What is the use of option -o in the useradd command? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inuseradd fails on archlinuxDisable login for useraddWhat does adduser do that useradd doesn't?useradd PAM authentication failedWhat variables are valid within /etc/default/useradd file?Can't add users anymore by using useradduseradd where account name is a numberDebian 9 - useraddadduser has no difference from useraddwhat is difference between useradd -m and useradd -d?
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What is the use of option -o in the useradd command?
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inuseradd fails on archlinuxDisable login for useraddWhat does adduser do that useradd doesn't?useradd PAM authentication failedWhat variables are valid within /etc/default/useradd file?Can't add users anymore by using useradduseradd where account name is a numberDebian 9 - useraddadduser has no difference from useraddwhat is difference between useradd -m and useradd -d?
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As the title indicates, what is the use of option -o
for command useradd
? What is a good use case of this option?
linux useradd
add a comment |
As the title indicates, what is the use of option -o
for command useradd
? What is a good use case of this option?
linux useradd
add a comment |
As the title indicates, what is the use of option -o
for command useradd
? What is a good use case of this option?
linux useradd
As the title indicates, what is the use of option -o
for command useradd
? What is a good use case of this option?
linux useradd
linux useradd
edited 8 hours ago
GAD3R
28.1k1958114
28.1k1958114
asked 9 hours ago
osmakosmak
434
434
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
useradd
’s -o
option, along with its -u
option, allows you to create a user with a non-unique user id. One use case for that is to create users with identical privileges (since they share the same user id) but different passwords, and if appropriate, home directories. This can be useful for service accounts (although typically you’d achieve the same result using sudo
nowadays).
add a comment |
The -o option allows the creation of users with non-unique IDs, only when you also supply the numerical value of their UID with the -u option in the same line, e.g.:
# useradd -o huey -u 501
# useradd -o dewey -u 501
# useradd -o louie -u 501
This permits setting up multiple users with same rights and priveleges, but with different home directories and passwords.
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
useradd
’s -o
option, along with its -u
option, allows you to create a user with a non-unique user id. One use case for that is to create users with identical privileges (since they share the same user id) but different passwords, and if appropriate, home directories. This can be useful for service accounts (although typically you’d achieve the same result using sudo
nowadays).
add a comment |
useradd
’s -o
option, along with its -u
option, allows you to create a user with a non-unique user id. One use case for that is to create users with identical privileges (since they share the same user id) but different passwords, and if appropriate, home directories. This can be useful for service accounts (although typically you’d achieve the same result using sudo
nowadays).
add a comment |
useradd
’s -o
option, along with its -u
option, allows you to create a user with a non-unique user id. One use case for that is to create users with identical privileges (since they share the same user id) but different passwords, and if appropriate, home directories. This can be useful for service accounts (although typically you’d achieve the same result using sudo
nowadays).
useradd
’s -o
option, along with its -u
option, allows you to create a user with a non-unique user id. One use case for that is to create users with identical privileges (since they share the same user id) but different passwords, and if appropriate, home directories. This can be useful for service accounts (although typically you’d achieve the same result using sudo
nowadays).
answered 9 hours ago
Stephen KittStephen Kitt
181k25413492
181k25413492
add a comment |
add a comment |
The -o option allows the creation of users with non-unique IDs, only when you also supply the numerical value of their UID with the -u option in the same line, e.g.:
# useradd -o huey -u 501
# useradd -o dewey -u 501
# useradd -o louie -u 501
This permits setting up multiple users with same rights and priveleges, but with different home directories and passwords.
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
add a comment |
The -o option allows the creation of users with non-unique IDs, only when you also supply the numerical value of their UID with the -u option in the same line, e.g.:
# useradd -o huey -u 501
# useradd -o dewey -u 501
# useradd -o louie -u 501
This permits setting up multiple users with same rights and priveleges, but with different home directories and passwords.
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
add a comment |
The -o option allows the creation of users with non-unique IDs, only when you also supply the numerical value of their UID with the -u option in the same line, e.g.:
# useradd -o huey -u 501
# useradd -o dewey -u 501
# useradd -o louie -u 501
This permits setting up multiple users with same rights and priveleges, but with different home directories and passwords.
The -o option allows the creation of users with non-unique IDs, only when you also supply the numerical value of their UID with the -u option in the same line, e.g.:
# useradd -o huey -u 501
# useradd -o dewey -u 501
# useradd -o louie -u 501
This permits setting up multiple users with same rights and priveleges, but with different home directories and passwords.
answered 9 hours ago
K7AAYK7AAY
1,0861028
1,0861028
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
add a comment |
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
# useradd -o scrooge -u 0
– rrauenza
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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