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XAUTH(1)		    General Commands Manual		      XAUTH(1)

NAME
       xauth - X authority file	utility

SYNOPSIS
       xauth [ -f authfile ] [ -vqibn ]	[ command arg ... ]

DESCRIPTION
       The  xauth program is used to edit and display the authorization	infor-
       mation used in connecting to the	X server.   This  program  is  usually
       used  to	 extract authorization records from one	machine	and merge them
       in on another (as is the	case when using	remote logins or granting  ac-
       cess to other users).  Commands (described below) may be	entered	inter-
       actively,  on  the  xauth  command line,	or in scripts.	Note that this
       program does not	contact	the X server except when the generate  command
       is used.	 Normally xauth	is not used to create the authority file entry
       in  the first place; the	program	that starts the	X server (often	xdm or
       startx) does that.

OPTIONS
       The following options may be used with xauth.  They may be given	 indi-
       vidually	(e.g., -q -i) or may combined (e.g., -qi).

       -f authfile
	       This  option  specifies	the name of the	authority file to use.
	       By default, xauth will use the file specified by	the XAUTHORITY
	       environment variable or .Xauthority in the user's  home	direc-
	       tory.

       -q      This option indicates that xauth	should operate quietly and not
	       print  unsolicited  status messages.  This is the default if an
	       xauth command is	given on the command line or if	 the  standard
	       output is not directed to a terminal.

       -v      This  option  indicates that xauth should operate verbosely and
	       print status messages indicating	the results of various	opera-
	       tions  (e.g.,  how  many	 records  have been read in or written
	       out).  This is the default if xauth is  reading	commands  from
	       its  standard  input  and  its standard output is directed to a
	       terminal.

       -i      This option indicates that xauth	should	ignore	any  authority
	       file  locks.   Normally,	 xauth will refuse to read or edit any
	       authority files that have been locked by	other  programs	 (usu-
	       ally xdm	or another xauth).

       -b      This  option  indicates	that xauth should attempt to break any
	       authority file locks before proceeding.	Use this  option  only
	       to clean	up stale locks.

       -n      This  option indicates that xauth should	not attempt to resolve
	       any hostnames, but should simply	always print the host  address
	       as stored in the	authority file.

       -V      This option shows the version number of the xauth executable.

COMMANDS
       The following commands may be used to manipulate	authority files:

       add displayname protocolname hexkey
	       An  authorization  entry	 for  the  indicated display using the
	       given protocol and key data is added to the authorization file.
	       The data	is specified as	an even-lengthed string	of hexadecimal
	       digits, each pair representing one octet.  The first  digit  of
	       each  pair  gives the most significant 4	bits of	the octet, and
	       the second digit	of the pair  gives  the	 least	significant  4
	       bits.   For  example,  a	 32 character hexkey would represent a
	       128-bit value.  A protocol name consisting of just a single pe-
	       riod is treated as an abbreviation for MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1.

       generate	displayname protocolname [trusted|untrusted]
	       [timeout	seconds] [group	group-id] [data	hexdata]

	       This command is similar to add.	The main  difference  is  that
	       instead	of  requiring the user to supply the key data, it con-
	       nects to	the server specified in	displayname and	uses the SECU-
	       RITY extension in order to get the key data to store in the au-
	       thorization file.  If the server	cannot be contacted or	if  it
	       does  not  support  the	SECURITY extension, the	command	fails.
	       Otherwise, an authorization entry for the indicated display us-
	       ing the given protocol is added to the authorization  file.   A
	       protocol	 name consisting of just a single period is treated as
	       an abbreviation for MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1.

	       If the trusted option is	used, clients that connect using  this
	       authorization  will have	full run of the	display, as usual.  If
	       untrusted is used, clients that connect using  this  authoriza-
	       tion  will  be considered untrusted and prevented from stealing
	       or tampering with data belonging	to trusted clients.   See  the
	       SECURITY	 extension  specification  for full details on the re-
	       strictions imposed on untrusted clients.	 The  default  is  un-
	       trusted.

	       The  timeout  option  specifies how long	in seconds this	autho-
	       rization	will be	valid.	If the	authorization  remains	unused
	       (no  clients  are  connected with it) for longer	than this time
	       period, the server purges the  authorization,  and  future  at-
	       tempts  to  connect  using it will fail.	 Note that the purging
	       done by the server does not delete the authorization entry from
	       the authorization file.	The default timeout is 60 seconds.

	       The group option	specifies the application group	 that  clients
	       connecting  with	 this authorization should belong to.  See the
	       application group extension  specification  for	more  details.
	       The default is to not belong to an application group.

