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NETGROUP(5)		      File Formats Manual		   NETGROUP(5)

NAME
       netgroup	-- defines network groups

SYNOPSIS
       netgroup

DESCRIPTION
       The  netgroup  file  specifies  ``netgroups'', which are	sets of	(host,
       user, domain) tuples that are to	be given similar network access.

       Each line in the	file consists of a netgroup name followed by a list of
       the members of the netgroup.  Each member can be	either the name	of an-
       other netgroup or a specification of a tuple as follows:

	     (host, user, domain)

       where the host, user, and domain	are character  string  names  for  the
       corresponding  component.   Any	of  the	 comma separated fields	may be
       empty to	specify	a ``wildcard'' value or	 may  consist  of  the	string
       ``-''  to  specify  ``no	valid value''.	The members of the list	may be
       separated by whitespace and/or commas; the ``\''	character may be  used
       at  the	end of a line to specify line continuation.  Lines are limited
       to 1024 characters.  The	functions specified in	getnetgrent(3)	should
       normally	be used	to access the netgroup database.

       Lines that begin	with a # are treated as	comments.

NIS/YP INTERACTION
       On  most	 other	platforms, netgroups are only used in conjunction with
       NIS and local /etc/netgroup files are ignored.  With FreeBSD, netgroups
       can be used with	either NIS or  local  files,  but  there  are  certain
       caveats to consider.  The existing netgroup system is extremely ineffi-
       cient where innetgr(3) lookups are concerned since netgroup memberships
       are  computed  on the fly.  By contrast,	the NIS	netgroup database con-
       sists of	 three	separate  maps	(netgroup,  netgroup.byuser  and  net-
       group.byhost)  that  are	 keyed	to allow innetgr(3) lookups to be done
       quickly.	 The  FreeBSD  netgroup	 system	 can  interact	with  the  NIS
       netgroup	maps in	the following ways:

	     	 If the	/etc/netgroup file does	not exist, or it exists	and is
		 empty,	 or it exists and contains only	a `+', and NIS is run-
		 ning, netgroup	lookups	will be	done exclusively through  NIS,
		 with  innetgr(3)  taking advantage of the netgroup.byuser and
		 netgroup.byhost maps to speed up searches.  (This is more  or
		 less  compatible with the behavior of SunOS and similar plat-
		 forms.)

	     	 If the	/etc/netgroup exists and contains only local  netgroup
		 information  (with  no	 NIS  `+'  token), then	only the local
		 netgroup information will be processed	(and NIS will  be  ig-
		 nored).

	     	 If /etc/netgroup exists and contains both local netgroup data
		 and  the  NIS	`+' token, the local data and the NIS netgroup
		 map will be processed as a single combined netgroup database.
		 While this configuration is the most flexible,	it is also the
		 least efficient: in particular, innetgr(3)  lookups  will  be
		 especially slow if the	database is large.

FILES
       /etc/netgroup  the netgroup database

COMPATIBILITY
       The  file format	is compatible with that	of various vendors, however it
       appears that not	all vendors use	an identical format.

SEE ALSO
       getnetgrent(3), exports(5)

BUGS
       The interpretation of access restrictions based on the member tuples of
       a netgroup is left up to	the various network applications.  Also, it is
       not obvious how the domain specification	applies	to  the	 BSD  environ-
       ment.

       The  netgroup  database	should be stored in the	form of	a hashed db(3)
       database	just like the passwd(5)	database to speed up reverse lookups.

FreeBSD	14.3		       December	11, 1993		   NETGROUP(5)

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