login

 


 
 
 
 User Commands                                            login(1)
 
 
 


NAME

login - sign on to the system

SYNOPSIS

login [ -p ] [ -d device ] [ -h hostname | [ terminal ] | -r hostname ] [ name [ environ ] ... ]

DESCRIPTION

The login command is used at the beginning of each terminal session to identify oneself to the system. login is invoked by the system when a connection is first established, after the previous user has terminated the login shell by issuing the exit command. If login is invoked as a command, it must replace the ini- tial command interpreter. To invoke login in this fashion, type: exec login from the initial shell. The C shell and Korn shell have their own builtins of login. See ksh(1) and csh(1) for descriptions of login builtins and usage. login asks for your user name, if it is not supplied as an argument, and your password, if appropriate. Where possible, echoing is turned off while you type your password, so it will not appear on the written record of the session. If you make any mistake in the login procedure, the message: Login incorrect is printed and a new login prompt will appear. If you make five incorrect login attempts, all five may be logged in /var/adm/loginlog, if it exists. The TTY line will be dropped. If password aging is turned on and the password has "aged" (see passwd(1) for more information), the user is forced to changed the password. In this case the /etc/nsswitch.conf" file is consulted to determine password repositories (see nsswitch.conf(4)). The password update configurations sup- ported are limited to the following five cases. + passwd: files + passwd: files nis SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 1 User Commands login(1) + passwd: files nisplus + passwd: compat (==> files nis) + passwd: compat (==> files nisplus) passwd_compat: nisplus Failure to comply with the configurations will prevent the user from logging onto the system because passwd(1) will fail. If you do not complete the login successfully within a certain period of time, it is likely that you will be silently disconnected. After a successful login, accounting files are updated. Dev- ice owner, group, and permissions are set according to the contents of the /etc/logindevperm file, and the time you last logged in is printed (see logindevperm(4)). The user-ID, group-ID, supplementary group list, and working directory are initialized, and the command interpreter (usu- ally ksh) is started. The basic environment is initialized to: HOME=your-login-directory LOGNAME=your-login-name PATH=/usr/bin: SHELL=last-field-of-passwd-entry MAIL=/var/mail/TZ=timezone-specification For Bourne shell and Korn shell logins, the shell executes /etc/profile and $HOME/.profile, if it exists. For C shell logins, the shell executes /etc/.login, $HOME/.cshrc , and $HOME/.login . The default /etc/profile and /etc/.login files check quotas (see quota(1M)), print /etc/motd, and check for mail. None of the messages are printed if the file $HOME/.hushlogin exists. The name of the command inter- preter is set to - (dash), followed by the last component of the interpreter's path name, for example, -sh. If the login-shell field in the password file (see passwd(4)) is empty, then the default command interpreter, /usr/bin/sh, is used. If this field is * (asterisk), then the named directory becomes the root directory. At that point, login is re-executed at the new level, which must have its own root structure. SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 2 User Commands login(1) The environment may be expanded or modified by supplying additional arguments to login, either at execution time or when login requests your login name. The arguments may take either the form xxx or xxx=yyy. Arguments without an = (equal sign) are placed in the environment as: Ln=xxx where n is a number starting at 0 and is incremented each time a new variable name is required. Variables containing an = (equal sign) are placed in the environment without modification. If they already appear in the environment, then they replace the older values. There are two exceptions: The variables PATH and SHELL can- not be changed. This prevents people logged into restricted shell environments from spawning secondary shells that are not restricted. login understands simple single-character quoting conventions. Typing a \ (backslash) in front of a character quotes it and allows the inclusion of such charac- ters as spaces and tabs. Alternatively, you can pass the current environment by sup- plying the -p flag to login. This flag indicates that all currently defined environment variables should be passed, if possible, to the new environment. This option does not bypass any environment variable restrictions mentioned above. Environment variables specified on the login line take precedence, if a variable is passed by both methods. To enable remote logins by root, edit the /etc/default/login file by inserting a # (pound sign) before the CONSOLE=/dev/console entry. See FILES. SECURITY The login command uses pam(3PAM) for authentication, account management, session management, and password management. The PAM configuration policy, listed through /etc/pam.conf, specifies the modules to be used for login. Here is a par- tial pam.conf file with entries for the login command using the UNIX authentication, account management, session manage- ment, and password management module. login auth required /usr/lib/security/pam_unix.so.1 login account required /usr/lib/security/pam_unix.so.1 login session required /usr/lib/security/pam_unix.so.1 login password required /usr/lib/security/pam_unix.so.1 If there are no entries for the login service, then the entries for the "other" service will be used. If multiple SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 3 User Commands login(1) authentication modules are listed, then the user may be prompted for multiple passwords. When login is invoked through rlogind or telnetd, the ser- vice name used by PAM is rlogin or telnet respectively.

