cloginrc(5)							File Formats Manual						       cloginrc(5)

NAME
.cloginrc - clogin configuration file DESCRIPTION
.cloginrc contains configuration information for alogin(1), blogin(1), clogin(1), elogin(1), flogin(1), hlogin(1), htlogin(1), jlogin(1), nlogin(1), nslogin(1), rivlogin(1), and tntlogin(1), such as usernames, passwords, ssh encryption type, etc., and is read at run-time. Each line contains either white-space (blank line), a comment which begins with the comment character '#' and may be preceded by white- space, or one of the directives listed below. Each line containing a directive is of the form: add <directive> <hostname glob> {<value>} [{<value>} ...] or include {<file>} Note: the braces ({}) surrounding the values is significant when the values include TCL meta-characters. Best common practice is to always enclose the values in braces. If a value includes a (left or right) brace or space character, it must be backslash-escaped, as in: add user <hostname glob> {foo}bar} add user <hostname glob> {foo bar} As .cloginrc is searched for a directive matching a hostname, it is always the first matching instance of a directive, one whose hostname glob expression matches the hostname, which is used. For example; looking up the "password" directive for hostname foo in a .cloginrc file containing add password * {bar} {table} add password foo {bar} {table} would return the first line, even though the second is an exact match. .cloginrc is expected to exist in the user's home directory and must not be readable, writable, or executable by "others". .cloginrc should be mode 0600, or 0640 if it is to be shared with other users who are members of the same unix group. See chgrp(1) and chmod(1) for more information on ownership and file modes. DIRECTIVES
The accepted directives are (alphabetically): add autoenable <router name glob> {[01]} When using locally defined usernames or AAA, it is possible to have a login which is automatically enabled. This is, that user has enable privileges without the need to execute the enable command. The router's prompt is different for enabled mode, ending with a # rather than a >. Example: add autoenable * {1} Default: 0 zero, meaning that the user is not automatically enabled and clogin should execute the enable command to gain enable privileges, unless negated by the noenable directive or -noenable command-line option. Also see the noenable directive. add cyphertype <router name glob> {<ssh encryption type>} cyphertype defines which encryption algorithm is used with ssh. A device may not support the type ssh uses by default. See ssh(1)'s -c option for details. Default: {3des} add enableprompt <router name glob> {"<enable prompt>"} When using AAA with a Cisco router or switch, it is possible to redefine the prompt the device presents to the user for the enable password. enableprompt may be used to adjust the prompt that clogin should look for when trying to login. Note that enableprompt can be a Tcl style regular expression. Example: add enableprompt rc*.example.net {"[Ee]nter the enable password:"} Default: "[Pp]assword:" add enauser <router name glob> {<username>} This is only needed if a device prompts for a username when gaining enable privileges and where this username is different from that defined by or the default of the user directive. add identity <router name glob> {<ssh identity file path>} May be used to specify an alternate identity file for use with ssh(1). See ssh's -i option for details. Default: your default identity file. see ssh(1). add method <router name glob> {ssh} [{...}] Defines, in order, the connection methods to use for a device from the set {ssh, telnet, rsh}. Method telnet may have a suffix, indicating an alternate TCP port, of the form ":port". Note: Different versions of telnet treat the specification of a port differently. In particular, BSD derived telnets do not do option negotiation when a port is given. Some devices, Extreme switches for example, have undesirable telnet default options such as linemode. In the BSD case, to enable option negotiation when specifying a port the method should be "{telnet:-23}" or you should add "mode character" to .telnetrc. See telnet(1) for more information on telnet command-line syntax, telnet options, and .telnetrc. Example: add method * {ssh} {telnet:-3000} {rsh} Which would cause clogin to first attempt an ssh connection to the device and if that were to fail with connection refused, a telnet connection to port 3000 would be tried, and then a rsh connection. Note that not all platforms support all of these connection methods. Default: {telnet} {ssh} add noenable <router name glob> {1} clogin will not try to gain enable privileges when noenable is matched for a device. This is equivalent to clogin's -noenable command-line option. Note that this directive is meaningless for jlogin(1), nlogin(1) and clogin(1) [for Extreme] which do not have the concept of "enabled" and/or no way to elevate privleges once logged in; a user either has the necessary privleges or doesn't. add passphrase <router name glob> {"<SSH passphrase>"} Specify the SSH passphrase. Note that this may be particular to an identity directive. The passphrase will default to the password for the given router. Example: add passphrase rc*.example.net {the bird goes tweet} add passprompt <router name glob> {"<password prompt>"} When using AAA with a Cisco router or switch, it is possible to redefine the prompt the device presents to the user for the password. passprompt may be used to adjust the prompt that clogin should look for when trying to login. Note that passprompt can be a Tcl style regular expression. Example: add passprompt rc*.example.net {"[Ee]nter the password:"} Default: "([Pp]assword|passwd):" add password <router name glob> {<vty passwd>} [{<enable passwd>}] Specifies a vty password, that which is prompted for upon the connection to the router. The last argument is the enable password and need not be specified if the device also has a matching noenable or autoenable directive or the corresponding command-line options are used. add sshcmd <router name glob> {<ssh>} <ssh> is the name of the ssh executable. OpenSSH uses a command-line option to specify the protocol version, but other implementations use a separate binary such as "ssh1". sshcmd allows this to be adjusted as necessary for the local environment. Default: ssh add timeout <router name glob> {<seconds>} Time in seconds that the login script will wait for input from the device before timeout. Default: device dependent add user <router name glob> {<username>} Specifies a username clogin should use if or when prompted for one. Default: $USER (or $LOGNAME), i.e.: your Unix username. add userpassword <router name glob> {<user password>} Specifies a password to be associated with a user, if different from that defined with the password directive. add userprompt <router name glob> {"<username prompt>"} When using AAA with a Cisco router or switch, it is possible to redefine the prompt the device presents to the user for the username. userprompt may be used to adjust the prompt that clogin should look for when trying to login. Note that userprompt can be a Tcl style regular expression. Example: add userprompt rc*.example.net {"[Ee]nter your username:"} Default: "(Username|login|user name):" include {<file>} <file> is the pathname of an additional .cloginrc file to include at that point. It is evaluated immediately. That is important with regard to the order of matching hostnames for a given directive, as mentioned above. This is useful if you have your own .cloginrc plus an additional .cloginrc file that is shared among a group of folks. If <file> is not a full pathname, $HOME/ will be prepended. Example: include {.cloginrc.group} FILES
$HOME/.cloginrc Configuration file described here. share/rancid/cloginrc.sample A sample .cloginrc. ERRORS
.cloginrc is interpreted directly by Tcl, so its syntax follows that of Tcl. Errors may produce quite unexpected results. SEE ALSO
clogin(1), glob(3), tclsh(1) 9 February 2009 cloginrc(5)