NAME
usermgmt.conf
—
user management tools configuration
file
DESCRIPTION
The usermgmt.conf
file defines the default
values used by the user management tools,
user(8).
Options in this file can be set by manually editing
/etc/usermgmt.conf or using the
-D
option to
useradd(8).
base_dir
- Sets the base directory name, in which new users' home directories are
created when using the
-m
option to useradd(8). class
- Sets the default login class for new users. See login.conf(5) for more information on user login classes.
expire
- Sets the default time at which the new accounts expire. Both the expire and inactive fields should be entered in the form “month day year”, where month is the month name (the first three characters are sufficient), day is the day of the month, and year is the year. Time in seconds since the Epoch (UTC) is also valid. A value of 0 can be used to disable this feature.
group
- Sets the default primary group for new users. If this is the special
string
=uid
, a group is created with the same numeric ID as the UID; if such a group already exists a warning is given and no group is created. It has the format:group
gid | name |=uid
inactive
- Sets the default time at which the passwords of new accounts expire. A value of 0 can be used to disable this feature. Also see the expire field.
password
- Specifies a default password encrypted with encrypt(1).
preserve
- If this value is one of ‘
true
’, ‘yes
’, or a non-zero number, then the user login information will be preserved when removing a user with userdel(8). range
- Specifies the UID boundaries for new users. If unspecified, the default is
“1000..60000”. It has the format:
range
starting-uid..
ending-uid shell
- Sets the default login shell for new users.
skel_dir
- Sets the default skeleton directory in which to find files with which to populate the new user's home directory.
FILES
- /etc/usermgmt.conf
- /etc/skel/*
- /etc/login.conf
SEE ALSO
login.conf(5), passwd(5), user(8), useradd(8), userdel(8), usermod(8)
STANDARDS
Other implementations of the user(8) utilities use the inactive-time parameter to refer to the maximum number of days allowed between logins (this is used to lock "stale" accounts that have not been used for a period of time). However, on OpenBSD systems this parameter refers instead to the password change time. This is due to differences in the passwd(5) database compared to other operating systems.
HISTORY
The usermgmt.conf
configuration file first
appeared in OpenBSD 2.7.