NAME¶
adduser, addgroup - add a user or group to the system
SYNOPSIS¶
adduser [options] [--home DIR] [--shell SHELL] [--no-create-home] [--uid
ID] [--firstuid ID] [--lastuid ID] [--ingroup GROUP | --gid ID]
[--disabled-password] [--disabled-login] [--gecos GECOS] [--add_extra_groups]
user
adduser --system [options] [--home DIR] [--shell SHELL]
[--no-create-home] [--uid ID] [--group | --ingroup GROUP | --gid ID]
[--disabled-password] [--disabled-login] [--gecos GECOS] user
addgroup [options] [--gid ID] group
addgroup --system [options] [--gid ID] group
adduser [options] user group
COMMON OPTIONS¶
[--quiet] [--debug] [--force-badname] [--help|-h] [--version] [--conf FILE]
DESCRIPTION¶
adduser and
addgroup add users and groups to the system according
to command line options and configuration information in
/etc/adduser.conf. They are friendlier front ends to the low level
tools like
useradd, groupadd and
usermod programs, by
default choosing Debian policy conformant UID and GID values, creating a home
directory with skeletal configuration, running a custom script, and other
features.
adduser and
addgroup can be run in one of five modes:
Add a normal user¶
If called with one non-option argument and without the
--system or
--group options,
adduser will add a normal user.
adduser will choose the first available UID from the range specified for
normal users in the configuration file. The UID can be overridden with the
--uid option.
The range specified in the configuration file may be overridden with the
--firstuid and
--lastuid options.
By default, each user in Debian GNU/Linux is given a corresponding group with
the same name. Usergroups allow group writable directories to be easily
maintained by placing the appropriate users in the new group, setting the
set-group-ID bit in the directory, and ensuring that all users use a umask of
002. If this option is turned off by setting
USERGROUPS to
no,
all users' GIDs are set to
USERS_GID. Users' primary groups can also be
overridden from the command line with the
--gid or
--ingroup
options to set the group by id or name, respectively. Also, users can be added
to one or more groups defined in adduser.conf either by setting
ADD_EXTRA_GROUPS to 1 in adduser.conf, or by passing --add_extra_groups on the
commandline.
adduser will create a home directory subject to
DHOME,
GROUPHOMES, and
LETTERHOMES. The home directory can be
overridden from the command line with the
--home option, and the shell
with the
--shell option. The home directory's set-group-ID bit is set
if
USERGROUPS is
yes so that any files created in the user's
home directory will have the correct group.
adduser will copy files from
SKEL into the home directory and
prompt for finger (gecos) information and a password. The gecos may also be
set with the
--gecos option. With the
--disabled-login option,
the account will be created but will be disabled until a password is set. The
--disabled-password option will not set a password, but login is still
possible (for example with SSH RSA keys).
If the file
/usr/local/sbin/adduser.local exists, it will be executed
after the user account has been set up in order to do any local setup. The
arguments passed to
adduser.local are:
username uid gid home-directory
The environment variable VERBOSE is set according to the following rule:
- 0 if --quiet is specified
- 1 if neither --quiet nor --debug is specified
- 2 if --debug is specified
-
(The same applies to the variable DEBUG, but DEBUG is deprecated and will be
removed in a later version of adduser.)
Add a system user¶
If called with one non-option argument and the
--system option,
adduser will add a system user. If a user with the same name already
exists in the system uid range (or, if the uid is specified, if a user with
that uid already exists), adduser will exit with a warning. This warning can
be suppressed by adding "--quiet".
adduser will choose the first available UID from the range specified for
system users in the configuration file (FIRST_SYSTEM_UID and LAST_SYSTEM_UID).
If you want to have a specific UID, you can specify it using the
--uid
option.
By default, system users are placed in the
nogroup group. To place the
new system user in an already existing group, use the
--gid or
--ingroup options. To place the new system user in a new group with the
same ID, use the
--group option.
A home directory is created by the same rules as for normal users. The new
system user will have the shell
/bin/false (unless overridden with the
--shell option), and have logins disabled. Skeletal configuration files
are not copied.
