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Full Discussion: Users and groups
Special Forums Cybersecurity Users and groups Post 25137 by Perderabo on Thursday 25th of July 2002 08:28:13 AM
Old 07-25-2002
It depends or your version of Unix. Originally, it was one group at a time and you used the newgrp command to switch groups as needed. BSD introduced the concept of one user being in many groups at once. This is a better way of doing things and it caught on. Most versions of Unix have adopted it. HP-UX actually supports both techniques, depending on how you configure it. If you post your version of unix, we may be able to give you a more definitive answer.
 

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NEWGRP(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 NEWGRP(1)

NAME
newgrp -- change to a new group SYNOPSIS
newgrp [-l] [group] DESCRIPTION
The newgrp utility creates a new shell execution environment with modified real and effective group IDs. The options are as follows: -l Simulate a full login. The environment and umask are set to what would be expected if the user actually logged in again. If the group operand is present, a new shell is started with the specified effective and real group IDs. The user will be prompted for a password if they are not a member of the specified group. Otherwise, the real, effective and supplementary group IDs are restored to those from the current user's password database entry. EXIT STATUS
The newgrp utility attempts to start the shell regardless of whether group IDs were successfully changed. If an error occurs and the shell cannot be started, newgrp exits >0. Otherwise, the exit status of newgrp is the exit status of the shell. SEE ALSO
csh(1), groups(1), login(1), sh(1), su(1), umask(1), group(5), passwd(5), environ(7) STANDARDS
The newgrp utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1''). HISTORY
A newgrp utility appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BUGS
Group passwords are inherently insecure as there is no way to stop users obtaining the crypted passwords from the group database. Their use is discouraged. BSD
May 23, 2002 BSD
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