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Full Discussion: Using the Find command
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Using the Find command Post 302999368 by Mook on Sunday 18th of June 2017 05:06:32 PM
Old 06-18-2017
Thank you, I know have a copy! I meant without any other alternatives and, I think I have some sort of misunderstanding... So -gid will show me the files that a user group has access too?
 

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

NAME
groupadd - create a new group entry SYNOPSIS
groupadd [-D binddn] [-P path] [-g gid [-o]] [-p password] [--preferred-gid gid] [-r] [--service service] [--help] [--usage] [-v] group DESCRIPTION
groupadd creates a new group entry using the values specified on the command line. Depending on the command line options the new entry will be added to the system files or LDAP database. The group name must begin with an alphabetic character and the rest of the string should be from the POSIX portable character class ([A-Za- z_][A-Za-z0-9_-.]*). OPTIONS
-g, --gid gid Force the new group ID to be the given number. This value must be positive and unique. The default is to use the first free ID after the greatest used one. The range from which the group ID is chosen can be specified in /etc/login.defs. --preferred-gid gid Set the new group ID to the specified value if possible. If that value is already in use the first free ID will be chosen as described above. -o, --non-unique Allow duplicate (non-unique) group IDs. -p, --password password Encrypted password as returned by crypt(3) for the new account. The default is to disable the account. -r, --system Create a system group. A system group is an entry with an GID between SYSTEM_GID_MIN and SYSTEM_GID_MAX as defined in /etc/login.defs, if no GID is specified. --service service Add the group to a special directory. The default is files, but ldap is also valid. -D, --binddn binddn Use the Distinguished Name binddn to bind to the LDAP directory. The user will be prompted for a password for simple authentica- tion. -P, --path path The group file is located below the specified directory path. groupadd will use this files, not /etc/group. --help Print a list of valid options with a short description. --usage Print a short list of valid options. -v, --version Print the version number and exit. FILES
/etc/group - group account information SEE ALSO
login.defs(5), group(5), groupdel(8), groupmod(8) AUTHOR
Thorsten Kukuk <kukuk@suse.de> pwdutils December 2003 groupadd(8)
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