	       The  data  option  specifies data that the server should	use to
	       generate	the authorization.  Note that this  is	not  the  same
	       data  that  gets	written	to the authorization file.  The	inter-
	       pretation of this data depends on the  authorization  protocol.
	       The  hexdata  is	 in the	same format as the hexkey described in
	       the add command.	 The default is	to send	no data.

       [n]extract filename displayname...
	       Authorization entries for each of the  specified	 displays  are
	       written	to  the	 indicated  file.   If the nextract command is
	       used, the entries are written in	a numeric format suitable  for
	       non-binary  transmission	(such as secure	electronic mail).  The
	       extracted entries can be	read  back  in	using  the  merge  and
	       nmerge  commands.   If  the  filename consists of just a	single
	       dash, the entries will be written to the	standard output.

       [n]list [displayname...]
	       Authorization entries for each of the  specified	 displays  (or
	       all  if no displays are named) are printed on the standard out-
	       put.  If	the nlist command is used, entries will	 be  shown  in
	       the  numeric  format  used  by the nextract command; otherwise,
	       they are	shown in a textual format.  Key	data  is  always  dis-
	       played  in  the	hexadecimal format given in the	description of
	       the add command.

       [n]merge	[filename...]
	       Authorization entries are read from the specified files and are
	       merged into the authorization database, superseding any	match-
	       ing  existing  entries.	If the nmerge command is used, the nu-
	       meric format given in the description of	the extract command is
	       used.  If a filename consists of	just a single dash, the	 stan-
	       dard input will be read if it hasn't been read before.

       remove displayname...
	       Authorization  entries  matching	the specified displays are re-
	       moved from the authority	file.

       source filename
	       The specified file is treated as	a script containing xauth com-
	       mands to	execute.  Blank	lines and lines	beginning with a sharp
	       sign (#)	are ignored.  A	single dash may	be  used  to  indicate
	       the standard input, if it hasn't	already	been read.

       info    Information  describing	the authorization file,	whether	or not
	       any changes have	been made, and from where xauth	 commands  are
	       being read is printed on	the standard output.

       exit    If  any	modifications  have  been  made, the authority file is
	       written out (if allowed), and the program  exits.   An  end  of
	       file is treated as an implicit exit command.

       quit    The  program  exits, ignoring any modifications.	 This may also
	       be accomplished by pressing the interrupt character.

       version This command shows the version number of	the xauth executable.

       help [string]
	       A description of	all commands that begin	with the given	string
	       (or all commands	if no string is	given) is printed on the stan-
	       dard output.

       ?       A  short	 list of the valid commands is printed on the standard
	       output.

DISPLAY	NAMES
       Display names for the add, [n]extract, [n]list,	[n]merge,  and	remove
       commands	 use  the  same	format as the DISPLAY environment variable and
       the common -display command line	argument.   Display-specific  informa-
       tion  (such  as	the screen number) is unnecessary and will be ignored.
       Same-machine connections	(such as local-host  sockets,  shared  memory,
       and  the	Internet Protocol hostname localhost) are referred to as host-
       name/unix:displaynumber so that local entries  for  different  machines
       may be stored in	one authority file.

EXAMPLE
       The  most  common use for xauth is to extract the entry for the current
       display,	copy it	to another machine, and	merge it into the  user's  au-
       thority file on the remote machine:

	       %  xauth	extract	- $DISPLAY | ssh otherhost xauth merge -

       The following command contacts the server :0 to create an authorization
       using  the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 protocol.	Clients	that connect with this
       authorization will be untrusted.
	    %  xauth generate :0 .

ENVIRONMENT
       This xauth program uses the following environment variables:

       XAUTHORITY
	       to get the name of the authority	file to	use if the  -f	option
	       isn't used.

       HOME    to get the user's home directory	if XAUTHORITY isn't defined.

FILES
       $HOME/.Xauthority
	       default authority file if XAUTHORITY isn't defined.

SEE ALSO
       X(7), Xsecurity(7), xhost(1), Xserver(1), xdm(1), startx(1), Xau(3).

BUGS
       Users  that  have  insecure  networks should take care to use encrypted
       file transfer mechanisms	to  copy  authorization	 entries  between  ma-
       chines.	 Similarly, the	MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 protocol is not very	useful
       in insecure environments.  Sites	that are interested in additional  se-
       curity  may need	to use encrypted authorization mechanisms such as Ker-
       beros.

       Spaces are currently not	allowed	in the protocol	name.	Quoting	 could
       be added	for the	truly perverse.

AUTHOR
       Jim Fulton, MIT X Consortium

X Version 11			  xauth	1.1.4			      XAUTH(1)

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