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Name

nispasswd - change NIS+ password information

Synopsis

nispasswd [ -ghs ] [ -D domainname ] [ username ]

nispasswd -a

nispasswd -D domainname [ -d [ username ] ]

nispasswd [ -l ] [ -f ] [ -n min ] [ -x max ] [ -w warn ] [ -D domainname ] username

Availability

SUNWnisu

Description

nispasswd changes a password, gecos (finger) field (-g option), home directory (-h option), or login shell (-s option) associated with the username (invoker by default) in the NIS+ passwd table.

Additionally, the command can be used to view or modify aging information associated with the user specified if the invoker has the right NIS+ privileges.

nispasswd uses secure RPC to communicate with the NIS+ server, and therefore, never sends unencrypted passwords over the communication medium.

nispasswd does not read or modify the local password information stored in the /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow files.

When used to change a password, nispasswd prompts non-privileged users for their old password. It then prompts for the new password twice to forestall typing mistakes. When the old password is entered, nispasswd checks to see if it has ‘aged’ sufficiently. If ‘aging’ is insufficient, nispasswd terminates; see getspnam(3C) .

The old password is used to decrypt the username’s secret key. If the password does not decrypt the secret key, nispasswd prompts for the old secure-RPC password. It uses this password to decrypt the secret key. If this fails, it gives the user one more chance. The old password is also used to ensure that the new password differs from the old by at least three characters. Assuming aging is sufficient, a check is made to ensure that the new password meets construction requirements described below. When the new password is entered a second time, the two copies of the new password are compared. If the two copies are not identical, the cycle of prompting for the new password is repeated twice. The new password is used to re-encrypt the user’s secret key. Hence, it also becomes their secure-RPC password. Therefore, the secure-RPC is no longer a different password from the user’s password.

Passwords must be constructed to meet the following requirements:


Network administrators, who own the NIS+ password table, may change any password attributes if they establish their credentials (see keylogin(1) ) before invoking nispasswd. Hence, nispasswd does not prompt these privileged-users for the old password and they are not forced to comply with password aging and password construction requirements.

Any user may use the -d option to display password attributes for his or her own login name. The format of the display will be:

username status mm/dd/yy min max warn

or, if password aging information is not present,

username status

where

username
The login ID of the user.
status
The password status of username: "PS" stands for password exists or locked, "LK" stands for locked, and "NP" stands for no password.
mm/dd/yy
The date password was last changed for username. (Note that all password aging dates are determined using Greenwich Mean Time (Universal Time) and, therefore, may differ by as much as a day in other time zones.)
min
The minimum number of days required between password changes for username.
max
The maximum number of days the password is valid for username.
warn
The number of days relative to max before the password expires that the username will be warned.

Options

-g
Change the gecos (finger) information.
-h
Change the home directory.
-s
Change the login shell. By default, only the NIS+ administrator can change the login shell. User will be prompted for the new login shell.
-a
Show the password attributes for all entries. This will show only the entries in the NIS+ passwd table in the local domain that the invoker is authorized to "read".
-d [username]
Display password attributes for the caller or the user specified if the invoker has the right privileges.
-l
Locks the password entry for username. Subsequently, login(1) would disallow logins with this NIS+ password entry.
-f
Force the user to change password at the next login by expiring the password for username.
-n min
Set minimum field for username. The min field contains the minimum number of days between password changes for username. If min is greater than max, the user may not change the password. Always use this option with the -x option, unless max is set to -1 (aging turned off). In that case, min need not be set.
-x max
Set maximum field for username. The max field contains the number of days that the password is valid for username. The aging for username will be turned off immediately if max is set to -1. If it is set to 0, then the user is forced to change the password at the next login session and aging is turned off.
-w warn
Set warn field for username. The warn field contains the number of days before the password expires that the user will be warned whenever he or she attempts to login.
-D domainname
Consult the passwd.org_dir table in domainname. If this option is not specified, the default domainname returned by nis_local_directory() will be used. This domainname is the same as that returned by domainname(1M) .

Exit Status

The nispasswd command exits with one of the following values:

  1. success.
  2. Permission denied.
  3. Invalid combination of options.
  4. Unexpected failure. NIS+ passwd table unchanged.
  5. NIS+ passwd table missing.
  6. NIS+ is busy. Try again later.
  7. Invalid argument to option.
  8. Aging is disabled.

See Also

keylogin(1) , login(1) , nis+(1) , nistbladm(1) , passwd(1) , domainname(1M) , getspnam(3C) , getpwnam(3C) , nsswitch.conf(4) , passwd(4) , shadow(4)

Notes

The use of nispasswd is discouraged, as it is now only a link to the passwd(1) command, which should be used instead. Using passwd(1) with the -r nisplus option will achieve the same result, and be consistent across all the different name services available.

The login program, file access display programs (for example, ’ls -l’) and network programs that require user passwords (for example, rlogin(1) , ftp(1) , etc.) use the standard getpwnam(3C) and getspnam(3C) interfaces to get password information. These programs will get the NIS+ password information, that is modified by nispasswd, only if the passwd: entry in the /etc/nsswitch.conf file includes nisplus. See nsswitch.conf(4) for more details.


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