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LOGIN(1)		   Linux Programmer's Manual		      LOGIN(1)

NAME
       login - sign on

SYNOPSIS
       login [ name ]
       login -p
       login -h hostname
       login -f name

DESCRIPTION
       login is used when signing onto a system.

       If an argument is not given, login prompts for the username.

       If  the	user  is not root, and if /etc/nologin exists, the contents of
       this file are printed to the screen, and the login is terminated.  This
       is  typically  used  to	prevent	 logins when the system is being taken
       down.

       If  special  access  restrictions  are  specified  for  the   user   in
       /etc/usertty,  these  must be met, or the log in attempt will be denied
       and a syslog message will be generated. See  the	 section  on  "Special
       Access Restrictions".

       If  the	user is root, then the login must be occurring on a tty listed
       in /etc/securetty.  Failures will be logged with the syslog facility.

       After  these  conditions	 have  been  checked,  the  password  will  be
       requested  and  checked	(if a password is required for this username).
       Ten attempts are allowed before login dies, but after the first	three,
       the  response starts to get very slow.  Login failures are reported via
       the syslog facility.  This facility is also used to report any success‐
       ful root logins.

       If  the file .hushlogin exists, then a "quiet" login is performed (this
       disables the checking of mail and the printing of the last  login  time
       and  message  of	 the day).  Otherwise, if /var/log/lastlog exists, the
       last login time is printed (and the current login is recorded).

       Random administrative things, such as setting the UID and  GID  of  the
       tty  are	 performed.  The TERM environment variable is preserved, if it
       exists (other environment variables are preserved if the -p  option  is
       used).  Then the HOME, PATH, SHELL, TERM, MAIL, and LOGNAME environment
       variables are set.  PATH defaults to  /usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin  for
       normal		       users,		       and		    to
       /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin for	 root.
       Last, if this is not a "quiet" login, the message of the day is printed
       and the file with the user's name in /var/spool/mail will  be  checked,
       and a message printed if it has non-zero length.

       The  user's  shell  is  then started.  If no shell is specified for the
       user in /etc/passwd, then /bin/sh is used.  If there  is	 no  directory
       specified in /etc/passwd, then / is used (the home directory is checked
       for the .hushlogin file described above).

OPTIONS
       -p     Used by getty(8) to tell login not to destroy the environment

       -f     Used to skip a second login authentication.   This  specifically
	      does  not	 work for root, and does not appear to work well under
	      Linux.

       -h     Used by other servers (i.e., telnetd(8)) to pass the name of the
	      remote  host to login so that it may be placed in utmp and wtmp.
	      Only the superuser may use this option.

	      Note that the -h option has impact on the PAM service name.  The
	      standard service name is "login", with the -h option the name is
	      "remote". It's necessary to create a  proper  PAM	 config	 files
	      (e.g.  /etc/pam.d/login and /etc/pam.d/remote ).

SPECIAL ACCESS RESTRICTIONS
       The  file  /etc/securetty  lists	 the  names  of the ttys where root is
       allowed to log in. One name of a tty device without  the	 /dev/	prefix
       must  be	 specified  on each line.  If the file does not exist, root is
       allowed to log in on any tty.

       On most modern Linux systems PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules)  is
       used.  On  systems that do not use PAM, the file /etc/usertty specifies
       additional access restrictions for specific users.  Note that this file
       is  not	applicable  to	login  implementations that use PAM (Pluggable
       Authentication Modules), such as most modern Linux  systems.   If  this
       file does not exist, no additional access restrictions are imposed. The
       file consists of a sequence of sections. There are three possible  sec‐
       tion  types:  CLASSES,  GROUPS  and  USERS.  A  CLASSES section defines
       classes of ttys and hostname patterns, A GROUPS section defines allowed
       ttys  and  hosts	 on  a	per  group  basis, and a USERS section defines
       allowed ttys and hosts on a per user basis.

       Each line in this file in may be no longer than	255  characters.  Com‐
       ments start with # character and extend to the end of the line.

   The CLASSES Section
       A  CLASSES  section begins with the word CLASSES at the start of a line
       in all upper case. Each following line until the start of a new section
       or  the	end  of	 the file consists of a sequence of words separated by
       tabs or spaces. Each line defines a class of ttys and host patterns.

       The word at the beginning of a line becomes  defined  as	 a  collective
       name  for the ttys and host patterns specified at the rest of the line.
       This collective name can be used in any subsequent GROUPS or USERS sec‐
       tion.  No  such	class  name  must occur as part of the definition of a
       class in order to avoid problems with recursive classes.

       An example CLASSES section:

       CLASSES
       myclass1	      tty1 tty2
       myclass2	      tty3 @.foo.com

       This defines the classes myclass1 and  myclass2	as  the	 corresponding
       right hand sides.

   The GROUPS Section
       A  GROUPS  section  defines  allowed ttys and hosts on a per Unix group
       basis. If a user is a member of a Unix group according  to  /etc/passwd
       and  /etc/group	and  such  a group is mentioned in a GROUPS section in
       /etc/usertty then the user is granted access if the group is.

       A GROUPS section starts with the word GROUPS in all upper case  at  the
       start  of  a line, and each following line is a sequence of words sepa‐
       rated by spaces or tabs. The first word on a line is the	 name  of  the
       group  and  the	rest  of  the words on the line specifies the ttys and
       hosts where members of that group are allowed access. These  specifica‐
       tions  may  involve the use of classes defined in previous CLASSES sec‐
       tions.

       An example GROUPS section.

