Maybe you missed the part about this NOT working in RedHat. I can read a man page. ONE MORE TIME, PEOPLE... useradd -D will not make a RedHat (7.3 in my case) installation not create a group for every user. I need REAL answers, not quoting of useradd's manpage. Try it yourself, and you'll see it does NOT work.
-Cameron Mandrake On 10/15/02 2:32 PM, "Mark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tuesday 15 October 2002 02:50 pm, Cameron is done writ: > >> How do I disable the automatic creation of groups for each user and >> just default to group 100 (users)? > > man useradd: > ... > Changing the default values > When invoked with the -D option, useradd will either dis > play the current default values, or update the default > values from the command line. The valid options are > ... > -g default_group > The group name or ID for a new user's initial > group. The named group must exist, and a numerical > group ID must have an existing entry . > <snip> > mark -- Cameron J. Mandrake, Administrator dragon.org -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list