OPTIONS

The following options are supported: -d device login accepts a device option, device. device is taken to be the path name of the TTY port login is to operate on. The use of the device option can be expected to improve login performance, since login will not need to call ttyname(3C). The -d option is available only to users whose UID and effective UID are root. Any other attempt to use -d will cause login to quietly exit. -h hostname [ terminal ] Used by in.telnetd(1M) to pass information about the remote host and terminal type. -p Used to pass environment variables to the login shell. -r hostname Used by in.rlogind(1M) to pass information about the remote host. EXIT STATUS The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful operation. non-zero Error.

FILES

$HOME/.cshrc initial commands for each csh $HOME/.hushlogin suppresses login messages $HOME/.login user's login commands for csh $HOME/.profile user's login commands for sh and ksh $HOME/.rhosts private list of trusted hostname/username combinations SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 4 User Commands login(1) /etc/.login system-wide csh login commands /etc/logindevperm" login-based device permissions /etc/motd message-of-the-day /etc/nologin message displayed to users attempting to login during machine shutdown /etc/passwd" password file /etc/profile" system-wide sh and ksh login commands /etc/shadow" list of users' encrypted passwords /usr/bin/sh" user's default command interpreter /var/adm/lastlog time of last login /var/adm/loginlog record of failed login attempts /var/adm/utmp accounting /var/adm/wtmp accounting /var/mail/your-name mailbox for user your-name /etc/default/login Default value can be set for the following flags in /etc/default/login. For example: TIMEZONE=EST5EDT TIMEZONE Sets the TZ environment variable of the shell (see environ(5)). HZ Sets the HZ environment variable of the shell. ULIMIT Sets the file size limit for the login. Units SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 5 User Commands login(1) are disk blocks. Default is zero (no limit). CONSOLE If set, root can login on that device only. This will not prevent execution of remote commands with rsh(1). Comment out this line to allow login by root. PASSREQ Determines if login requires a non-null pass- word. ALTSHELL Determines if login should set the SHELL environment variable. PATH Sets the initial shell PATH variable. SUPATH Sets the initial shell PATH variable for root. TIMEOUT Sets the number of seconds (between 0 and 900) to wait before abandoning a login session. UMASK Sets the initial shell file creation mode mask. See umask(1). SYSLOG Determines whether the syslog(3C) LOG_AUTH facility should be used to log all root logins at level LOG_NOTICE and multiple failed login attempts atLOG_CRIT. SLEEPTIME If present, sets the number of seconds to wait before login failure is printed to the screen and another login attempt is allowed. Default is 4 seconds. Minimum is 0 seconds. Maximum is 5 seconds. RETRIES Sets the number of retries for logging in (see pam(3PAM)). The default is 5. SYSLOG_FAILED_LOGINS Used to determine how many failed login attempts will be allowed by the system before a failed login message is logged, using the syslog(3C) LOG_NOTICE facility. For example, if the vari- able is set to 0, login will log all failed login attempts. SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 6 User Commands login(1)

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri- butes: ____________________________________________________________ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | |_____________________________|_____________________________| | Availability | SUNWcsu | |_____________________________|_____________________________|

SEE ALSO

csh(1), exit(1), ksh(1), mail(1), mailx(1), newgrp(1), passwd(1), rlogin(1), rsh(1), sh(1), shell_builtins(1), tel- net(1), umask(1), admintool(1M), in.rlogind(1M), in.telnetd(1M), logins(1M), quota(1M), su(1M), syslogd(1M), useradd(1M), userdel(1M), pam(3PAM), rcmd(3SOCKET), syslog(3C), ttyname(3C), hosts.equiv(4), logindevperm(4), loginlog(4), nologin(4), nsswitch.conf(4), pam.conf(4), passwd(4), profile(4), shadow(4), utmp(4), wtmp(4), attri- butes(5), environ(5), pam_unix(5), termio(7I)

DIAGNOSTICS

Login incorrect The user name or the password cannot be matched. Not on system console Root login denied. Check the CONSOLE setting in /etc/default/login. No directory! Logging in with home=/ The user's home directory named in the passwd(4) data- base cannot be found or has the wrong permissions. Contact your system administrator. No shell Cannot execute the shell named in the passwd(4) data- base. Contact your system administrator. NO LOGINS: System going down in N minutes The machine is in the process of being shut down and logins have been disabled. WARNINGS Users with a UID greater than 76695844 are not subject to password aging, and the system does not record their last login time. If you use the CONSOLE setting to disable root logins, you should arrange that remote command execution by root is also disabled. See rsh(1), rcmd(3SOCKET), and hosts.equiv(4) for further details. SunOS 5.8 Last change: 11 Aug 1999 7