solaris - useradd (1)



NAME
     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  exe-
     cuted.

     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  direc-
                 tories 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 supple-
                 mentary group  membership.   Duplicates  between
                 group  with  the  -g and -G options are ignored.
                 No more than NGROUPS_MAX groups  may  be  speci-
                 fied.

     -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  direc-
                 tory.   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  can-
          not 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.