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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | CAVEATS | CONFIGURATION | FILES | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON |
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LOGIN(1) User Commands LOGIN(1)
login - begin session on the system
login [-p] [-h host] [username] [ENV=VAR...]
login [-p] [-h host] -f username
login [-p] -r host
The login program is used to establish a new session with the
system. It is normally invoked automatically by responding to the
login: prompt on the user's terminal. login may be special to
the shell and may not be invoked as a sub-process. When called
from a shell, login should be executed as exec login which will
cause the user to exit from the current shell (and thus will
prevent the new logged in user to return to the session of the
caller). Attempting to execute login from any shell but the login
shell will produce an error message.
The user is then prompted for a password, where appropriate.
Echoing is disabled to prevent revealing the password. Only a
small number of password failures are permitted before login
exits and the communications link is severed.
If password aging has been enabled for your account, you may be
prompted for a new password before proceeding. You will be forced
to provide your old password and the new password before
continuing. Please refer to passwd(1) for more information.
Your user and group ID will be set according to their values in
the /etc/passwd file. The value for $HOME, $SHELL, $PATH,
$LOGNAME, and $MAIL are set according to the appropriate fields
in the password entry. Ulimit, umask and nice values may also be
set according to entries in the GECOS field.
On some installations, the environmental variable $TERM will be
initialized to the terminal type on your tty line, as specified
in /etc/ttytype.
An initialization script for your command interpreter may also be
executed. Please see the appropriate manual section for more
information on this function.
A subsystem login is indicated by the presence of a "*" as the
first character of the login shell. The given home directory will
be used as the root of a new file system which the user is
actually logged into.
The login program is NOT responsible for removing users from the
utmp file. It is the responsibility of getty(8) and init(8) to
clean up apparent ownership of a terminal session. If you use
login from the shell prompt without exec, the user you use will
continue to appear to be logged in even after you log out of the
"subsession".
-f
Do not perform authentication, user is preauthenticated.
Note: In that case, username is mandatory.
-h
Name of the remote host for this login.
-p
Preserve environment.
-r
Perform autologin protocol for rlogin.
The -r, -h and -f options are only used when login is invoked by
root.
This version of login has many compilation options, only some of
which may be in use at any particular site.
The location of files is subject to differences in system
configuration.
The login program is NOT responsible for removing users from the
utmp file. It is the responsibility of getty(8) and init(8) to
clean up apparent ownership of a terminal session. If you use
login from the shell prompt without exec, the user you use will
continue to appear to be logged in even after you log out of the
"subsession".
As with any program, login's appearance can be faked. If
non-trusted users have physical access to a machine, an attacker
could use this to obtain the password of the next person coming
to sit in front of the machine. Under Linux, the SAK mechanism
can be used by users to initiate a trusted path and prevent this
kind of attack.
The following configuration variables in /etc/login.defs change
the behavior of this tool:
CONSOLE_GROUPS (string)
List of groups to add to the user's supplementary groups set
when logging in on the console (as determined by the CONSOLE
setting). Default is none.
Use with caution - it is possible for users to gain permanent
access to these groups, even when not logged in on the
console.
DEFAULT_HOME (boolean)
Indicate if login is allowed if we can't cd to the home
directory. Default is no.
If set to yes, the user will login in the root (/) directory
if it is not possible to cd to her home directory.
ENV_PATH (string)
If set, it will be used to define the PATH environment
variable when a regular user login. The value is a colon
separated list of paths (for example /bin:/usr/bin) and can
be preceded by PATH=. The default value is
PATH=/bin:/usr/bin.
ENV_SUPATH (string)
If set, it will be used to define the PATH environment
variable when the superuser login. The value is a colon
separated list of paths (for example
/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin) and can be preceded by PATH=.
The default value is PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin.
ERASECHAR (number)
Terminal ERASE character (010 = backspace, 0177 = DEL).
The value can be prefixed "0" for an octal value, or "0x" for
an hexadecimal value.
FAIL_DELAY (number)
Delay in seconds before being allowed another attempt after a
login failure.
FAKE_SHELL (string)
If set, login will execute this shell instead of the users'
shell specified in /etc/passwd.
HUSHLOGIN_FILE (string)
If defined, this file can inhibit all the usual chatter
during the login sequence. If a full pathname is specified,
then hushed mode will be enabled if the user's name or shell
are found in the file. If not a full pathname, then hushed
mode will be enabled if the file exists in the user's home
directory.
KILLCHAR (number)
Terminal KILL character (025 = CTRL/U).
The value can be prefixed "0" for an octal value, or "0x" for
an hexadecimal value.
LOGIN_RETRIES (number)
Maximum number of login retries in case of bad password.
This will most likely be overridden by PAM, since the default
pam_unix module has its own built in of 3 retries. However,
this is a safe fallback in case you are using an
authentication module that does not enforce PAM_MAXTRIES.
LOGIN_TIMEOUT (number)
Max time in seconds for login.
LOG_OK_LOGINS (boolean)
Enable logging of successful logins.
LOG_UNKFAIL_ENAB (boolean)
Enable display of unknown usernames when login failures are
recorded.
Note: logging unknown usernames may be a security issue if an
user enter her password instead of her login name.
TTYGROUP (string), TTYPERM (string)
The terminal permissions: the login tty will be owned by the
TTYGROUP group, and the permissions will be set to TTYPERM.
By default, the ownership of the terminal is set to the
user's primary group and the permissions are set to 0600.
TTYGROUP can be either the name of a group or a numeric group
identifier.
If you have a write program which is "setgid" to a special
group which owns the terminals, define TTYGROUP to the group
number and TTYPERM to 0620. Otherwise leave TTYGROUP
commented out and assign TTYPERM to either 622 or 600.
TTYTYPE_FILE (string)
If defined, file which maps tty line to TERM environment
parameter. Each line of the file is in a format something
like "vt100 tty01".
USERGROUPS_ENAB (boolean)
If set to yes, userdel will remove the user's group if it
contains no more members, and useradd will create by default
a group with the name of the user.
/var/run/utmp
List of current login sessions.
/var/log/wtmp
List of previous login sessions.
/etc/passwd
User account information.
/etc/shadow
Secure user account information.
/etc/motd
System message of the day file.
/etc/nologin
Prevent non-root users from logging in.
/etc/ttytype
List of terminal types.
$HOME/.hushlogin
Suppress printing of system messages.
/etc/login.defs
Shadow password suite configuration.
mail(1), passwd(1), sh(1), su(1), login.defs(5), nologin(5),
passwd(5), securetty(5), getty(8).
This page is part of the shadow-utils (utilities for managing
accounts and shadow password files) project. Information about
the project can be found at
⟨https://github.com/shadow-maint/shadow⟩. If you have a bug
report for this manual page, send it to
pkg-shadow-devel@alioth-lists.debian.net. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/shadow-maint/shadow⟩ on 2022-12-17. (At that
time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
repository was 2022-12-15.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
shadow-utils 4.11.1 12/17/2022 LOGIN(1)