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PWD_MKDB(8)		    System Manager's Manual		   PWD_MKDB(8)

NAME
       pwd_mkdb	-- generate the	password databases

SYNOPSIS
       pwd_mkdb	  [-C]	 [-N]	[-p]   [-i]   [-d  directory]  [-s  cachesize]
		[-u username] file

DESCRIPTION
       The pwd_mkdb utility creates db(3) style	secure and insecure  databases
       for  the	 specified  file.   These  databases  are  then	installed into
       /etc/spwd.db and	/etc/pwd.db respectively.  The file is installed  into
       /etc/master.passwd.   The  file	must  be  in  the  correct format (see
       passwd(5)).  It is important to note that the format used in this  sys-
       tem is different	from the historic Version 7 style format.

       The options are as follows:

       -C    Check  if	the  password  file  is	in the correct format.	Do not
	     change, add, or remove any	files.

       -N    Tell pwd_mkdb to exit with	an error if it cannot obtain a lock on
	     the file.	By default, we block waiting for a lock	on the	source
	     file.  The	lock is	held through the rebuilding of the database.

       -p    Create  a	Version	 7  style  password  file  and install it into
	     /etc/passwd.

       -i    Ignore locking failure of the master.passwd file.	This option is
	     intended to be used  to  build  password  files  in  the  release
	     process  over  NFS	where no contention can	happen.	 A non-default
	     directory must also be specified with the -d option  for  locking
	     to	be ignored.  Other use of this option is strongly discouraged.

       -d directory
	     Store  databases  into specified destination directory instead of
	     /etc.

       -u username
	     Only update the record for	the specified  user.   Utilities  that
	     operate  on  a single user	can use	this option to avoid the over-
	     head of rebuilding	the entire database.

       -s cachesize
	     Specify in	megabytes the size of the memory  cache	 used  by  the
	     hashing  library.	 On  systems  with  a large user base, a small
	     cache size	can lead to prohibitively long database	 file  rebuild
	     times.   As  a  rough  guide,  the	 memory	 usage	of pwd_mkdb in
	     megabytes will be a little	bit more than twice the	figure	speci-
	     fied here.	 The default is	2 megabytes.

       The two databases differ	in that	the secure version contains the	user's
       encrypted password and the insecure version has an asterisk (``*'')

       The  databases  are  used  by  the  C  library  password	 routines (see
       getpwent(3)).

       The pwd_mkdb utility exits zero on success, non-zero on failure.

ENVIRONMENT
       If the PW_SCAN_BIG_IDS environment variable is set, pwd_mkdb will  sup-
       press  the  warning messages that are normally generated	for large user
       and group IDs.  Such IDs	can cause serious problems with	software  that
       makes assumptions about the values of IDs.

FILES
       /etc/pwd.db			 The insecure password database	file.
       /etc/pwd.db.tmp			 A temporary file.
       /etc/spwd.db			 The secure password database file.
       /etc/spwd.db.tmp			 A temporary file.
       /etc/master.passwd		 The current password file.
       /etc/passwd			 A Version 7 format password file.

BUGS
       Because	of  the	 necessity  for	 atomic	 update	of the password	files,
       pwd_mkdb	uses rename(2) to install them.	 This, however,	requires  that
       the  file specified on the command line live on the same	file system as
       the /etc	directory.

       There are the obvious races with	multiple people	 running  pwd_mkdb  on
       different password files	at the same time.  The front-ends to pwd_mkdb,
       chpass(1), passwd(1) and	vipw(8), handle	the locking necessary to avoid
       this problem.

COMPATIBILITY
       Previous	 versions  of  the  system  had	a program similar to pwd_mkdb,
       mkpasswd(8), which built	dbm(3) style databases for the	password  file
       but  depended on	the calling programs to	install	them.  The program was
       renamed in order	that previous users of the program not be surprised by
       the changes in functionality.

SEE ALSO
       chpass(1), passwd(1), db(3), getpwent(3), passwd(5), vipw(8)

FreeBSD	5.3			 June 6, 1993			   PWD_MKDB(8)

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