Add a user group¶
If
adduser is called with the
--group option and without the
--system option, or
addgroup is called respectively, a user
group will be added.
A GID will be chosen from the range specified for system GIDS in the
configuration file (FIRST_GID, LAST_GID). To override that mechanism you can
give the GID using the
--gid option.
The group is created with no users.
Add a system group¶
If
addgroup is called with the
--system option, a system group
will be added.
A GID will be chosen from the range specified for system GIDS in the
configuration file (FIRST_SYSTEM_GID, LAST_SYSTEM_GID). To override that
mechanism you can give the GID using the
--gid option.
The group is created with no users.
Add an existing user to an existing group¶
If called with two non-option arguments,
adduser will add an existing
user to an existing group.
OPTIONS¶
- --conf FILE
- Use FILE instead of /etc/adduser.conf.
- --disabled-login
- Do not run passwd to set the password. The user won't be able to use her
account until the password is set.
- --disabled-password
- Like --disabled-login, but logins are still possible (for example using
SSH RSA keys) but not using password authentication.
- --force-badname
- By default, user and group names are checked against the configurable
regular expression NAME_REGEX specified in the configuration file.
This option forces adduser and addgroup to apply only a weak
check for validity of the name.
- --gecos GECOS
- Set the gecos field for the new entry generated. adduser will not
ask for finger information if this option is given.
- --gid ID
- When creating a group, this option forces the new groupid to be the given
number. When creating a user, this option will put the user in that
group.
- --group
- When combined with --system, a group with the same name and ID as
the system user is created. If not combined with --system, a group
with the given name is created. This is the default action if the program
is invoked as addgroup.
- --help
- Display brief instructions.
- --home DIR
- Use DIR as the user's home directory, rather than the default specified by
the configuration file. If the directory does not exist, it is created and
skeleton files are copied.
- --shell SHELL
- Use SHELL as the user's login shell, rather than the default specified by
the configuration file.
- --ingroup GROUP
- Add the new user to GROUP instead of a usergroup or the default group
defined by USERS_GID in the configuration file. This affects the
users primary group. To add additional groups, see the
add_extra_groups option
- --no-create-home
- Do not create the home directory, even if it doesn't exist.
- --quiet
- Suppress informational messages, only show warnings and errors.
- --debug
- Be verbose, most useful if you want to nail down a problem with
adduser.
- --system
- Create a system user or group.
- --uid ID
- Force the new userid to be the given number. adduser will fail if
the userid is already taken.
- --firstuid ID
- Override the first uid in the range that the uid is chosen from (overrides
FIRST_UID specified in the configuration file).
- --lastuid ID
- Override the last uid in the range that the uid is chosen from (
LAST_UID )
- --add_extra_groups
- Add new user to extra groups defined in the configuration file.
- --version
- Display version and copyright information.
EXIT VALUES¶
- 0
- The user exists as specified. This can have 2 causes: The user was created
by adduser or the user was already present on the system before adduser
was invoked. If adduser was returning 0 , invoking adduser a second time
with the same parameters as before also returns 0.
- 1
- Creating the user or group failed because it was already present with
other UID/GID than specified. The username or groupname was rejected
because of a mismatch with the configured regular expressions, see
adduser.conf(5). Adduser has been aborted by a signal.
Or for many other yet undocumented reasons which are printed to console
then. You may then consider to remove --quiet to make adduser more
verbose.
FILES¶
- /etc/adduser.conf
- Default configuration file for adduser and addgroup
SEE ALSO¶
adduser.conf(5),
deluser(8),
useradd(8),
groupadd(8),
usermod(8), Debian Policy
9.2.2.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 1997, 1998, 1999 Guy Maor. Modifications by Roland Bauerschmidt
and Marc Haber. Additional patches by Joerg Hoh and Stephen Gran.
Copyright (C) 1995 Ted Hajek, with a great deal borrowed from the original
Debian
adduser
Copyright (C) 1994 Ian Murdock.
adduser is free software; see the GNU
General Public Licence version 2 or later for copying conditions. There is
no warranty.