solaris - getpwent (3)



NAME
     getpwnam,  getpwnam_r,   getpwent,   getpwent_r,   getpwuid,
     getpwuid_r, setpwent, endpwent, fgetpwent, fgetpwent_r - get
     password entry


SYNOPSIS
     #include <pwd.h>

     struct passwd *getpwnam(const char *name);

     struct passwd *getpwnam_r(const char *name,
          struct passwd *pwd,  char *buffer, int buflen);

     struct passwd *getpwent(void);

     struct passwd *getpwent_r(struct passwd *pwd,
           char *buffer,  int buflen);

     struct passwd *getpwuid(uid_t uid);

     struct passwd *getpwuid_r(uid_t uid, struct passwd * pwd,
           char *buffer, int buflen);

     void setpwent(void);

     void endpwent(void);

     struct passwd *fgetpwent(FILE *f);

     struct passwd *fgetpwent_r(FILE *f, struct passwd *pwd,
           char *buffer, int buflen);

  POSIX
     cc  [  flag...  ]  file  ...  - D_POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS  [
     library... ]

     int getpwnam_r(const char *name,struct passwd *pwd,
           char *buffer, size_t bufsize  struct passwd **result);

     int getpwuid_r(uid_t uid, struct passwd *pwd,
           char *buffer, size_t bufsize  struct passwd **result);


MT-LEVEL
     See the subsection "Reentrant Interfaces" in the DESCRIPTION
     section of this page.


DESCRIPTION
     These  functions  are  used  to  obtain  password   entries.
     Entries  can  come from any of the sources for passwd speci-
     fied in the /etc/nsswitch.conf file (see nsswitch.conf(4)).


     getpwnam() searches for a password entry with the login name
     specified by the character string parameter name.

     getpwuid() searches for a password entry with the  (numeric)
     user id specified by the parameter uid.

     The functions setpwent(),  getpwent(),  and  endpwent()  are
     used  to  enumerate  password  entries  from  the  database.
     setpwent() sets (or resets) the enumeration to the beginning
     of  the  set  of  password entries.  This function should be
     called before  the  first  call  to  getpwent().   Calls  to
     getpwnam()  and getpwuid() leave the enumeration position in
     an  indeterminate  state.  Successive  calls  to  getpwent()
     return either successive entries or NULL, indicating the end
     of the enumeration.

     endpwent() may be called to indicate that the caller expects
     to  do  no further password retrieval operations; the system
     may then close the password file,  deallocate  resources  it
     was  using, and so forth.  It is still allowed, but possibly
     less efficient, for the process to call more password  func-
     tions after calling endpwent().

     fgetpwent(), unlike the other functions above, does not  use
     nsswitch.conf;  it  reads  and parses the next line from the
     stream f, which is assumed to have the format of the  passwd
     file.  See passwd(4).

  Reentrant Interfaces
     The  functions  getpwnam(),  getpwuid(),   getpwent(),   and
     fgetpwent() use static storage that is re-used in each call,
     making these routines unsafe for use in multithreaded appli-
     cations.

     The   parallel   functions    getpwnam_r(),    getpwuid_r(),
     getpwent_r(), and fgetpwent_r() provide reentrant interfaces
     for these operations.

     Each reentrant interface performs the same operation as  its
     non-reentrant  counterpart,  named by removing the "_r" suf-
     fix.  The reentrant interfaces, however,  use  buffers  sup-
     plied  by the caller to store returned results, and are safe
     for use in both single-threaded and  multithreaded  applica-
     tions.

     Each reentrant interface takes the same  parameters  as  its
     non-reentrant  counterpart,  as  well as the following addi-
     tional parameters.  The parameter pwd must be a pointer to a
     struct  passwd  structure  allocated by the caller.  On suc-
     cessful completion, the function returns the password  entry
     in  this  structure.  The parameter buffer is a pointer to a
     buffer supplied by the caller, used as storage space for the
     password  data.   All  of  the  pointers within the returned
     struct passwd pwd point to data stored within  this  buffer;
     see  RETURN VALUES.  The buffer must be large enough to hold
     all the data associated with the password entry.  The param-
     eter  buflen (or bufsize for the POSIX versions) should give
     the size in bytes of buffer.  The  POSIX  versions  place  a
     pointer  to the modified pwd structure in the result parame-
     ter, instead of returning a pointer to this structure.

     For enumeration in multithreaded applications, the  position
     within  the enumeration is a process-wide property shared by
     all threads.  setpwent() may  be  used  in  a  multithreaded
     application  but  resets  the  enumeration  position for all
     threads.   If   multiple   threads   interleave   calls   to
     getpwent_r(), the threads will enumerate disjoint subsets of
     the password database.

     Like  their  non-reentrant  counterparts,  getpwnam_r()  and
     getpwuid_r()  leave  the enumeration position in an indeter-
     minate state.