       GROUPS
       sys	 tty1 @.bar.edu
       stud	 myclass1 tty4

       This example specifies that members of group sys may log in on tty1 and
       from  hosts  in the bar.edu domain. Users in group stud may log in from
       hosts/ttys specified in the class myclass1 or from tty4.

   The USERS Section
       A USERS section starts with the word USERS in all  upper	 case  at  the
       start  of  a line, and each following line is a sequence of words sepa‐
       rated by spaces or tabs. The first word on a line  is  a	 username  and
       that user is allowed to log in on the ttys and from the hosts mentioned
       on the rest of the  line.  These	 specifications	 may  involve  classes
       defined	in  previous CLASSES sections.	If no section header is speci‐
       fied at the top of the file, the first section defaults to be  a	 USERS
       section.

       An example USERS section:

       USERS
       zacho	      tty1 @130.225.16.0/255.255.255.0
       blue	 tty3 myclass2

       This  lets  the	user  zacho  login only on tty1 and from hosts with IP
       addreses in the range 130.225.16.0 - 130.225.16.255, and user  blue  is
       allowed	to  log	 in  from  tty3 and whatever is specified in the class
       myclass2.

       There may be a line in a USERS section starting with a username	of  *.
       This  is a default rule and it will be applied to any user not matching
       any other line.

       If both a USERS line and GROUPS line match a  user  then	 the  user  is
       allowed	access from the union of all the ttys/hosts mentioned in these
       specifications.

   Origins
       The tty and host pattern specifications used in	the  specification  of
       classes, group and user access are called origins. An origin string may
       have one of these formats:

       o      The name of a tty device without the /dev/ prefix,  for  example
	      tty1 or ttyS0.

       o      The  string @localhost, meaning that the user is allowed to tel‐
	      net/rlogin from the local host  to  the  same  host.  This  also
	      allows  the  user	 to  for  example  run	the  command: xterm -e
	      /bin/login.

       o      A domain name suffix such as @.some.dom, meaning that  the  user
	      may rlogin/telnet from any host whose domain name has the suffix
	      .some.dom.

       o      A	 range	of  IPv4  addresses,  written  @x.x.x.x/y.y.y.y	 where
	      x.x.x.x is the IP address in the usual dotted quad decimal nota‐
	      tion, and y.y.y.y is a bitmask in the same  notation  specifying
	      which  bits in the address to compare with the IP address of the
	      remote host. For example @130.225.16.0/255.255.254.0 means  that
	      the  user may rlogin/telnet from any host whose IP address is in
	      the range 130.225.16.0 - 130.225.17.255.

       o      An range of  IPv6	 addresses,  written  @[n:n:n:n:n:n:n:n]/m  is
	      interpreted  as  a [net]/prefixlen pair. An IPv6 host address is
	      matched if prefixlen bits of net is equal to the prefixlen  bits
	      of  the  address.	  For	example,  the  [net]/prefixlen pattern
	      [3ffe:505:2:1::]/64  matches  every   address   in   the	 range
	      3ffe:505:2:1:: through 3ffe:505:2:1:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff.

       Any  of	the  above  origins  may  be  prefixed by a time specification
       according to the syntax:

       timespec	   ::= '[' <day-or-hour> [':' <day-or-hour>]* ']'
       day	   ::= 'mon' | 'tue' | 'wed' | 'thu' | 'fri' | 'sat' | 'sun'
       hour	   ::= '0' | '1' | ... | '23'
       hourspec	   ::= <hour> | <hour> '-' <hour>
       day-or-hour ::= <day> | <hourspec>

       For example, the origin [mon:tue:wed:thu:fri:8-17]tty3 means  that  log
       in  is  allowed on mondays through fridays between 8:00 and 17:59 (5:59
       pm) on tty3.  This also shows that  an  hour  range  a-b	 includes  all
       moments between a:00 and b:59. A single hour specification (such as 10)
       means the time span between 10:00 and 10:59.

       Not specifying any time prefix for a tty or host means log in from that
       origin  is allowed any time. If you give a time prefix be sure to spec‐
       ify both a set of days and one or more hours or	hour  ranges.  A  time
       specification may not include any white space.

       If  no  default	rule  is  given	 then  users  not  matching  any  line
       /etc/usertty are allowed to log in from anywhere as is standard	behav‐
       ior.

FILES
       /var/run/utmp
       /var/log/wtmp
       /var/log/lastlog
       /var/spool/mail/*
       /etc/motd
       /etc/passwd
       /etc/nologin
       /etc/usertty
       /etc/pam.d/login
       /etc/pam.d/remote
       .hushlogin

SEE ALSO
       init(8),	 getty(8),  mail(1),  passwd(1),  passwd(5), environ(7), shut‐
       down(8)

BUGS
       The undocumented BSD -r option is not supported.	 This may be  required
       by some rlogind(8) programs.

       A  recursive  login,  as	 used  to be possible in the good old days, no
       longer works; for most purposes su(1)  is  a  satisfactory  substitute.
       Indeed,	for  security  reasons,	 login does a vhangup() system call to
       remove any possible listening processes on the tty. This	 is  to	 avoid
       password	 sniffing. If one uses the command "login", then the surround‐
       ing shell gets killed by vhangup() because  it's	 no  longer  the  true
       owner  of the tty.  This can be avoided by using "exec login" in a top-
       level shell or xterm.

AUTHOR
       Derived from BSD login 5.40 (5/9/89) by	Michael	 Glad  (glad@daimi.dk)
       for HP-UX
       Ported to Linux 0.12: Peter Orbaek (poe@daimi.aau.dk)

AVAILABILITY
       The login command is part of the util-linux-ng package and is available
       from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux-ng/.

Util-linux 1.6			4 November 1996			      LOGIN(1)
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