Hi Tinker, On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 15:19:27 +0800 Tinker <[email protected]> wrote: > I see there's a unix group by the name "staff" too.
The 'staff' group could define people who are employees. The 'users' group could define people who are customers. The 'guest' group could define people who've not yet subscribed. You get to choose. It is easy enough to add groups and login classes. See groupinfo(8), groupadd(8), useradd(8) & usermod(8) -G + -g flags,.. Perhaps you'd like to create a '_big_daemon' group & login class for your processes? Several companies I've worked for had a unique UNIX group for each team of 5-20 people (e.g. jd3185), even when the company had 30,000+ employees. The umask was set so non-technical people in each team could easily share files in team directories. The group name was used on job sheets & time sheets for billing, etc. You get to decide. Cheers, -- Craig Skinner | http://linkd.in/yGqkv7