RETURN VALUES
     Password entries are represented by the struct passwd struc-
     ture defined in <pwd.h>:
          struct passwd {
              char *pw_name;    /* user's login name */
              char *pw_passwd;  /* no longer used */
              uid_t pw_uid;        /* user's uid */
              gid_t pw_gid;        /* user's gid */
              char *pw_age;     /* not used */
              char *pw_comment; /* not used */
              char *pw_gecos;   /* typically user's full name */
              char *pw_dir;     /* user's home dir */
              char *pw_shell;   /* user's login shell */
          };

     The  functions  getpwnam(),  getpwnam_r(),  getpwuid(),  and
     getpwuid_r()  each  return  a  pointer to a struct passwd if
     they successfully locate the requested entry; otherwise they
     return   NULL.   The   POSIX   functions   getpwnam_r()  and
     getpwuid_r() return zero upon success, or the  error  number
     in case of failure.

     The functions  getpwent(),  getpwent_r(),  fgetpwent(),  and
     fgetpwent_r()  each  return  a pointer to a struct passwd if
     they successfully enumerate an entry; otherwise they  return
     NULL, indicating the end of the enumeration.

     The  functions  getpwnam(),  getpwuid(),   getpwent(),   and
     fgetpwent()  use  static  storage,  so returned data must be
     copied before a subsequent call to any of these functions if
     the data is to be saved.
     When  the  pointer  returned  by  the  reentrant   functions
     getpwnam_r(),  getpwuid_r(), getpwent_r(), and fgetpwent_r()
     is non-NULL, it is always equal to the pwd pointer that  was
     supplied by the caller.


ERRORS
     The   reentrant   functions   getpwnam_r(),    getpwuid_r(),
     getpwent_r(),  and  fgetpwent_r()  will  return NULL and set
     errno  to  ERANGE  (or  in  the  case  of  POSIX   functions
     getpwnam_r()  and  getpwuid_r()  return the ERANGE error) if
     the length of the buffer supplied by  caller  is  not  large
     enough  to  store  the  result.  See Intro(2) for the proper
     usage and interpretation of errno in multithreaded  applica-
     tions.


FILES
     /etc/passwd
     /etc/shadow
     /etc/nsswitch.conf


SEE ALSO
     nispasswd(1), passwd(1),  yppasswd(1),  Intro(2),  Intro(3),
     cuserid(3S),   getgrnam(3C),   getlogin(3C),   getspnam(3C),
     nsswitch.conf(4), passwd(4), shadow(4)


NOTES
     When compiling multithread programs, see Intro(3), Notes  On
     Multithread Applications.

     The pw_passwd field in the passwd structure  should  not  be
     used  as the encrypted password for the user; use getspnam()
     or getspnam_r() instead. See getspnam(3C).

     Programs that use the interfaces described  in  this  manual
     page  cannot be linked statically since, the implementations
     of these functions employ dynamic  loading  and  linking  of
     shared objects at run time.

     Use   of   the   enumeration   interfaces   getpwent()   and
     getpwent_r()  is  discouraged;  enumeration is supported for
     the passwd file, NIS, and NIS+, but in general is not  effi-
     cient  and  may  not  be supported for all database sources.
     The  semantics  of  enumeration  are  discussed  further  in
     nsswitch.conf(4).

     Previous releases allowed the use of `+' and `-' entries  in
     /etc/passwd  to selectively include and exclude NIS entries.
     The primary usage of these `+/-' entries  is  superseded  by
     the  name  service switch, so the `+/-' form may not be sup-
     ported in future releases.


     If required, the `+/-' functionality can still  be  obtained
     for NIS by specifying compat as the source for passwd.

     If the `+/-' functionality is required in  conjunction  with
     NIS+,  specify  both  compat  as  the  source for passwd and
     nisplus as the source for the pseudo-database passwd_compat.
     See passwd(4), shadow(4), and nsswitch.conf(4) for details.

     If the `+/-'  is  used,  both  /etc/shadow  and  /etc/passwd
     should  have  the  same  `+'  and `-' entries to ensure con-
     sistency between the password and shadow databases.

     If a password entry from any  of  the  sources  contains  an
     empty  uid  or  gid field, that entry will be ignored by the
     files, NIS, and NIS+ name  service  switch  backends.   This
     will cause the user to appear unknown to the system.

     If a password entry contains an empty gecos, home directory,
     or shell field, getpwnam() and getpwnam_r() return a pointer
     to a null string in  the  respective  field  of  the  passwd
     structure.

     If the shell field is empty, login(1) automatically  assigns
     the default shell.  See login(1).

     Solaris 2.4 and earlier releases provided definitions of the
     getpwnam_r()  and  getpwuid_r()  functions  as  specified in
     POSIX.1c Draft 6.  The final POSIX.1c standard  changed  the
     interface  for  these  functions.   Support  for the Draft 6
     interface is provided for compatibility only and may not  be
     supported   in   future   releases.   New  applications  and
     libraries should use the POSIX standard interface.

     For      POSIX.1c      complaint      applications,      the
     _POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS  and _REENTRANT flags are automati-
     cally turned on by defining the _POSIX_C_SOURCE flag with  a
     value >= 199506L.