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- <!DOCTYPE part PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
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- <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">
- %general-entities;
- ]>
- <sect1 id="ch-config-shells" xreflabel="Creating the /etc/shells File">
- <?dbhtml filename="etcshells.html"?>
- <sect1info>
- <othername>$LastChangedBy: randy $</othername>
- <date>$Date: 2007-04-04 14:42:53 -0500 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) $</date>
- </sect1info>
- <title>Creating the /etc/shells File</title>
- <indexterm zone="ch-config-shells">
- <primary sortas="e-etc-shells">/etc/shells</primary>
- </indexterm>
- <para>The <filename>shells</filename> file contains a list of
- login shells on the system. Applications use this file to determine
- whether a shell is valid. For each shell a single line should be
- present, consisting of the shell's path, relative to the root of the
- directory structure (/).</para>
- <para>For example, this file is consulted by <command>chsh</command>
- to determine whether an unprivileged user may change the login shell for her
- own account. If the command name is not listed, the user will be denied of
- change.</para>
- <para>It is a requirement for applications such as
- <application>GDM</application> which does not populate the
- face browser if it can't find <filename>/etc/shells</filename>, or
- FTP daemons which traditionally disallow access to users
- with shells not included in this file.</para>
- <screen role="root"><userinput>cat > /etc/shells << "EOF"
- <literal># Begin /etc/shells
- /bin/sh
- /bin/bash
- # End /etc/shells</literal>
- EOF</userinput></screen>
- </sect1>
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