User Management- Linux: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "* useradd: standard system command to add a user to the system. * adduser: script to add a user to the system. * userdel: delete a user account and optionally related files. *..." |
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*adduser, addgroup - add a user or group to the system | *adduser, addgroup - add a user or group to the system | ||
*useradd - create a new user or update default new user information | *useradd - create a new user or update default new user information | ||
== Related == | |||
* [[Console Command Reference]] | |||
* [[User Management- OpenBSD]] | |||
[[Category:Computer_Technology]] | |||
[[Category:Linux]] |
Revision as of 12:46, 2 April 2020
- useradd: standard system command to add a user to the system.
- adduser: script to add a user to the system.
- userdel: delete a user account and optionally related files.
- addgroup: script to add a group to the system.
- delgroup: remove a group from the system.
- usermod: modify a user account.
Adding Users to the System
The following hidden files are copied into the user’s home directory, and will be used to provide environment variables for his/her user session.
- .bash_logout
- .bash_profile
- .bashrc
adduser vs useradd
Adduser is not a standard Linux command. Adduser is not available on some Linux distributions. On others, it is a soft link to useradd. While on some others, it is a Perl script.
Both commands have a man page on most linux distributions
- adduser, addgroup - add a user or group to the system
- useradd - create a new user or update default new user information