NAME
login
—
log into the computer
SYNOPSIS
login |
[-fpq ] [-h
hostname] [user] |
login |
-f [-lpq ]
[-h hostname]
[user [prog
[args...]]] |
DESCRIPTION
The login
utility logs users (and
pseudo-users) into the computer system.
If no user is specified, or if a user is specified and
authentication of the user fails, login
prompts for
a user name. Authentication of users is configurable via
pam(8). Password
authentication is the default.
The following options are available:
-f
- When a user name is specified, this option indicates that proper
authentication has already been done and that no password need be
requested. This option may only be used by the super-user or when an
already logged in user is logging in as themselves.
With the
-f
option, an alternate program (and any arguments) may be run instead of the user's default shell. The program and arguments follows the user name. -h
- Specify the host from which the connection was received. It is used by various daemons such as telnetd(8). This option may only be used by the super-user.
-l
- Tells the program executed by
login
that this is not a login session (by convention, a login session is signalled to the program with a hyphen as the first character of argv[0]; this option disables that), and prevents it from chdir(2)ing to the user's home directory. The default is to add the hyphen (this is a login session). -p
- By default,
login
discards any previous environment. The-p
option disables this behavior. -q
- This forces quiet logins, as if a .hushlogin is present.
If the file /etc/nologin exists,
login
dislays its contents to the user and exits.
This is used by shutdown(8) to prevent users from logging in when the system
is about to go down.
Immediately after logging a user in, login
displays the system copyright notice, the date and time the user last logged
in, the message of the day as well as other information. If the file
.hushlogin exists in the user's home directory, all
of these messages are suppressed. If -q
is
specified, all of these messages are suppressed. This is to simplify logins
for non-human users, such as uucp(1). login
then records an entry
in utmpx(5)
and the like, and executes the user's command interpreter (or the program
specified on the command line if -f
is
specified).
The login
utility enters information into
the environment (see environ(7)) specifying the user's home directory (HOME),
command interpreter (SHELL), search path (PATH), terminal type (TERM) and
user name (both LOGNAME and USER).
Some shells may provide a builtin login
command which is similar or identical to this utility. Consult the
builtin(1) manual page.
The login
utility will submit an audit
record when login succeeds or fails. Failure to determine the current
auditing state will result in an error exit from
login
.
FILES
- /etc/motd
- message-of-the-day
- /etc/nologin
- disallows logins
- /var/run/utmpx
- current logins
- /var/mail/user
- system mailboxes
- .hushlogin
- makes login quieter
- /etc/pam.d/login
- pam(8) configuration file
- /etc/security/audit_user
- user flags for auditing
- /etc/security/audit_control
- global flags for auditing
SEE ALSO
builtin(1), chpass(1), csh(1), newgrp(1), passwd(1), rlogin(1), getpass(3), utmpx(5), environ(7)
HISTORY
A login
utility appeared in
Version 6 AT&T UNIX.