
428.Nm
429.El
430.Sh SEE ALSO
431.Xr chpass 1 ,
432.Xr passwd 1 ,
433.Xr adduser.conf 5 ,
434.Xr aliases 5 ,
435.Xr group 5 ,
436.Xr login.conf 5 ,
437.Xr passwd 5 ,
438.Xr shells 5 ,
439.Xr pw 8 ,
440.Xr pwd_mkdb 8 ,
441.Xr rmuser 8 ,
442.Xr vipw 8 ,
443.Xr yp 8
444.Sh HISTORY
445The
446.Nm
447command appeared in
448.Fx 2.1 .
449.Sh AUTHORS
450.An -nosplit
451This manual page and the original script, in Perl, was written by
452.An Wolfram Schneider Aq Mt wosch@FreeBSD.org .
453The replacement script, written as a Bourne
454shell script with some enhancements, and the man page modification that
455came with it were done by
456.An Mike Makonnen Aq Mt mtm@identd.net .
457.Sh BUGS
458In order for
459.Nm
460to correctly expand variables such as
461.Va $username
462and
463.Va $randompass
464in the message sent to new users, it must let the shell evaluate
465each line of the message file.
466This means that shell commands can also be embedded in the message file.
467The
468.Nm
469utility attempts to mitigate the possibility of an attacker using this
470feature by refusing to evaluate the file if it is not owned and writable
471only by the root user.
472In addition, shell special characters and operators will have to be
473escaped when used in the message file.
474.Pp
475Also, password ageing and account expiry times are currently settable
476only in batch mode or when specified in
477.Pa /etc/adduser.conf .
478The user should be able to set them in interactive mode as well.
479