11-13-2003
The default gid is in /etc/passwd and that is what you changed. This may or may not have been an error. Did you want the user to retain membership in his old group? A user can be a member of several groups at once by adding him into various lines in /etc/group. It all depends on what you really want.
And hp-ux is a little odd here, but I seem to rememeber that you use sunos.
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LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
groupmod
GROUPMOD(8) System Manager's Manual GROUPMOD(8)
NAME
groupmod - Modify a group
SYNOPSIS
groupmod [-g gid [-o]] [-n group_name ] group
DESCRIPTION
The groupmod command modifies the system account files to reflect the changes that are specified on the command line. The options which
apply to the groupmod command are
-g gid The numerical value of the group's ID. This value must be unique, unless the -o option is used. The value must be non-negative.
Values between 0 and 99 are typically reserved for system groups. Any files which the old group ID is the file group ID must have
the file group ID changed manually.
-n group_name
The name of the group will be changed from group to group_name.
FILES
/etc/group - group information
/etc/gshadow - secure group information
SEE ALSO
chfn(1), chsh(1), passwd(1), groupadd(8), groupdel(8), useradd(8), userdel(8), usermod(8)
AUTHOR
Julianne Frances Haugh (jockgrrl@ix.netcom.com)
GROUPMOD(8)