pw_lock, pw_mkdb, pw_abort, pw_setprefix, pw_getprefix - passwd file
update functions
System Utilities Library (libutil, -lutil)
#include <util.h>
int
pw_lock(int retries);
int
pw_mkdb(const char *username, int secureonly);
void
pw_abort(void);
void
pw_error(const char *name, int err, int eval);
int
pw_setprefix(const char *new_prefix);
const char *
pw_getprefix(void);
The pw_lock(), pw_mkdb(), and pw_abort() functions allow a program to
update the system passwd database.
The pw_lock() function attempts to lock the passwd database by creating
the file /etc/ptmp, and returns the file descriptor of that file. If
retries is greater than zero, pw_lock() will try multiple times to open
/etc/ptmp, waiting one second between tries. In addition to being a lock
file, /etc/ptmp will also hold the contents of the new passwd file.
The pw_mkdb() function updates the passwd file from the contents of
/etc/ptmp. You should finish writing to and close the file descriptor
returned by pw_lock() before calling pw_mkdb(). If pw_mkdb() fails and
you do not wish to retry, you should make sure to call pw_abort() to
clean up the lock file. If the username argument is not NULL, only
database entries pertaining to the specified user will be modified. If
the secureonly argument is non-zero, only the secure database will be
updated.
The pw_abort() function aborts a passwd file update by deleting
/etc/ptmp. The passwd database remains unchanged.
The pw_setprefix() function defines the root directory used for passwd
file updates. If the prefix is set to /newroot pw_lock() will operate on
/newroot/etc/ptmp afterwards. The default prefix is an empty string.
The pw_getprefix() function returns the root directory which is currently
used for passwd file updates.
The pw_lock() and pw_mkdb() functions return -1 if they are unable to
complete properly.
/etc/master.passwd
/etc/ptmp
pw_init(3), pwd_mkdb(8)
BSD August 18, 2001 BSD
[ Back ] |