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Date:      Thu, 8 Oct 1998 14:14:46 -0700
From:      Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
To:        jase <jase@clearsail.net>, questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Groupes
Message-ID:  <19981008141446.A25136@wopr.caltech.edu>
In-Reply-To: <361D17AA.79C888C7@clearsail.net>; from jase on Thu, Oct 08, 1998 at 02:51:06PM -0500
References:  <361D17AA.79C888C7@clearsail.net>

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On Thu, Oct 08, 1998 at 02:51:06PM -0500, jase wrote:

> I'm just curious, why is it that every user gets their very own (empty!)
> group?  I've seen on a lot of other OSs that everyone gets put into the
> 'user' group (not to imply that is a better way of doing it.)  and I'm
> wondering exactly what the advantages/disadvantages of this are.

The rationale for one-user ("unique") groups is described in the
manpage for adduser(8).  The gist of it is that your users can then
run with umask 002 safely; shared directories for people who need to
work on the same files are then convenient to use, because it's not
necessary to switch umasks when working in the directory or to chmod
all of the files to g+w.

If you're an ISP or something, and you don't have users working on
shared projects, the advantages will be small or zero, though.

-- 
Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com> * UNIX is a lever for the intellect. -J.R. Mashey
http://www.pobox.com/~mph/pgp.key for PGP public key 0x67203349.

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