passmass man page on MirBSD

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PASSMASS(1)							   PASSMASS(1)

NAME
       passmass - change password on multiple machines

SYNOPSIS
       passmass [ host1 host2 host3 ...	 ]

INTRODUCTION
       Passmass changes a password on multiple machines.  If you have accounts
       on several machines that do not share password databases, Passmass  can
       help  you keep them all in sync.	 This, in turn, will make it easier to
       change them more frequently.

       When Passmass runs, it asks you for the old and new passwords.  (If you
       are changing root passwords and have equivalencing, the old password is
       not used and may be omitted.)

       Passmass understands the "usual" conventions.  Additional arguments may
       be  used	 for tuning.  They affect all hosts which follow until another
       argument overrides it.  For example, if you are	known  as  "libes"  on
       host1 and host2, but "don" on host3, you would say:

	    passmass host1 host2 -user don host3

       Arguments are:

	      -user
		  User	whose  password will be changed.  By default, the cur‐
		  rent user is used.

	      -rlogin
		  Use rlogin to access host.  (default)

	      -slogin
		  Use slogin to access host.

	      -telnet
		  Use telnet to access host.

	      -program

		  Next argument is a program  to  run  to  set	the  password.
		  Default  is  "passwd".   Other common choices are "yppasswd"
		  and "set passwd" (e.g., VMS hosts).  A program name such  as
		  "password  fred"  can	 be  used  to  create  entries for new
		  accounts (when run as root).

	      -prompt
		  Next argument is a prompt suffix pattern.  This  allows  the
		  script  to know when the shell is prompting.	The default is
		  "# " for root and "% " for non-root accounts.

	      -timeout
		  Next	argument  is  the  number  of  seconds	to  wait   for
		  responses.   Default	is  30	but  some  systems can be much
		  slower logging in.

	      -su

		  Next argument is  1  or  0.	If  1,	you  are  additionally
		  prompted  for a root password which is used to su after log‐
		  ging in.  root's password is changed rather than the user's.
		  This is useful for hosts which do not allow root to log in.

HOW TO USE
       The  best way to run Passmass is to put the command in a one-line shell
       script or alias.	 Whenever you get a new account on a new machine,  add
       the  appropriate	 arguments  to	the command.  Then run it whenever you
       want to change your passwords on all the hosts.

CAVEATS
       Using the same password on multiple hosts carries risks.	  In  particu‐
       lar,  if	 the  password can be stolen, then all of your accounts are at
       risk.  Thus, you should not use Passmass in situations where your pass‐
       word  is	 visible,  such as across a network which hackers are known to
       eavesdrop.

       On the other hand, if you have enough  accounts	with  different	 pass‐
       words,  you  may end up writing them down somewhere - and that can be a
       security problem.  Funny story: my  college  roommate  had  an  11"x13"
       piece of paper on which he had listed accounts and passwords all across
       the Internet.  This was several years worth of careful work and he car‐
       ried it with him everywhere he went.  Well one day, he forgot to remove
       it from his jeans, and we found a perfectly blank sheet of  paper  when
       we took out the wash the following day!

SEE ALSO
       "Exploring  Expect: A Tcl-Based Toolkit for Automating Interactive Pro‐
       grams" by Don Libes, O'Reilly and Associates, January 1995.

AUTHOR
       Don Libes, National Institute of Standards and Technology

				7 October 1993			   PASSMASS(1)
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