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Date:      22 Nov 2002 10:32:54 -0800
From:      swear@attbi.com (Gary W. Swearingen)
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: passwords in /etc/group
Message-ID:  <5d1y5da209.y5d@localhost.localdomain>
In-Reply-To: <20021121212019.GA47022@raggedclown.net>
References:  <000701c29193$0f4a68f0$0a2da8c0@sem> <20021121212019.GA47022@raggedclown.net>

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> What purpose do they serve ?
> A System Manager can put the users in the appropriate groups
> for their work.
> I have never seen them used on any Unix system I have worked on,
> and I seem to recall from some ancient documentation that they
> are more trouble than they are worth.

(Please put blank lines between paragraphs or use bullets or
indentation or something.  This isn't a Poetry 101 forum.  Thanks.)

IRIX and Linux (and HP-UX?) had a "newgrp" command for changing your
current GID (eg, "gid" from "id -g").  I've forgotten, but I suppose
"newgrp" used the group passwords if they were defined.  Users could
change their GID to work in different projects.

I'm not sure why FreeBSD doesn't have the feature, but I suppose someone
thought that the SUIDDIR feature was sufficient.  But I don't know what
it would hurt to have the feature which needn't be used or could easily
be disabled.

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