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Mac OS X / Darwin man pages : group (5)
group (5)

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Name

group - format of the group permissions file

Description

Note: This information may be superseded by the NetInfo system. See lookupd(8) for more information.

The file </etc/group> consists of newline separated ASCII records, one per group, containing four colon `:' separated fields. These fields are as follows:

group
Name of the group.
passwd
Group's encrypted password.
gid
The group's decimal ID.
member
Group members.

The group field is the group name used for granting file access to users who are members of the group. The gid field is the number associated with the group name. They should both be unique across the system (and often across a group of systems) since they control file access. The passwd field is an optional encrypted password. This field is rarely used and an asterisk is normally placed in it rather than leaving it blank. The member field contains the names of users granted the privileges of group. The member names are separated by commas without spaces or newlines. A user is automatically in a group if that group was specified in their /etc/passwd entry and does not need to be added to that group in the /etc/group file.

Yp Support

If YP is active, the group file may also contain lines of the format

+name:*::

which causes the specified group to be included from the group.byname YP map.

If no group name is specified, or the ``+'' (plus sign) appears alone on line, all groups are included from the YP map.

YP references may appear anywhere in the file, but the single ``+'' form should be on the last line, for historical reasons. Only the first group with a specific name encountered, whether in the group file itself, or included via YP, will be used.

Files

/etc/group

See Also

passwd(1) , setgroups(2) , crypt(3) , initgroups(3) , passwd(5) , lookupd(8) , yp(8)

Bugs

The passwd(1) command does not change the group passwords.

History

A group file format appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.

YP file format first appeared in SunOS.


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