setnetgrent, endnetgrent, getnetgrent, getnetgrent_r, innetgr — handle network group entries
#include <netdb.h>
int
setnetgrent( |
const char * | netgroup) ; |
void
endnetgrent( |
void) ; |
int
getnetgrent( |
char ** | host, |
char ** | user, | |
char ** | domain) ; |
int
getnetgrent_r( |
char ** | host, |
char ** | user, | |
char ** | domain, | |
char * | buf, | |
int | buflen) ; |
int
innetgr( |
const char * | netgroup, |
const char * | host, | |
const char * | user, | |
const char * | domain) ; |
Note | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
The netgroup
is a
SunOS invention. A netgroup database is a list of string
triples (hostname
,
username
,
domainname
) or
other netgroup names. Any of the elements in a triple can be
empty, which means that anything matches. The functions
described here allow access to the netgroup databases. The
file /etc/nsswitch.conf
defines
what database is searched.
The setnetgrent
() call
defines the netgroup that will be searched by subsequent
getnetgrent
() calls. The
getnetgrent
() function
retrieves the next netgroup entry, and returns pointers in
host
, user
, domain
. A NULL pointer means
that the corresponding entry matches any string. The pointers
are valid only as long as there is no call to other
netgroup-related functions. To avoid this problem you can use
the GNU function getnetgrent_r
() that stores the strings in
the supplied buffer. To free all allocated buffers use
endnetgrent
().
In most cases you only want to check if the triplet
(hostname
,
username
,
domainname
) is a
member of a netgroup. The function innetgr
() can be used for this without
calling the above three functions. Again, a NULL pointer is a
wildcard and matches any string. The function is
thread-safe.
These functions are not in POSIX.1-2001, but setnetgrent
(), endnetgrent
(), getnetgrent
(), and innetgr
() are available on most Unix
systems. getnetgrent_r
() is not
widely available on other systems.
This page is part of release 2.79 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting
bugs, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Copyright 2002 walter harms (walter.harmsinformatik.uni-oldenburg.de) Distributed under GPL based on glibc infopages polished - aeb |