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kdestroy(1) [freebsd man page]

KDESTROY(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					       KDESTROY(1)

NAME
kdestroy -- remove one credential or destroy the current ticket file SYNOPSIS
kdestroy [-c cachefile] [--credential=principal] [--cache=cachefile] [-A | --all] [--no-unlog] [--no-delete-v4] [--version] [--help] DESCRIPTION
kdestroy removes one credential or the current set of tickets. Supported options: -credential=principal remove principal from the credential cache if it exists. -c cachefile -cache=cachefile The cache file to remove. -A --all remove all credential caches. --no-unlog Do not remove AFS tokens. --no-delete-v4 Do not remove v4 tickets. SEE ALSO
kinit(1), klist(1) HEIMDAL
April 27, 2006 HEIMDAL

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KDESTROY(1)						      General Commands Manual						       KDESTROY(1)

NAME
kdestroy - destroy Kerberos tickets SYNOPSIS
kdestroy [-q] [-c cache_name] DESCRIPTION
The kdestroy utility destroys the user's active Kerberos authorization tickets by writing zeros to the specified credentials cache that contains them. If the credentials cache is not specified, the default credentials cache is destroyed. OPTIONS
-q Run quietly. Normally kdestroy beeps if it fails to destroy the user's tickets. The -q flag suppresses this behavior. -c cache_name use cache_name as the credentials (ticket) cache name and location; if this option is not used, the default cache name and location are used. The default credentials cache may vary between systems. If the KRB5CCNAME environment variable is set, its value is used to name the default ticket cache. Most installations recommend that you place the kdestroy command in your .logout file, so that your tickets are destroyed automatically when you log out. ENVIRONMENT
Kdestroy uses the following environment variables: KRB5CCNAME Location of the Kerberos 5 credentials (ticket) cache. FILES
/tmp/krb5cc_[uid] default location of Kerberos 5 credentials cache ([uid] is the decimal UID of the user). SEE ALSO
kinit(1), klist(1), krb5(3) BUGS
Only the tickets in the specified credentials cache are destroyed. Separate ticket caches are used to hold root instance and password changing tickets. These should probably be destroyed too, or all of a user's tickets kept in a single credentials cache. KDESTROY(1)
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