grpck - Unix, Linux Command



NAME

grpck - verify integrity of group files

SYNOPSIS

TagDescription
grpck [-r] [group shadow]

DESCRIPTION

grpck verifies the integrity of the system authentication information. All entries in the /etc/group and /etc/gshadow are checked to see that the entry has the proper format and valid data in each field. The user is prompted to delete entries that are improperly formatted or which have other uncorrectable errors.

Checks are made to verify that each entry has:

TagDescription
o the correct number of fields
o a unique group name
o a valid list of members and administrators

The checks for correct number of fields and unique group name are fatal. If the entry has the wrong number of fields, the user will be prompted to delete the entire line. If the user does not answer affirmatively, all further checks are bypassed. An entry with a duplicated group name is prompted for deletion, but the remaining checks will still be made. All other errors are warnings and the user is encouraged to run the groupmod command to correct the error.

The commands which operate on the /etc/group file are not able to alter corrupted or duplicated entries. grpck should be used in those circumstances to remove the offending entry.

OPTIONS

By default, grpck operates on the files /etc/group and /etc/gshadow. The user may select alternate files with the group and shadow parameters. Additionally, the user may execute the command in read-only mode by specifying the -r flag. This causes all questions regarding changes to be answered no without user intervention. grpck can also sort entries in /etc/group and /etc/gshadow by GID. To run it in sort mode pass it -s flag. No checks are performed then, it just sorts.

FILES

TagDescription
/etc/group
  Group account information.
/etc/gshadow
  Secure group account information.
/etc/passwd
  User account information.

SEE ALSO

group(5), passwd(5), shadow(5), groupmod(8).

EXIT VALUES

The grpck command exits with the following values:

TagDescription
0 success
1 invalid command syntax
2 one or more bad group entries
3 can’t open group files
4 can’t lock group files
5 can’t update group files

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