usermod
Steve Buehler
steve at ibapp.com
Wed Mar 30 14:41:14 UTC 2005
At 08:34 AM 3/30/2005, you wrote:
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Steve Buehler [mailto:steve at ibapp.com]
>>Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2005 8:21 AM
>>To: redhat-list at redhat.com
>>Subject: usermod
>>
>>
>>I know you can use "usermod" on RedHat Linux to add a user to another group
>>by typing:
>>usermod -G sam,frank steve
>>This would effectively add steve to the "frank" and "sam" group. How do
>>you remove them from those groups without editing the /etc/group file
>>manually? I can do:
>>usermod -G steve steve
>>That will remove him from "sam" and "frank" groups but would add steve to
>>his own group so the /etc/group file would look like:
>>steve:x:590:steve
>>instead of just:
>>steve:x:590:
>>For the life of me, I can't figure this one out. Does anybody know?
>If you "usermod -G sam,frank steve" and realize that you shouldn't have put
>steve in the frank group, just "usermod -G sam steve" and by omission, will
>remove the user from the group. HTH
Yes, but what if I want to remove him from both groups. You can't type
"usermod -G steve". Basically, I am wanting to remove him from ALL groups
except for his initial group. And "usermod -g steve steve" will not do it
either. The "-G" must have atleast one group as an
option..................................I just tried something that seems
to work, but not sure if it is suppose to work this way. I typed:
usermod -G "" steve
and that removed steve from all extra groups. So either my problem is
solved, or there is another "proper" way of doing it.
Thanks for your help
Steve
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