login.access man page on PC-BSD

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   9747 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
PC-BSD logo
[printable version]

LOGIN.ACCESS(5)		    BSD File Formats Manual	       LOGIN.ACCESS(5)

NAME
     login.accesslogin access control table

DESCRIPTION
     The login.access file specifies (user, host) combinations and/or (user,
     tty) combinations for which a login will be either accepted or refused.

     When someone logs in, the login.access is scanned for the first entry
     that matches the (user, host) combination, or, in case of non-networked
     logins, the first entry that matches the (user, tty) combination.	The
     permissions field of that table entry determines whether the login will
     be accepted or refused.

     Each line of the login access control table has three fields separated by
     a ‘:’ character: permission:users:origins

     The first field should be a "+" (access granted) or "-" (access denied)
     character.	 The second field should be a list of one or more login names,
     group names, or ALL (always matches).  The third field should be a list
     of one or more tty names (for non-networked logins), host names, domain
     names (begin with "."), host addresses, internet network numbers (end
     with "."), ALL (always matches) or LOCAL (matches any string that does
     not contain a "." character).  If you run NIS you can use @netgroupname
     in host or user patterns.

     The EXCEPT operator makes it possible to write very compact rules.

     The group file is searched only when a name does not match that of the
     logged-in user.  Only groups are matched in which users are explicitly
     listed: the program does not look at a user's primary group id value.

FILES
     /etc/login.access	login access control table

SEE ALSO
     login(1), pam_login_access(8)

AUTHORS
     Guido van Rooij

BSD			      September 13, 2006			   BSD
[top]

List of man pages available for PC-BSD

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net