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Full Discussion: Dynamic MOTD
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Dynamic MOTD Post 29167 by Perderabo on Tuesday 1st of October 2002 08:45:55 AM
Old 10-01-2002
I would not want to call this impossible, but it would be very hard and dangerous and there is a better approach to do what you want.

/etc/motd is display because the shells are reading common scripts at login time. For sh, bash, and ksh it is /etc/profile. For csh it might be /etc/.login or some other file. You will need to check the man pages for each shell in use on your system to be sure. But each of these startup scripts will have a "cat /etc/motd" somewhere in them. Just add you own code to do whatever else is needed.
 

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groups(1)						      General Commands Manual							 groups(1)

NAME
groups - Displays your group membership SYNOPSIS
groups [user] DESCRIPTION
The groups command writes to standard output the groups to which you or the specified user belong. The Tru64 UNIX operating system allows a user to belong to many different groups at the same time. Your primary group is specified in the /etc/passwd file. Once you are logged in, you can change your active group with the newgrp shell command (see sh). When you create a file, its group ID is that of your active group. Other groups that you belong to are specified in the /etc/group file. If you belong to more than one group, you can access files belonging to any of those groups without changing your primary group ID. These are called your concurrent groups. NOTES
The /etc/passwd and /etc/group files must be on the same node. EXAMPLES
To determine your group membership, enter: groups The groups to which you belong will be displayed. For example: devel prod FILES
Contains group information. Contains user information. SEE ALSO
Commands: csh(1), ksh(1), sh(1) Functions: initgroups(3), setgroups(2) groups(1)
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