Managing users and groups
It is also common to need to add or modify users and groups to our filesystem. This recipe explains how it is done.
Getting ready
The user information is stored in the /etc/passwd
file, a text file that is used as a database for the system user's information. The passwd
file is human-readable.
Each line on it corresponds to one user in the system, and it has the following format:
<username>:<password>:<uid>:<gid>:<comment>:<home directory>:<login shell>
Let's see each of the parameters of this format:
username
: A unique string that identifies the user at loginuid
: User ID, a number that Linux uses to identify the usergid
: Group ID, a number that Linux uses to identify the user's primary groupcomment
: Comma-separated values that describe the account, typically the user's contact detailshome directory
: Path to the user's home directorylogin shell
: Shell that is started for interactive logins
The default passwd
file is stored with...